Places
Sorry, no places were found that related to your search.
Photos
6 photos found. Showing results 41 to 6.
Maps
862 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 49 to 2.
Memories
1,131 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Schooldays
When I was at the Grammar School, I used to do my mothers shopping on this street; I bought my first pair of earrings from Woolworths, on the mid-left, for a shilling - 5p!! and my mum bought shoes from the shop near left. My French ...Read more
A memory of Penrith by
Rydal Avenue Winton Eccles
Hi, my name is Roy Mozley & I was born in 1948 in a prefab in Rydal Avenue, Winton. We then moved to Lambton St, Winton. This was our football pitch then, main problem was this guy who, lets say, used to visit a ...Read more
A memory of Eccles in 1950 by
Robin Hood Pub In Salford
I was born in 61. My gran and grandad Elizabeth and Thomas Wainwright ran the Robin Hood pub in Salford - I cannot remember the exact street it was on, but I think you could get to it from Lower Broughton Rd. It was a ...Read more
A memory of Salford in 1964 by
Red Lion Shawforth Spanish Bar 1972
Lived at the red lion pub in 1972 my parents took over the pub made a Spanish bar in the rear room can anyone remember? Will look for photo
A memory of Shawforth by
Random Memories
I was born in Runnymede Gardens, near the Bridge Hotel and Greenford roundabout in 1939. I remember Spitfires flying from Northolt and a V1 rocket that (I think) hit part of Glaxo laboratories in 1944. I was in the garden, ...Read more
A memory of Greenford by
Pub/Nightclub On Manchester Road
Looking for the name of a wine bar/nightclub near the library on Manchester road please
A memory of Bradford in 1977 by
Privateers And Pirates
The Llandoger Trow - It is rumoured that Daniel DeFoe had met Alexander Selkirk ( shipwrekced sailor who had been rescued by a Bristol ship) in the Llandoger, on whose story he based his book 'Robinson Crusoe'. The ...Read more
A memory of Bristol by
Part 7
There was no running hot water, no gas, no bathroom and no flushing toilets. Electricity was used for lighting and if you were lucky, a wireless set. Most sets were run from accumulators, a sort of battery, which you had to take to ...Read more
A memory of Middle Rainton in 1945 by
One Summer
I worked as a 16 yr old in this hotel in 1960, I have lovely memories of the place. Also the hotel looks different to me now. We, the staff, lived in a bunglow at the end of the back garden. I think it was owned by Mr & Mrs ...Read more
A memory of Dulverton in 1960 by
My Years At Mobberley Boys School
i was at MBS from 1969 to 1972 i was 12 yrs old when i went there i was in Russell house number 17 we used to wear red mr link was the head house master his wife worked in the kitchen making flap jacks for supper ...Read more
A memory of Mobberley by
Captions
252 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
Thirteen years before this photograph of Sandhurst was taken, the village police station was completed in memory of some of Sandhurst's older residents.
The civil engineers of the future concentrate on their construction work, while a budding mountaineer attempts a climb of the stone wall (left).
This photograph, taken in what is known as Above Bar, shows Bargate facing south. There were originally seven gates into Southampton's old walled town.
Here we see the town bridge in Maidenhead with an elegant steamer - the 'Empress of India' - tied up in the foreground.
The welcoming though deserted bar inside The Red Lion shows a typical pub interior, decorated with brass tankards, hunting horns and pewter plates.
This wintry scene was taken well out of the tourist season, and is hardly an invitation for the choc ices advertised in the snack bar.
Facilities at the racecourse have improved considerably since the fifties with the addition of new stands, hospitality suites and the Champagne and Seafood Bar.
Cove's London Hotel (centre left) is now the Moorish Wine Bar, and J H Easterbrook's Boot and Shoe Warehouse (left) is now two separate businesses.
This pub has a date of 1635 in sheep's knucklebones set in the floor of the bar.
The statue of Hull's leading writer, Andrew Marvell, has been moved; George Street became the new centre of entertainment. Bars, bistros and night clubs flourish here.
In 1837 the local squire, Reverend Canon Rogers, commissioned James Rendell to design a harbour for the Loe.
Continuing through the village, we come to The Black Bull public house (centre); the parish church stands in the background.
Bus shelters, one with a shopper waiting, occupy Tudor Square, once called Bally Green, at the end of Market Street, which is Dalton's main shopping street.
This photograph shows the layout of Beverley well, with North Bar leading to the Market Place. It also reveals more detail of the west front of St Mary's Church.
Here we see the post-1953 sea wall, stepped here to allow access to the beach.
Built in the 1820s, and substantially altered in 1848, this building was variously the site of executions, a school, a courthouse and a venue for Swansea's Literature Festival.
The Pump Room (left, 48974) was constructed in 1842 over the sulphur wells. Now it is a fascinating museum, where visitors are encouraged to sample the health-giving water.
Nestling on the south bank of the Humber, the wide boulevard of Whitecross Street has changed little.
Here we see the post-1953 sea wall, stepped here to allow access to the beach.
The bar staff are in attendance, possibly waiting for customers after the Newton, Clifton and Salwick Field Day, very popular in the 1960s. The children from the Blue Coat School loved it.
As we look past the children paddling, the seaward end of the pier is terminated by the Kursaal of 1899, replacing a smaller 1888 one that had cost a mere £250.
All four bars still have their portcullises, but this is the only one that still works. The statues on the parapet are holding rocks or boulders, and are ready to throw them at any invader.
At the top of Sheep Street is the largely 17th-century Hind Hotel, perhaps the best secular building in the town.
This view of Allerford's much photographed 15th-century packhorse bridge and ford looks much the same today. The guesthouse to the right now has a public bar.
Places (0)
Photos (6)
Memories (1131)
Books (2)
Maps (862)