Photos
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Maps
13 maps found.
Books
3 books found. Showing results 49 to 3.
Memories
4,022 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Water Street
I was born in 1924 @80 water street in the rear part of a sweetshop fronting on water street & owned by My Godmother Eva Parks-My Father worked in the steel mill & We moved to London in 1931 for My Father to obtain work which ...Read more
A memory of Port Talbot by
Water Lane
Firstly, does anyone have any photos of a thatched cottage that stood up on the back, opposite Ospringe church, as this is where I lived with my parents for a while. My surname was Hogben and I can remember my mother and my sister ...Read more
A memory of Ospringe in 1956 by
Wartime Shackleford
The gentleman in this photo is my grandfather Mr James William Arthur Reffold late of the Pump house that lays to his left behind the shop.the horses name is Jimmy he was a large ginger horse. I lived in Shackleford through ...Read more
A memory of Shackleford by
War Time Evacuees
in 1944 we were taken to St Agnes, me, my two sisters and my mum. I was only 5 years old. They put us in the hotel Driftwood Spars, St Agnes. I went to school there, I can't remember the name of it. My mum worked in the pub in ...Read more
A memory of St Agnes by
Wallsend 1954 68
Born in the Green Maternity Hosp 1954, lived in Windsor Drive, Howden, Sandown Gardens, Howden and Prospect Ave. I remember being taken to the Masons Arms at Bigges Main in a pushchair, parked outside the corrugated iron lean to ...Read more
A memory of Wallsend by
Walking To School
I went to Downshall Infants and Primary up to the age of 12 when I then went to Ilford Country High in Gants Hill. I remember the daily walk along Meads Lane calling for a sour grapes gob stopper that would dye our mouths ...Read more
A memory of Seven Kings in 1963 by
W W 2 In Egypt
HI .it may be a long shot my dad was out there during W W 2 I HAVE A PHOTO of him and two of his mates....in uniform. there are not many men left now .my dads name was bill kemp he was a cook at the time he was in PORT SAID .on the photo. Mabey some one will remember him.
A memory of Port Said by
Village I Was Born
Its the year I was born, so I don't have immediate memory. I grew up there and went to the infant school at the top of the hill on this photo, the corner store on the left is the beer off licence where I would go and get ...Read more
A memory of Swallownest by
Very Recent Visit 2013
Not quite a historical memory. But only last year I began some serious searching into my father's mother's family. She died when he was a wee child, and he lost touch with her family. He is now 94 years old, and this year I ...Read more
A memory of Hythe in 2013 by
Unforgetable Ardwick
I was born in Coleman Street, Ardwick, in December 1939, just as war broke out. I went to St Aloysius school. I have a book full of photos, memories of St Aloysuis etc. and I still remember every street in ...Read more
A memory of Hulme in 1945 by
Captions
69 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
King's Café (left of photo) is now an Indian restaurant.
Today there is a photo developer and an osteopath's.
On the opposite corner is Thomas, the tailors and hosiers; shortly after this photo was taken it became the Biglis Dairy.
Note the 'Cyclists Only' sign in the photo: cycle paths are by no means a recent idea.
The photos displayed in the window of WH Smith (left) give us a flashback of the pop stars of the mid-sixties - Gene Pitney, the Bachelors, and possibly a newish group called the Beatles.
Our photo- graph was taken before the M6 or the Chorley by-pass opened— Chorley was troubled by heavy traffic for many years.
The little Austin 7, or 'Ruby', in the right foreground predates the photo by some 10 years – it is a 1920s model.
At the time of our photo, the pub offered 'dancing every Friday, Saturday and Sunday evening— to the music of the Roundabouts'.
The building on the right was part of Skoulding's provisions shop (a different shop to that in the photo above).
This photo was taken from a little further along Church Street.
Jugs of tea are advertised on the left, and 'Walkie Photos' on the right.
The Walmer Stores in the centre of this photo has its blinds down.
The shop in the centre of the photo at this time was run by A Francis, to the left was W R Eynon and Sons, General Ironmongers.
Mr and Mrs Potts kept the village shop opposite the mill and on the corner of the A34 and Church Lane.
This photo was taken the same time as U10084.
The floating road was supported on pontoons that rose and fell with the tide, which is high in our photo.
Most of the buildings in the foreground were less than 10 years old when this photo was taken.
By the time this photo was taken the railway had closed.
This photo shows the Welton end of the Braunston Tunnel, built to connect the Grand Union Canal from London to the Oxford Canal at Braunston.
Displays of various kinds decorate the entrance hall; these may include photos of Queen Elizabeth II and her husband, the Duke of Edinburgh, who made numerous visits to Barrow to launch ships from
Not much has changed since the photo- graph was taken, although some of the trees and vegetation has been removed.
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