Places

4 places found.

Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.

Photos

6 photos found. Showing results 621 to 6.

Maps

65 maps found.

Books

1 books found. Showing results 745 to 1.

Memories

4,575 memories found. Showing results 311 to 320.

Qeggs

I attended Queen Elizabeth’s Girls Grammar School from 1954 to 1959, and in 1957 the Queen came to visit. We all had to practise our lessons for ages beforehand (mine was French), and when she came to our classroom she spoke to us in French. We ...Read more

A memory of Barnet by Linda Smith

The Queen's Visit

I cannot be specific as to the date of the Queen's visit because I was very young at the time. On the left hand side of the road you can see what was at one time the post office but which later became a carpet shop.  On the ...Read more

A memory of Little Sutton in 1956 by Kathleen Green

When We Had A Shop

I was born in Little Marlow in 1947 and lived three doors away from the village shop, run by Miss Littlewood. I would go there and weigh the sultanas, currants etc., and put them into little blue bags. My Mum (Phyllis ...Read more

A memory of Little Marlow in 1950 by Liz Hughes

Durham Buildings

The pub over the road did a singalong every Saturday night ending in a very long finale of "Hit the Road Jack - Don't you come back no more, no more ,no more, no more", and so on. I don't know about the pub but I doubt if anybody ...Read more

A memory of Battersea

Our Visit

We traveled from Missouri U.S.A. in 2015. Having reached Bonsall, Derbyshire, a kind, elderly resident told us she used to deliver meat to Mouldridge Grange for her uncle the butcher, as she pointed across the rooftops to his ...Read more

A memory of Mouldridge Grange by Gary Bonsall

Late Childhood Memories Of Watchfield

Like others on the site I have very happy memories of living in Watchfield (1956 to 1966).My father was the Hall Manager of Kitchener Hall (RMCS) and we lived in army quarters in Hill Road. The houses were two ...Read more

A memory of Watchfield by Susan Richmond

The Salford Girl

I was born in 1947 and lived at 52 West St, Lower Broughton, Salford 7. I attended St. John's School for girls, just off Chapel St. My parents were Annie and David Johnson. I had an older sister, Jean, and a younger brother, David. My ...Read more

A memory of Salford by Anne Whyte

Alice Eastwood Nee Colthup

My great aunt Alice was a teacher at Five Ashes village school in the early years of the 20th century. She was born in New Brompton, Kent on 29.8.1879 and died 23.12.1966 and is buried in the village. She married Fred ...Read more

A memory of Five Ashes in 1900 by Michael Canton

Days Gone By

My family arrived in Seaforth late in 1939 after we were shipped back from Gibraltar where my father was stationed with the Kings Regiment. Early memories of our house in Holly Grove are vague. My sister Maureen and I, along with ...Read more

A memory of Seaforth in 1940 by Charles Hegarty

Whitley Bay Colman Cafe Boarding House On The Esplanade

Does anyone remember a cafe / boarding house on the Esplanade, called Colman or Colman's? It was run by some relatives of mine and I am trying to trace the family tree; I do not know their ...Read more

A memory of Whitley Bay in 1930 by S Hill

Captions

926 captions found. Showing results 745 to 768.

Caption For Chirk, Viaduct And Aqueduct C1955

Its majesty was attenuated somewhat when the Great Western Railway line from Wolverhampton to Chester came along and was built even higher.

Caption For Dumfries, The Old And New Bridges C1890

Robert Burns came to the town in 1791 and lived with his wife and family in a house in Millhole Brae.

Caption For Bungay, The Castle C1965

When Henry II came to the throne, he resolved the lack of royal castles in Suffolk by confiscating four of Hugh's.

Caption For Preston, Post Office 1913

Two years later the Art Gallery opened, and the whole building came into use.

Caption For Scarisbrick, The Hall From The Lake 1896

The Hall was famed for its oak carvings, panelling, plaster work, and handprinted wall papers.

Caption For Quorn, The Church C1960

south aisle or Farnham Chapel contains monuments of interest, particularly one to John Farnham of Quorn Hall attributed to Epiphanius Evesham (1570-c1633), whose superb talent should have ensured his fame

Caption For New Brighton, General View 1892

James Atherton, who bought the 170 acres of land on this north-east corner of Wirral, had to modify his original grand plans.

Caption For Leicester, The Roman Remains And Jewry Wall C1955

The site was excavated in the 1930s by Dame Kathleen Kenyon, but it has managed to remain a comparatively unsung part of Roman history.

Caption For Warrington, Town Hall, New Gates 1895

Warrington's Town Hall was originally Bank Hall, built between 1749-50 by the world-famous architect James Gibbs as a home for a local businessman, Thomas Patten.

Caption For Brighton, The Ferry 1902

In 1887 Peter and Alexander Campbell decided to relocate their excursion steamer business from Scotland to the relatively untapped Bristol Channel, where they soon came to dominate the market.

Caption For Ansdell, Entrance To Fairhaven Golf Links 1927

Fortunately Richard Ansdell RA, the world-renowned Victorian painter, chose to build a house, Starr Hills, amongst the sandhills; although his hope was for solitude, he brought fame and expansion to the

Caption For Toddington, The Green C1965

Marrying the Duke of Monmouth, she sheltered him at Toddington when his scheme to take the throne from James II came unstuck.

Caption For Capel, Aldhurst Farm 1906

Three years after William Cobbett rode through this stretch of countryside in August 1823, the Dale family came to Aldhurst Farm.

Caption For Sharpness, The Severn Railway Bridge C1955

Vessels collided with the bridge quite frequently, but the fatal blow came in October 1960.

Caption For Churchtown, Entrance To Botanical Gardens C1965

Southport local authority came to the rescue in 1932, when financial difficulties were about to force a sale to a housing development company.

Caption For Liverpool, Church Street C1905

Bunney's was the shop for unusual gifts and imported goods from all over the world, which came to Britain via Liverpool Docks.

Caption For Horncastle, Market Place C1965

Sir Joseph came from the nearby village of Revesby, and the plants he brought back from his journey with Captain Cook formed Kew Gardens.

Caption For Odiham, High Street C1960

For some 100 years it was the residence of successive members of one family: James Brooks came to Odiham in 1818 to join an attorney's partnership, and his descendants continued as solicitors in

Caption For Alderley Edge, London Road 1896

During the Second World War, Mrs Armitage, who had taken to using her pony and trap to save petrol, would tie the pony up to the pump when she came down to the village to shop, never mind

Caption For Wilmslow, Dean Row Chapel 1897

He in his turn was expelled in 1660, and Thomas Wright came back, just for one year, as he died in 1661.

Caption For Wrexham, Town Hall In High Street 1895

Elihu Yale, founder of Yale University in the USA, came from the Wrexham area (his family was associated with Erddig Hall), and he is buried at St Giles's church.

Caption For Bramber, The Village Street C1950

In those days the sea came much closer, and it used to be a fisherman's home.

Caption For Boston Spa, Thorp Arch Hall 1895

Stone came from local quarries within a short distance from here, and even the clay for bricks was found on his land.

Caption For Liverpool, Custom House 1887

Things came to a head in 1706 when the Excise launched a full investigation of the port over alleged customs avoidance.