Places
26 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- The Temple, County Down
- Temple Sowerby, Cumbria
- Temple, Wiltshire
- Temple, Berkshire
- Temple, Lothian
- Temple, Strathclyde (near Clydebank)
- Temple, Cornwall
- Temple Bar, Sussex
- Temple Grafton, Warwickshire
- Temple Guiting, Gloucestershire
- Temple Hill, Kent
- Temple Cowley, Oxfordshire
- Temple End, Essex
- Temple Cloud, Avon
- Temple End, Suffolk
- Temple Fields, Essex
- Temple Herdewyke, Warwickshire
- Temple Ewell, Kent
- Temple Hirst, Yorkshire
- Temple Normanton, Derbyshire
- Temple Bar, Dyfed (near Lampeter)
- Temple Bar, Dyfed (near Ammanford)
- Temple Balsall, West Midlands
- Temple Mills, Greater London
- Temple Fortune, Greater London
- Newbiggin, Cumbria (near Temple Sowerby)
Photos
250 photos found. Showing results 41 to 60.
Maps
115 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
114 memories found. Showing results 21 to 30.
Batter Park Off Temple Ave
Hi my name is Terence Stone (Vic) as I was more commonly known and I grew up in a wooden hut in Battery park hut number 2 and have many very fond memories of my childhood but sadly I cant find any trace or photos from there ...Read more
A memory of Edmonton by
A Very Happy Childhood At Westbury
My name is Andy Pike, getting on a bit now but lovely to read other folks memories of Westbury. Here are a few reminiscences of my childhood in Westbury on Trym in the 50's and 60's. Maybe this will ring a ...Read more
A memory of Westbury on Trym by
Bread, Cakes, Cafe And Masons
Of course everybody know this building as Taylor's. However not everybody knows that there is another floor above the restaurant level. It can be clearly seen in the photo. This was the location of Cannock's Freemasons Temple for many years and may still be so for all I know.
A memory of Cannock
Happy Days
I had a fantastic childhood living in Sale Moor. I suppose one of my most vivid memories was selling the evening paper "Empire News" from the front of the Temple Inn to the crowds attending the Warwick Picture house on Temple Road junction ...Read more
A memory of Sale in 1950 by
Living Above The Shops Thornton St North
We moved to Collyhurst (60 Thornton St North) in 1966/67 and I have always considered myself a Collyhurst girl. I absolutely loved it there and used to play on the railway line at the back of the flats. ...Read more
A memory of Collyhurst in 1967 by
Temple Hill Shops
My Grandmother and Grandfather had the hardware shop (Frost) for a long time. I remember going out with my Dad and my Grandfather on the paraffin round (Esso Blue and Pink) around Dartford. I was very young and found it great fun, ...Read more
A memory of Dartford by
Exciting And Interesting Times
Not sure if anyone reads their comments later in life, but in response to one, it was Cliff Bennett and the Rebel Rousers. Cliff lived in Long Lane, next door to where I lived when I was 3 or 4. We lived in the ...Read more
A memory of Uxbridge in 1968 by
Casterton Hall Homicide 1868
Hi, My name is Robyn Arkinstall and I live in Australia. I am very interested and doing research into the Arkinstall surname, worldwide. On Friday December 11, 1868 a James/John? Arkinstall was employed at ...Read more
A memory of Kirkby Lonsdale by
The Regal
In the fifties I remember the Regal cinema at Temple Fields. I think it was an old factory converted to a cinema. I used to go on Saturday morning with my older brother. You had to be arrive early or it would be full and you would not get ...Read more
A memory of Harlow by
Schoolboy Caddy
I spent many a happy moment as a schoolboy caddy at BBGC at the end of the 50s and early 60s. It was also a very useful source of pocket money. I regularly caddied for local businessmen, the likes of the MD of Weston's Biscuits, ...Read more
A memory of Burnham by
Captions
105 captions found. Showing results 49 to 72.
Along this sacred avenue dead bodies were probably carried to the temple of Avebury.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel built the famous Box Tunnel in 1841 as part of his ambitious Great Western Railway link between London's Paddington station and Bristol's Temple Meads.
It was completed in 1821 in a Greek revival style, with a Doric Portico based upon the Temple of Theseus in Athens.
On the far right are the offices of the Royal Insurance and beyond the Temple is the Prudential Assurance Building.
Bazalgette also designed the Temple Pier and its arch of 1868.
Some believe that there was once a temple to the Anglo-Saxon god Woden on the hilltop site where St Bartholomew's now stands.
The delightful Temple Gardens once extended right the way down to the river.
The resultant temple was therefore dedicated to the goddess Sul Minerva.
We can see the monument topped by a dragon marking Temple Bar on the City boundary in the middle of the road.
During the mid 19th century, the writer Martin Tupper exposed a fine Romano-British temple.
Built as a result of a vigorous campaign by a local citizen, Richard Oliver, and funded by public subscription on donated land, this great Ionic temple to health opened in May 1839.
Lexden is dotted with Roman earthworks, and it has been suggested that the church may stand on the site of a temple.
Formerly an Iron Age circular rampart and the site of a Romano-British temple, Chanctonbury Ring rises to 783 feet.
Colchester Castle—the largest Norman Keep ever built—stands on the site of the Roman temple of Claudius, which was destroyed during the Boudiccan rebellion of AD60.
Along this sacred avenue dead bodies were probably carried to the temple of Avebury.
In 1907 the exciting architect Temple Moore added a nave, turning the old church into the north aisle. Moore used brick with stone bands and produced a most successful design.
Thomas Babington Macaulay (1800-52), the historian and essayist, was born at the Temple on St Crispin's Day 1800, and it was his masterpiece 'The History of England', published between 1848 and 1862
It was a temple to the triumphs of Victorian art and industry. After the Exhibition, it was moved to wooded parkland at Sydenham in south-east London.
It was a temple to the triumphs of Victorian art and industry. After the Exhibition, it was moved to wooded parkland at Sydenham in south-east London.
Temple Newsam was bought by Leeds Corporation in 1922 from Edward Wood, the future Lord Halifax.The first house known to have been built here belonged to Thomas, Lord Darcy, who was executed for
On the left is a pub known as the Malt Shovel, and the 480 bus has journeyed to this point from Temple Hill.
Here the photographer looks uphill towards Temple Square. The 18th-century cottages on the left stand behind a raised pavement.
In 1908 the east end of the chancel was extended and the transepts added; the gradient of the site was such that the archi- tect, Temple-Moore, designed a structure supported on a round- arched
Some believe that there was once a temple to the Anglo-Saxon god Woden on the hilltop site where St Bartholomew's now stands.
Places (26)
Photos (250)
Memories (114)
Books (0)
Maps (115)