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Memories
1,131 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
A Wonderful Memory
I understand that we all can’t like the same thing, but Rookesbury Park was a wonderful school for me, I was so happy there. I was a little bugger. I knew the school better than any of the teachers. I ran wild. I knew all the ...Read more
A memory of Wickham by
Chinese Restaurant Near The Wimpy Bar
There was a very good dine-in Chinese restaurant late 1960s/early1970s in Wembley Park Drive, almost next to the Wimpy Bar. Can anybody remember its name ?
A memory of Wembley by
Jazz At The Peacock Inn
I remember the 1980's & early 1990's when Tony & Lorna Marsh the Peacock Inn's owners had jazz bands playing in the back bar on Friday evenings . I snapped some photos of Stan Tracey sitting on telephone ...Read more
A memory of Chelsworth by
Oakhanger, Hampshire
Grew up in Oakhanger and enjoyed the freedom of exploring the common in the centre of the village. Some good times were had sledging down a hill on the common in the snow. Also, finding and catching tadpoles in the pond ...Read more
A memory of Oakhanger
Village Shop, Nether Alderley
It is often stated that the village shop was also the Post Office, but this is not true. There was a letter box (bar) in the wall, but the nearest Post Office was at Monk's Heath. The village shop was very small but sold a variety of products from chicken feed to postcards.
A memory of Nether Alderley by
Jazz At The Peacock Inn
I remember the 1980's & early 1990's when Tony & Lorna Marsh the Peacock Inn's owners had jazz bands playing in the back bar on Friday evenings . I snapped some photos of Stan Tracey sitting on telephone directories ...Read more
A memory of Chelsworth by
The Old Outdoor Swimming Pool
During the summer holidays we would visit the outdoor swimming pool in Bath Road. The first indication when near to the entrance was the strong smell of chlorine and the sound of the two water fountains. No matter what ...Read more
A memory of Luton by
My Local.
I remember the fire that destroyed this lovely hotel. Prior to that I was working at the Hunters Inn Hotel and Blackmoor Gate was my local. They had 4 great Danes which towered above the bar. Two were lost in the fire, also a young lady who ...Read more
A memory of Exmoor by
Burcot Grange
I went to Burcot Grange School in Mere Green. From 1961-1964 or there about. Mrs Keates was the Headmistress and her husband was the vicar. Mrs Shinner was deputy head. I got told off for dangling my legs out of the top floor ...Read more
A memory of Sutton Coldfield by
Crampy’s
I remember happy times at the Vine public house . It was renamed Crampy’s , due to Cecil Bowles ( the landlord ), being nicknamed Crampy. His little wife Marge used to work behind the bar also . We loved Marge . When Crampy was out of ...Read more
A memory of Wickham Market
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.
In 1837 the local squire, Reverend Canon Rogers, commissioned James Rendell to design a harbour for the Loe.
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.
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.
Although it is sheltered and here looks relatively tranquil, the estuary has claimed many ships. The famous Doom Bar (so famous it even has a beer named after it!)
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