Places
12 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
191 photos found. Showing results 541 to 191.
Maps
115 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 649 to 1.
Memories
1,374 memories found. Showing results 271 to 280.
Summer Days At Oystermouth
Memories of The Mumbles by John S. Batts Viewing on-line a collection of Frith’s old photos of The Mumbles has jogged many memories. For me the place was simply known as “Mumbles,” home to a much-treasured uncle ...Read more
A memory of Mumbles, The by
Llanbedrog Bryn Du
I spent every summer staying with the Jones family at Bryn Du farm, from about 1957 to 1965. They were friends of my parents. The farm was sold some years ago, after Tom Jones had died. I enjoyed the farm very much, which was ...Read more
A memory of Llanbedrog by
1970 South Beach
Does any one remember the cinema on the South Beach by the Jubilee Park?
A memory of Saundersfoot by
School Days
I started school at 5yrs old ii then lived in Fernlea Avenue the house was called Anglo West and was number 44 (how i remember this so well i do not know) my mum took me to school through the park the school was not far from the end of ...Read more
A memory of Herne Bay
Gran And Grandad Catt.
There are no photos of Udimore but I remember it well and the building named Pound House.This is way back in the 1920's. My grandparents were on my mothers side and every now and again my family would walk from Winchelsea Beach ...Read more
A memory of Udimore
Holidays At Knotty's Greatstone
Travelling down to Greatstone in Grandad's Commer Van, Grandad driving, Nanny & Mum sitting up front, Dad, elder brothers Tony & Teddy (Edward ),sister Kathy, younger brother Brian & myself jammed ...Read more
A memory of Greatstone-on-Sea by
Holidays In Littlehampton And Meeting Aunts And Uncles
From Sandra (was Leggett) I first went to Littlehampton as a baby...as the story goes ..it must have been 1946..apparently I slept in a cupboard drawer at my Auntie Maisies. ...Read more
A memory of Littlehampton by
Colwyn Bay Drinking Fountains
The Dingle was indeed a magical place and as a child on holiday in the 1950's, I always chose to go to the beach via The Dingle. I have a photograph of myself and my brother taken by the drinking fountain that was ...Read more
A memory of Colwyn Bay by
Growing Up In Stanford Le Hope And Corringham 1960 To 1976
When I was born in Chelmsford Hospital, my family were living in a house in Corringham Road, Stanford-le-Hope but my first memories are of 66 Billet Lane. Right opposite what was ...Read more
A memory of Stanford-le-Hope by
The Creek
I, my sisters and my cousins often spent our summer holidays in the 50's with my Grandmother (Ivy Eddy nee Bryant) in her cottage by the culvert as shown in the photo of the creek. The boat wreck in the picture was a sailing barge owned by ...Read more
A memory of Millbrook by
Captions
1,131 captions found. Showing results 649 to 672.
The scene is Central Beach. J Wolfe and R Penswick were the bathing machine proprietors. These lumbering boxes on wheels were obligatory for swimmers.
The age-old tradition of pony rides on the sand is captured in this photograph of South Lancing beach. The nearby road has houses either side, which limits public access in places.
Nearly a century after its foundation, the town was already dominating the skyline, and its beaches were among the most crowded on the south coast.
The tramway offered holiday-makers an alternative means of escape from the beach to the Esplanade, other than by the 224 steps cutting through the Spa Gardens, and all for just 1d.
A steamer sets out from Exmouth Pier, watched by boatmen on the nearby beach.
The Fleet, a strip of brackish water between the Chesil Beach and the shoreline, gives a safe haven to all kinds of wetland fowl, including at one time a stray flamingo.
This view is from the beach towards the village. The road was developed in the Victorian period, and most of the houses and shops, like those on the right, are of that date.
As at Par, the Crinnis Beach is also largely a result of the deposition of waste from the mining and china clay industries.
Before the promenade defences were completed in 1905, Blackpool's sea-front hotels were literally that, with only a narrow road separating them from the waves that crashed onto the beach.
From the beach, the pier's extravagant pavilions suggest something mysterious and exotic, a world away from the industry of the nearby towns.
A leisured stroll on the cliff-top path leads to Cromer - otherwise rest awhile on the benches and admire the scenery and beach activities.
Some of the boys on the beach were probably from Mostyn House School in the town; the yacht in the foreground is a typical 12ft vessel favoured by the school.
Here, looking towards Ingoldmells Point, are the sandy beach and the sand dunes, a view now radically changed by the more recent sea defences with a massive concave-fronted sea wall forming a promenade
Until the 1990s, this was one of the few places where the lifeboat was kept on the open beach. Further along Crag Path is the former red and white brick watchtower (centre).
On the right is that ubiquitous feature of west country beaches, the lime kiln.
It is a major ecological problem, and one that can only be solved by literally dumping thousands of tons of rock on to the beach.
These days, the timber-framed Tudor Moot Hall (moot is Old English for meeting) stands next to the beach. When it was built, it was right in the centre of town.
Apart from the areas around the mouth of the Bourne Stream, much of Bournemouth was built to the rear of the long line of cliffs, necessitating many stairways down to the beach for energetic visitors
When this picture was taken, fishermen would have to wait for high tide before launching their boats from the beach.
Beach furniture includes the winding gear that helped to pull boats onto the shingle (centre).
The small hamlet of slate-roofed farm houses and cottages lies at the end of a lane near Black Head, sheltered in the valley which climbs up from Hallane Beach.
The promenade and beach are thronged with visitors. The ungainly motor vehicle in the centre is still an unusual enough feature for it to be attracting the attention of bystanders.
Judging by the crowd gathering on the beach, it looks as though a seaside concert party will shortly be giving a performance.
The steep descent to the end of a lane gives a certain isolation to Polkerris, and this early view shows perfectly how the little village clings to the valley bottom behind a beach and stone pier.
Places (12)
Photos (191)
Memories (1374)
Books (1)
Maps (115)