Places
4 places found.
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Photos
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Maps
11 maps found.
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Memories
227 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Ulleskelf
Hiya Luke and Liam if your reading this then your probably on the phone to me .coming up at the weekend hope 2 see you then i probably will. ask nana if i can stay there if not ill sleep round hal's. 2005/2006 where the best years of my ...Read more
A memory of Ulleskelf in 2006 by
Trolley Busses
The queue of people waiting to the left of the picture would have been waiting for the trolley bus which ran from the terminal at the bottom of the high street (on the opposite side from The Odeon and a bit further down). The post ...Read more
A memory of Uxbridge in 1955 by
Triggering Memories.
We were clearing the last furniture from my mother's bungalow a few weeks ago. A heartbreaking task, having lost her in April. Behind the last set of drawers, on the floor, I found an old sepia photograph. It showed a group of ...Read more
A memory of Pymore by
To Market In The Pony Cart In The 1950s
If it was Tuesday and school holiday my sister Carolyn and I would go with Grampy Smith the village blacksmith to Trowbridge market. Having helped harness the pony, Peggy, to the old milk float, we'd ...Read more
A memory of Steeple Ashton in 1952 by
Time Changes Everything
As I read and reread the memories that are posted on this site, Mitcham and my childhood there become more and more vivid. I can almost smell the grass on the cricket green, just after it was cut. When I was young, Mitcham ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham by
Thoughts Of Bisley Rodborough Chalford And More.
1794 The year my direct ancestor was born in Bisley. It was not until I found my connection with him that I discovered that my roots started there. Abraham Davis for that was his name, ...Read more
A memory of Bisley by
Those Were The Days
I have so many memories of Dagenham that I could write a book. I have already written one on this site entitled 'Shopping at the Heathway'. My earliest memory of Dagenham however was when I was about five years old. We lived ...Read more
A memory of Dagenham in 1940 by
Thornley In My Youth
Further to my memories I spoke of before, I can remember games we used to play like split the kipper, tally ho, blonk, and a lot more. The summer months were great, we would go over the moors and spend all day over there, if ...Read more
A memory of Thornley by
Thorne Water Sports
One of the highlights of the year was the annual Thorne Water Sports held in the canal between Dunston's shipyard and the Canal Tavern. The event included swimming races and sculling races where competitors stood in a rowing ...Read more
A memory of Thorne in 1948 by
There's Always Been A Chip Shop
At leas,t for as long as I can remember - there's always been a chip shop on the Parade at Crayford. Just like there's always been on the corner of Station Road - a little way further through the town - if you can ...Read more
A memory of Crayford in 1965 by
Captions
141 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
For centuries the Thames has played a part in Benson's history.
Visit the church at Yateley, and have a look at the glass in the 13th- century east window: it depicts Peter and John, and is the work of William Morris and the Pre-Raphaelite artist Sir Edward Burne-Jones
Pontrhydfendigaid means 'bridge of the blessed ford', and this is that bridge. By it is the village shop.
There are more bicycles than cars in this 1950s view of Sheerness High Street.
This whole area is now somewhat overgrown, making access difficult, and the remains are more ruinous.
In grander and more prosperous days Ashburton was one of the region's strategic stannary towns. Mining finally came to a halt in the 19th century.
The left- hand ground-floor window now matches its fellow, three dormers have replaced the original two, the end elevation has plasterwork instead of tile-hanging, a larger window and more
The River Teme rises in the Kerry Hills of Radnorshire and flows through 75 miles of beautiful countryside before it meets the River Severn just south of Worcester.
The Picture House on North Street was still doing excellent business, in spite of competition from the nearby and more modern Ritz cinema (1938).
Fishing was a rough and dangerous way to earn a living.
Motor cruisers were becoming larger and more numerous, almost crowding out the traditional sailing boats.
Cloche hats and knee-length skirts place this picture firmly in the roaring twenties.
As more and more injured men came back from the front, a larger hut hospital was built on the playing fields of King's and Clare Colleges, with 'open-air' wards such as this one housing the patients.
In 1882, the American firm of Singers opened a sewing-machine factory, bringing yet more jobs and more people to the area. Clydebank became a burgh in 1886.
Quay Station was the original town-side stop for the Ilfracombe train.
West Street was originally part of the main route through Sompting, linking it to Broadwater and North Lancing.
The streets are packed with onlookers, and anxious officials wait by the entrance to the site of the new town hall.
They may have a few trees to look at, but as far as the amenities of their home are concerned, these elephants do not fare any better than the gorilla.
This is the entrance front; the rows of Nissen huts and a water tank above the roofline are features of the former Nautical School, linked to HMS 'Ganges'.
In this view the trees are more mature and obscure the long facades of this eleven hundred foot long road.
J & K Deadman's stores (left) would probably have sold every kind of provision you could have imagined - and more.
St Osyth once had thriving lime-kilns and maltings, as well as wharves and a tide-mill.
By the time of this photograph, the river was being used more and more for pleasure: streamlined boats are moored by the bank, and a canoe with its lone occupant is heading towards Lendal Bridge.
In the foreground are cottages, some thatched, while in the distance are some more urban later houses of two and three full storeys.
Places (4)
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Memories (227)
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Maps (11)