Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- New Row, Dyfed
- Forest Row, Sussex
- Chigwell Row, Essex
- Low Row, Yorkshire
- Middleton One Row, Durham
- Red Row, Northumberland
- Collier Row, Essex
- Stoke Row, Oxfordshire
- Row, Cumbria (near Kendal)
- Row, Cornwall
- Row, Cumbria (near Langwathby)
- Corner Row, Lancashire
- Heather Row, Hampshire
- Helmington Row, Durham
- Higher Row, Dorset
- Authorpe Row, Lincolnshire
- North Row, Cumbria
- Medhurst Row, Kent
- Rotten Row, Berkshire
- Tittle Row, Berkshire
- Winkfield Row, Berkshire
- The Rowe, Staffordshire
- Spooner Row, Norfolk
- Alder Row, Somerset
- Smokey Row, Buckinghamshire
- Shiplake Row, Oxfordshire
- Ulcat Row, Cumbria
- Row Green, Essex
- Row Heath, Essex
- Tottenhill Row, Norfolk
- Frost Row, Norfolk
- Will Row, Lincolnshire
- West Row, Suffolk
- Orange Row, Norfolk
- Cold Row, Lancashire
- Dean Row, Cheshire
Photos
710 photos found. Showing results 521 to 540.
Maps
566 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,284 memories found. Showing results 261 to 270.
Morris Family
I was born in Dryburn Hospital, Durham and was christened in St Paul's church in 1960. We lived in Hamilton Row by the Black Horse pub, my dad played darts in the pub and was a miner in the local colliery. Then we moved to ...Read more
A memory of Esh Winning in 1963 by
Bromley By Bow Hospital?
My mother, at the tender age of 17, was taken to Bromley-by-Bow Hospital in the midst of the London blitz to have her first child. She never saw her baby girl, was told she had died and everyone was to be evacuated to ...Read more
A memory of Bromley by
Me Granda
I am writing this because I have been back to Clara visiting after I was contacted by Brian and Helen who now live in me Granda's house, they had read my memories of Newburn which mentioned Clara and sent me a message. Me Grandad ...Read more
A memory of Clara Vale in 1947 by
Chesson's Coaches
Hello Patrick, I came across your reminiscences while looking for something else - as you do! I remember Tom Chesson and his coaches, was at school with Veronica Chesson, his grand daughter and also my best friend Jill Burgess. ...Read more
A memory of Withyham in 1961 by
Little Sandhurst Shop
This is more or less as the centre of Litle Sandhurst appeared in 1958 - very little changed from 1939. We lived on the other side of this photo at a row of houses called (I don't know why!) Gibletts Folly. To the ...Read more
A memory of Little Sandhurst in 1958 by
The Old Ride
I was a day boy between 1966 and 1970. I was always in trouble and spent most of my meals on the punishment table. The ruling was tyranical, you had to eat everything on your plate and couldn't leave the table until you had ...Read more
A memory of Bradford-On-Avon in 1968 by
Thomas Family Please Help
My family come from Penrhiwceiber and I would like to know any information or help I can get. I am doing my family tree and I am stuck. My grandad was born there, his name was Cecil Thomas, born 1929. His father was ...Read more
A memory of Penrhiwceiber by
The First Annual Flower Show
In 1938 Wood Street village enjoyed their first Annual Flower Show . My father, Arthur Stock was a driving force in promoting this event. he was later presented with a chiming clock inscribed "Presented to Mr. ...Read more
A memory of Guildford in 1930 by
Morris Family The Gristmill Whitebrook
My father Eddie Morris was last of of 7 children who lived in the Gristmill. Even aged 70, he was still hugged & referred to as Baby Brother. (Ron, Tom, Jack, Jim, Trudy, Grace, Eddie). Story is that ...Read more
A memory of Whitebrook by
Welfare Gang
I grew up and played around the Welfare Hall,r ows of pit houses were situated behind it, Pretoria Street, Earle Street, Kimberly Street. We would watch the shows in the Welfare put on by the Featherstone ADS, and I attended the ...Read more
A memory of Featherstone in 1963 by
Captions
827 captions found. Showing results 625 to 648.
Behind the top row are high elaborate canopies with helmets and crests.
The rowing boats and solitary figure standing on the isolated shingle beach offer a rare glimpse of what is now part of the Army`s prohibited Lulworth Range.
It is flanked on the right by a row of very old stone cottages that appear to lean to one side but nevertheless stand to this day - no doubt a testament to those who built them!
At weekends the banks are lively with visitors, strollers and walkers, rowing club members, and people visiting the café.
All the buildings have been demolished on that side, and the road curving round (Buckwell Street) is now a cul-de-sac.
During the mackerel season, Newlyn bustled with freelance boatmen who earned their living ferrying the catch in clinker- built rowing boats known as bummers' gigs from fishing boats anchored offshore
Warehouses blossomed here from early days, and goods (including wool, wood, coal and other commodities) were conveyed in flat-bottomed trows. Bewdley Rowing Club was on Severnside North.
Afterwards they could stay at the Yoredale Guest House (right) and buy provisions in Watson's Grocery next door - now specialising in Wensleydale cheese.
By 1897 the process of development was in full swing and, beyond the row of bathing machines, many of the new buildings gleam in the sun.
Mercer Row is a good example, and the Georgian shop window to the right survives intact.
Mercer Row is a good example, and the Georgian shop window to the right survives intact.
The small, ornate castellated building in the centre of the row of shops used to be Heswall Village Post Office, but that later moved to its present position in the building to its immediate right.
The man in the boat has maybe rowed across to pick samphire from the muddy creeks; this is a local plant, a delicacy called 'poor mans asparagus'.
This row of terraced labourers` cottages lies opposite Hilton Village Hall, previously the school, and adjacent to the maze.
This unspoiled row of 16th- and 17th-century half-timbered houses facing onto the church was built and owned mainly by small farmers and tradesmen, who formed the backbone of the rural affluent society
A large village on the northern edge of the Ashdown Forest, Forest Row was a popular place in the 14th century when the King and his Lords used it as a base for hunting.
They are mostly built of loose stones, perhaps with a layer of turf betwixt each row are covered with rushes; the produce of the Loch'.
The latter was originally named Brunswick Row by the Duke of Gloucester on 16 August 1824.
Until 1864, Clacton had simply been a row of cliffs. It was Peter Bruff, a railway engineer, who bought the land and started to develop a resort here.
The Eels Foot Inn now dispenses refreshments to visitors after their row on the broad. The ladies' headwear is typical of the early 1930s, and short skirts were in vogue.
In 1921 Batchworth Lake, being nearest the town, was already used for recreation with rowing boats and yachts.
The tall chimney above the thatched cottage belonged to Tom Rowe's cheese factory. Run from Preston, it started business in 1930. Part of its sign can be seen just behind the vintage car.
This is red brick village Leicestershire at its best: nothing ostentatious in either the well- designed row of cottages (right) terminated by the Three Horseshoes pub, small and welcoming,
The row of four whitewashed cottages in the foreground leads up to the Vicarage Lane turning on the right; the lane crosses the river about 200 yards north of the Overflow, a weir at Waterford Marsh.
Places (93)
Photos (710)
Memories (1284)
Books (0)
Maps (566)