Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chatsworth House, Derbyshire
 - Osborne House, Isle of Wight
 - Brambletye House, Sussex
 - Ickworth House, Suffolk
 - Kingston Lacy House, Dorset
 - Boscobel House, Shropshire
 - Preshute House, Wiltshire
 - Bolton Houses, Lancashire
 - Brick Houses, Yorkshire
 - Quaking Houses, Durham
 - Water Houses, Yorkshire
 - Bottom House, Staffordshire
 - New House, Kent
 - Mite Houses, Cumbria
 - Lyneham House, Devon
 - Church Houses, Yorkshire
 - Dye House, Northumberland
 - Spittal Houses, Yorkshire
 - Street Houses, Yorkshire
 - Tow House, Northumberland
 - Halfway House, Shropshire
 - Halfway Houses, Kent
 - High Houses, Essex
 - Flush House, Yorkshire
 - White House, Suffolk
 - Wood House, Lancashire
 - Bank Houses, Lancashire
 - Lower House, Cheshire
 - Marsh Houses, Lancashire
 - Chapel House, Lancashire
 - Close House, Durham
 - Guard House, Yorkshire
 - Hundle Houses, Lincolnshire
 - Hundred House, Powys
 - Thorley Houses, Hertfordshire
 - School House, Dorset
 
Photos
7,776 photos found. Showing results 621 to 640.
Maps
370 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 745 to 1.
Memories
10,360 memories found. Showing results 311 to 320.
Longleat
My grandfather Cecil Welch, who was the local estate agent and auctioneer based at the Old Town Hall in the High Street, bought several old cottages next to the blacksmiths in Church End for his son John and wife Peggy, at the vast ...Read more
A memory of Great Dunmow in 1948
School!
Memory of the hated Catholic school I was sent to, me being one of three Church of England girls, meant I was treated like an outcast! Beautiful house, and grounds, I learnt to ride there, it was my only way to get away ...Read more
A memory of Denford Park (Training Coll) in 1958 by
Boyhood Memories From 1952
It was around this time that the tram lines were taken up from Sunderland Road in Gateshead. The men stored the old lines in Somerset Street and Devonshire Street. As boys we would dig up the tar from around the ...Read more
A memory of Gateshead in 1952 by
Lightning Strikes
This is August 1953, I was 10. We were playing cricket on the clay field with some older lads, the stumps were iron and came from Spencers steel works which was nearby and stuff like this was easily got. Anyway I remember it was ...Read more
A memory of Newburn in 1953 by
Hyde End House
I was at school (Lindfield) in this fine old Georgian building from 1947-1951 and spent many happy hours playing in the extensive grounds and old outbuildings and stables. One year our dormitory was above the stable block where the ...Read more
A memory of Brimpton in 1947 by
Childhood Memories From 1949
I was born in Hubert Terrace which ran off Bank Street and along to Cuthbert Street. Further down was School Street and Marian Street which ran along to Derwentwater Road, and on Derwentwater Road was Lady Vernon ...Read more
A memory of Gateshead by
Childhood Memories Great Bardfield 1969
My late parents were the landlord and landlady of the Vine public house. I was just coming into teenage years. Friends came from the base who lived in the village. The pub itself was refurbished in ...Read more
A memory of Great Bardfield in 1969 by
A Quiet Haven Of Peace.
I lived next door to Davenham Church, and one summer's day, when I was about 7, I went for a walk around the churchyard. Hearing a rustling noise on the ground, I crouched down, parted some long grass, and found a baby ...Read more
A memory of Davenham in 1959 by
Looking Back To The Early Days
I was born in rented 'rooms' at Wordsworth Road in 1936 and came to move with my parents to five different addresses at Easington before I moved away from the area, when I married in 1963. But although my ...Read more
A memory of Easington Colliery in 1900 by
A Farm Workers Daughter In Dunsyre
Dunsyre was my first school, there were only 7 children in the whole school, myself and my two brothers all went there. I loved my teacher, she showed me great kindness, her name was Miss Low, I will never forget ...Read more
A memory of Dunsyre in 1954 by
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Captions
6,977 captions found. Showing results 745 to 768.
Strangely, in an area where most old timber houses are having their plaster removed, the black and white house pictured here has since been plastered and painted white.
The Friary was the Richmond town house of the Huttons, the squires of Marske; it later belonged to the Robinson family for many years.
The Friary was the Richmond town house of the Huttons, the squires of Marske; it later belonged to the Robinson family for many years.
Built in the early 19th century, Preshute House was home to the Rev P W Taylor, MA at the time of this photograph.
The house nearest the camera was once the village poorhouse. It dates from the 16th century.
This delightful house, originally known as Halton Grange, was built by the soap manufacturer, Thomas Johnson in the 1850s.
This great house near Fowey was the seat of the Rashleigh family. It was surrounded by its own wooded grounds, leading down to the sea at Polridmouth Bay.
To the east, beyond the town hall, houses grew up along the road out of the town as it descended off the ridge towards the River Colne.
Plenty of stone-built houses and cottages stand in the shadow of Wytham Great Wood, and just to the south lies 700-acre Wytham Park. The house is now part of Oxford University.
It is a beautiful Jacobean house, now in the care of the National Trust and open to visitors. Kipling's literary work 'Puck of Pook's Hill' (1906) is set in the area.
The White Lion, one of many public houses in the village, was called the Rose and Crown in 1766, when it formed part of a marriage settlement between Mary Field and John Smith of Hitchin.
The large shelter and the Jubilee fountain replaced the grand wrought iron gates of Torbay House as the focal point of Torbay Road.
The bank to the right, where the car is parked, now houses a boat hire firm, Castle Narrowboats.
Walsingham is built around the ruins of a monastic house, celebrated for its shrine to Our Lady of Walsingham. It is an important place of pilgrimage, second only to Becket's tomb at Canterbury.
Addlestone grew up in the mid 19th century with the arrival of the railway, when a few villas and many more terraces and pairs of artisan houses were built.
The well spring and the house date from the early 1700s.
The Penwith House Temperance Hotel, established in 1880, is providing hot or cold luncheons but there is no alcohol available to celebrate.
This house was built by the three Medley brothers in c1750 in the grounds of Buxted Park, situated about two miles north of Uckfield.
This picture gives a tantalising glimpse of the wonderful Red House Cone, which belongs to Stuart & Sons, makers of crystal glass.
Children from the rather plain terraced houses have been given the job of taking the baby out for a pram ride.
This is the most spectacular house in Ipswich, redesigned c1670 by the Sparrow family. The first floor has oriel windows, in the centre of which are the arms of Charles II.
Polkerris has hardly changed, with virtually no new houses in 70 years.
Bleak House (with the pedimented doorway, right) has been demolished, and rebuilt to an almost identical design.
The building on the right is the Manor House.
Places (80)
Photos (7776)
Memories (10360)
Books (1)
Maps (370)