Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!

Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.

Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.

During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards

Places

3 places found.

Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Maps

27 maps found.

Books

2 books found. Showing results 625 to 2.

Memories

489 memories found. Showing results 261 to 270.

Summer Holidays

I was born in Brewery Yard, Great Haywood. After the war my mum moved to Notting Hill, London, so in the summer holidays my sister and I would stay at Nan & Grandads in the village. Mum {Eileen Bailey} played the piano in ...Read more

A memory of Great Haywood in 1954 by Christine Pitcher

St Johns School

I remember the Sunday March to Tiffield Church from St John's School and return. I remember masters there - Betteridge, Faid, Wooley and the young lads 'lusting' after Headmaster's daughter!! The good teaching received there. My ...Read more

A memory of Tiffield in 1948 by Ivor Heyman Heybyrne

Ewe And Lamb, 17 Bridge Street, Leighton Buzzard

I was 10 years old in 1944, and my great-uncle Mr Arthur E. Sims was the occupier of the Ewe and Lamb Inn. I have found on this website that it is now home  of the The Leighton Buzzard Observer! My ...Read more

A memory of Woburn in 1944 by First Name Last Name

Our Childhood

My twin sister and me were brought up in Hixon from babies till we were about 10, we were known as the Taylor Twins. We first lived with our nan in the house that stands at the top of Smithie Lane and Featherbed Lane, we then moved ...Read more

A memory of Hixon in 1954 by Trudy Allsop

Miniature Train Rides In The Park

Close to the Grand Union Canal which runs through Cassiobury Park is a splendid miniature railway. It loops through woodland, has level crossings over footpaths and criss-crosses several lines before returning to ...Read more

A memory of Watford in 2002 by John Howard Norfolk

Home

Risca, was the town where I was born, under the shadow of Tymbarlm. I could see the fields leading to the mountain from my bedroom window, in Fernlea. The canal bank was where I would ride my pony Silver. All my memories of Risca are very happy ones, it was home and my childhood.

A memory of Risca by Judith Allen

Families Of St Blazey In The 40s/50s.

My father was one of the local butchers, Jack Grigg. He and my mother ran the shop opposite the church.  My grandfather was John Charles Grigg who lived at a house called Mount View at the bottom of Rose Hill. ...Read more

A memory of St Blazey by Melville Grigg

My Childhood In New Haw

Our family moved to New Haw when the new council houses were built at Heathervale. We lived at 26 Park Side. Everybody moved in about the same time so during the fifties there was great community spirit in our street. The ...Read more

A memory of New Haw in 1956 by Michael Ponting

Good Young Memories

At nine years old unfortunately I had to leave the area of my birth to which I had so many good memories. My name is Patrick Alexander, born 1947 and first lived as a baby in Kings Rd opposite my grandparents' house which was No ...Read more

A memory of New Haw in 1954 by First Name Last Name

The Hope Inn

I think it was 1949/50, I remember living along the canal side, Trafalgar Row it was called, over the other side from the Hope Inn.  Somehow I think it was further up than Somerfield almost opposite the Empire.  Most of my family used ...Read more

A memory of Wisbech in 1949 by Sandra Ireland

Captions

720 captions found. Showing results 625 to 648.

Caption For Saltaire, The Mill And The Cricket Pitch 1888

His model village provided all the essential living amenities, and for recreation he provided a spacious park on the opposite side of the river and canal.

Caption For Bingley, Five Rise Locks, The Leeds & Liverpool Canal 1894

One of the wonders of the waterway system, the five rise locks at Bingley in West Yorkshire are part of the Leeds & Liverpool canal.

Caption For Kildwick, View From Church C1965

The Leeds-Liverpool canal runs behind the church and crosses this road via an aqueduct.

Caption For Newport, The Village C1960

Newport grew rapidly with the arrival of the Market Weighton canal in the 18th century; it was the final loading place before crossing a short distance to the Humber.

Caption For Yardley Gobion, Village Green C1965

Now quieter, thanks to a bypass, it once had a wharf on the Grand Junction Canal which passed a quarter of a mile north of the village.

Caption For Eastham, Queen Elizabeth Ii Docks C1955

The locks and docks at Eastham form the western end of the Manchester Ship Canal.

Caption For Chirk, Viaduct And Aqueduct C1955

Constructed by Telford and Jessop to link the rivers Severn, Dee and Mersey, the Llangollen Canal is one of the most popular waterways in the country.

Caption For South Wigston, Grand Union Canal C1960

The Grand Union Canal was extended from Leicester to Market Harborough via the dramatic locks at Foxton in 1809.

Caption For Cliffe, High Street C1955

The 19th century brought many labourers to Cliffe, who worked on the Strood canal or the cement works. The Victorian Black Bull pub (centre) is now a renowned Thai restaurant.

Caption For Exeter, In The Port 1896

The completion of Turf Lock in 1830 enabled vessels to enter the canal and proceed up to Exeter regardless of the state of the tide; the maximum dimensions possible were 122ft x 25ft x 10.5ft.

Caption For London, Chelsea Embankment 1890

upriver, above London Bridge, were the more modest colliers, whose simple barges, loaded by man-power, carried consignments on to Thameside towns, for shipment to the Midlands and the north through the canal

Caption For Northwich, Anderton Boat Lift C1960

The Anderton Boat Lift at Northwich was built in 1875, providing a link between the Weaver Navigation and the Trent & Mersey Canal.

Caption For Worsley, The Wooden Bridge C1960

There were two canal and tunnel systems, one set higher than the other. Linked by an inclined plane on a 1 in 4 gradient, the boats were carried between levels on a rail-mounted cradle.

Caption For Chalford, On The Canal 1910

The Red Lion Inn shown here at the centre of the picture survives where others, such as the Bell (on the left) have not; public houses sprang up alongside the canal route which opened to great national

Caption For Blisworth, High Street C1965

This village is less well known than the prodigious Grand Junction Canal tunnel that emerges just to the south.

Caption For Ulverston, Market Street 1895

At the time this photograph was taken, Ulverston was still a busy commercial port linked to the River Leven by the Ulverston Canal.

Caption For Thorne, Market Place C1955

In the late 19th century, many workers from Holland were attracted to this land of canals and windmills as skilled peat workers.

Caption For Glasson Dock, The Docks C1955

Swans and ducks live in the canal basin.

Caption For Newark, Castle And Footbridge 1890

The wooden bridge was built in 1827 to take the canal towpath over to millrace.

Caption For Welton, The Cross Roads C1955

The parkland of 18th-century Welton Place sweeps south to the north bank of the Grand Union Canal, in its cutting leading to the east portal of the Braunston Tunnel.

Caption For Watford, Cassiobury Park And Iron Bridge Lock 1921

This was just one lock in the long climb from the west edge of London up the Chilterns: there were 25 miles and 42 locks on the Grand Junction Canal (later to become part of the Grand Union), the original

Caption For Skipton, Woods, The Canal C1947

Not only did the coming of the canal vastly lower distribution costs for the industrial towns of Yorkshire, it also provided a localised transport service for the towns and cities through which it passed

Caption For Skipton, Woods, The Canal C1947

Not only did the coming of the canal vastly lower distribution costs for the industrial towns of Yorkshire, it also provided a localised transport service for the towns and cities through which it passed

Caption For Linslade, The Grand Union Canal C1960

The coming of firstly the Grand Union Canal and then the railways, led to the establishment of modern Linslade at its present location.