Places
4 places found.
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Photos
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Maps
11 maps found.
Books
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Memories
227 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Priestwood Square 1960s And 70s
I can remember the square not only for its shops but also as a meeting place . Most of our games back then involved huge amounts of our friends either playing war games or football matches over on the field opposite ...Read more
A memory of Bracknell by
Lady Hall Holmes
The Holmes Family of LADY HALL, Farming and Iron ore on the census it had 6 rooms, They named one Daughter Lady presuming after Lady Hall. Well may add more later Sandra Nee Holmes 5th Generation down the ladder. 1841 Head of the house was Thomas Holmes, wife Sarah .Ref- HO107 Census Millom.
A memory of Lady Hall by
Brief Memories Of My First School: Noak Hill
It was 1947, when my parents were told they would be able to move from their one room in a house to a Prefab in Harold Hill. My mother was pregnant. You didn't start school until you were 5. The closest ...Read more
A memory of Noak Hill by
Park Lane.
I moved to Park Lane in 1948.I was about 2 years old.Lived there with my Family till about 1956.It was all fields at the back of our house.At the top of the road was the Junior School I went to.It had about 4 class rooms.I can still ...Read more
A memory of Thatcham 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
Grandparents In Service
My paternal grandparents used to work in service at Wonham while my father was a young boy in the years before WW2. I believe my grandmother was a cook and my grandfather was a driver/handyman. I think my father ...Read more
A memory of South Godstone by
Living In Rhymney
My name is Terry Furlong I lived in Rhymney from 1949 to 1956 I lived in Heol- twin I attended the Top School and the Annexe . I loved both my schools and the other pupils there. I still go down a couple of times a year to see my ...Read more
A memory of Rhymney by
1960s Live Music In Coalville
Hello! I was born in 1950 and lived in Coalville, until I was 19 years old. I went to Belvoir Road C. P. School and King Edward 7th Grammar School. The thing I remember most about growing up in Coalville, as a ...Read more
A memory of Coalville
Growing Up In Sutton
We lived at no 6 Greenfields, Sutton. My nan lived at four with my grandad Tom - in fact it was my family which helped forge Sutton village. I remember many families; Mr and Mrs Harland who ran the village ...Read more
A memory of Sutton by
Radlett Prep
I attended Radlett Prep between 1958 and 1965. It was located in a converted three floored Edwardian house on the corner of Hillside Avenue and Aldenham Grove, and has since been converted back to a private residence. Aldenham Grove ...Read more
A memory of Radlett 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)
Books (0)
Maps (11)