Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Places
14 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- St Ives, Cornwall
- St Ives, Cambridgeshire
- St Ive, Cornwall
- St Ives, Dorset
- St Ive Cross, Cornwall
- St Ives Head, Cornwall
- Conington, Cambridgeshire (near St Ives)
- Trewartha, Cornwall (near St Ives)
- Longstone, Cornwall (near St Ives)
- Joppa, Cornwall (near St Ives)
- Whitecross, Cornwall (near St Ives)
- Island, The, Cornwall (near St Ives)
- Church End, Cambridgeshire (near St Ives)
- Church End, Cambridgeshire (near St Ives)
Photos
829 photos found. Showing results 41 to 60.
Maps
127 maps found.
Memories
628 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Hawthorn Ave Family Had A Chicken Farm And Sold Eggs From Their Home
Does anyone remember going to school with me? I would like to know how you all are.
A memory of Armthorpe in 1963
Willesden High Road
Hi I was born in Melrose ave, willesden green London nw2, and I'm still living here. One of my first times I remember is Sainsbury which took over 2 shop. The co-op was across the road and Fredrick Reed toyshop. My auntie ...Read more
A memory of Willesden in 1953 by
Living In Melrose Ave, Willesden Green In 1950s
Hi, my name is Liz Ely (maiden name O'Connell) and I was born in Melrose Ave, Willesden Green in 1953 and I still live in the same house. I remember doing my mother's shopping in Sainsburys in ...Read more
A memory of Willesden in 1953 by
Living In Harold Hill
I lived in 71 Hailsham Road off of Straight Road till we sadly moved in the April of 1971. I always remember; the Grammar School, at the back of Appleby Drive we used to have Saturday fetes with the small steam train ...Read more
A memory of Harold Hill in 1967 by
High Cannons School.
I came from Lowestoft in Suffolk to live with an aunt and uncle in Glenhaven Ave, while my mother was ill. I remember being taken by coach with my sister Jacky to High Cannons. We were not happy at first. It was very ...Read more
A memory of Borehamwood in 1953 by
Hill House Sizewell
I remember Fred and Jack Fryer, and a son if I remember correctly who went in the navy. I would often wait on the beach at night beside their lantern which would guide them back to shore after an evenings fishing. Did Jack ...Read more
A memory of Sizewell in 1954 by
Sternhold Avenue Memories
We lived in Sternhold Avenue, No 87 I think, and I went to Sunnyhill Road School until we moved to Crystal Palace some two years later. I remember the bombed out old Streatham Theatre and a milk bar call the Blue Riband ...Read more
A memory of Streatham in 1949 by
Oh For Thing Past.
I was born in 1941 in St Augustine's Rd at the top of Chalk Pit Ave. The memory I have are, the Bull Inn at the corner of Sandy Lane next to Nashes Paper Mills. Ridge ways ? the all one shop, {things past}. Doing paper ...Read more
A memory of St Paul's Cray in 1950 by
Bbrentford 1950/68
I lived in Brook Road from 1949 till 1968. I went to St Johns School till 1960 and then ArchBishop Myers in Hounslow. I lived with parents May and Alf Tyrrell, with nan and grandad living upstairs, when flats were not ...Read more
A memory of Brentford by
Old Quarry Court
Just to point out this photo is Quarry Court/Liverpool Road, near Royal Ave. Does anyone remember the old grave stone? It was moved to St Michs at the top of Ditchfield Road.
A memory of Widnes
Captions
123 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
St Ives Island, on which the Chapel of St Nicholas stands, is actually a headland joined to the shore.
The record of St Ives' lifeboats is an outstanding one, but has meant great sacrifice.
A very old part of St Ives. This area is next to the present day Sloop Inn. Left of the building is Pudding Bag Lane, so called because like a pudding bag it had only one opening.
It would be hard to find a straight edge in St Ives. Everything seems twisted or warped - the granite setts, alleys and courtyards, blue slate-hung walls, whitewashed rubble, tumbling roofs.
This is just one of the many narrow streets that are so characteristic of St Ives.
The war memorial at the junction of Hollidays Road and the main Earith to St Ives road was moved in early 1976 after a lorry hit it.
Today Porthmeor Beach is home to the Tate Gallery St Ives, built on the site of the old gasholder which can just be seen to the right of the ruin.
The St Erth to St Ives branch line, the last broad gauge railway to be built, was opened by the Great Western Railway in 1877.
Fore Street is still one of St Ives' busiest thoroughfares.
Cromwell's family farmed at Slepe Hall in St Ives, but by all accounts they were not particularly successful at it; they were even thought to have contemplated emigrating to America at one point.
The cedar survived from the grounds of Ives Place, a mansion and later an hotel, which stood where the present 1962 Town Hall is located.
The granite was carried by boat to St Ives.
This view shows St Ives' smallest beach bursting at the seams at a time when beach holidays were at the height of their popularity.
Just over a mile separates this popular sandy bay from St Ives. Above the coast path at Porthminster Point lived the 'Huer', whose job it was to watch for the arrival of the pilchard shoals.
The building with the jettied gables to the left dates back to the 17th century, on the face of it one of the oldest buildings in St Ives, although earlier buildings survive behind more modern facades.
The St Ives lifeboat is on its carriage outside the lifeboat house on West Pier near the church. The present lifeboat house is on the near side of the pier.
Cornwall's most westerly branch line, just 4 miles long, was opened from St Erth to St Ives in 1877.
In the 13th century, St Ives was one of the biggest markets in Europe. Since then, encroachment by buildings greatly reduced its size.
This photograph and H464004 show the same scene on the St Ives Road.
St Ives fishermen favoured flat-bottomed craft that remained upright at low water in the harbour surf.
St Ives
This granite settlement stands in a treeless hollow, five miles south of St Ives. Though itself unspectacular, the coastline about is rugged and sublime.
The four-and-a-half mile St Erth to St Ives branch line (visible on the left) saw its first train in 1877.
This view was taken standing against the old Butter Cross looking down the St Ives road.
Places (14)
Photos (829)
Memories (628)
Books (57)
Maps (127)