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Maps
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Memories
22,900 memories found. Showing results 3,201 to 3,210.
St. Leonards 1950's
Does anyone remember a girl named Mary Jones - her brother was Jimmy Jones and cousin was James Barnard. She was my best friend for such a short time and then had to leave infants/junior school as her dad remarried (her mum ...Read more
A memory of Streatham in 1950 by
Insurance Offices Christmas Party (North Motherwell) 1950s
Anyone who lived in North Motherwell during the 1950s may remember the single-storey, concrete-built insurance offices (long demolished) that were situated at the top of Fort Street ...Read more
A memory of Motherwell by
My Sister's 5th Birthday
My sister Lesley spent her 5th birthday at Heswall hospital. On 26th April 1957. She'd had encephalitis and then became epileptic. She had a birthday party on the ward, we have some photos of her sat in her cot/bed. She ...Read more
A memory of Heswall in 1957 by
Paines Grays High Street
I remember the shop very well,I went out with a girl who worked there.Her name was Rosalie.I worked at Gorstens the butchers my father was the manager.
A memory of Grays in 1958 by
Sons Of Rest
I work for the Parks Department at Wolverhampton City Council. The Sons of Rest building that was in Heath Town Park was demolished a few years ago (c) 2011. Does anyone have any information about its founder or any other history ...Read more
A memory of Heath Town by
Hounslow Cinemas
Doreen Jewess, Pat Bezant, Pat Sharman, Rita Bolton and myself would often walk from Midsummer Avenue past the little park at the top, past the horse trough at the Wellington where the trolley buses turned round and carried on ...Read more
A memory of Hounslow in 1950 by
My Gret Uncle Alf ,,,,
When I was 5 years old my Mother and my Grandmother took me to visit my Grandmothers brother Alfred who was a patient in The Pastures ,,,,it was quite a scary experience for a 5 year old ,,, my poor old Great Uncle Alf had ...Read more
A memory of Mickleover in 1956 by
My Memories Of My Home Town Ilkeston .
I was born on the sofa in the parlour at my Mothers home at 13 Lower Granby Street ,,,,Orchard Kitchens stands in that same spot today ,,I was born in 1951 and even now 63 years later I still remember some ...Read more
A memory of Long Eaton in 1951 by
Great Times Playing In The Fields.
I was born in Greenford on 1st Oct 1943 (25 Greenway Gardens) We were bombed out & were evacuated to various places. It must have been after the war we moved to 7 Laughton Rd in Northolt. We didn't live there ...Read more
A memory of Northolt in 1946 by
Wood End Schools
Both my wife and I went to Wood End schools. In our day, a girl who did not pass the 11+ exam would spend her whole school life in the one school, going through Nursery, Infants, Junior and Senior schools. As there were no senior ...Read more
A memory of Northolt in 1948 by
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Captions
9,654 captions found. Showing results 7,681 to 7,704.
By the mid 1950s, the Bridge Inn had a flint porch, thatched to match the roof. The area outside had been made into an attractive garden where refreshments purchased at the annexe could be enjoyed.
Rows of stone cottages surround the Cross in Geddington village centre, built in 1294 to commemorate Queen Eleanor of Castile, wife of Edward I.
Wilfred Pickles used to tell a story about a mother and her son at a guest house. He had a broad accent, which embarrassed his mum.
Wilfred Pickles used to tell a story about a mother and her son at a guest house. He had a broad accent, which embarrassed his mum.
These gates, with agricultural implements incorporated, are situated at the Holly Lodge on the Boughton Road west of the village.
Church Street and the roads off to the left are part of a grid of Victorian brick, terraced, straight streets.
Skegness owed its popular success to the railway, which reached here in 1873 as an extension from the then terminus at Wainfleet.
At the Stamford Road end of the street, the newly-built showroom of Tutty's sold kitchen units and appliances. Newman's next door was an old-fashioned ironmongers, which has resisted change.
A 'new style' double-decker bus pulls up at the Library bus stop. Piccadilly Buildings, opposite, were designed to harmonise with the Library.
The Blue Bell was kept by F Glossop, who was also a maltster; the landlord at the White Hart was Thomas Booth; and William Clark ran the Three Crowns.
In the mid-1950s Royston still appears to be a place of cloth caps and head-scarves, and apart from a handful of little differences we could just as easily be looking at Royston in the mid-1930s.
As Sheffield expanded, a number of turnpike toll bars which had once been in the country were now located within built-up areas.
On the right is the Swan, the only hotel in the city in the 1920s to be RAC and AA listed.
From the 12th century, the rearing of sheep for their wool became a major source of revenue for the monastic houses in the north of England.
THE MAIN EAST-WEST thoroughfare in Bearsden, one of Glasgow's northern suburbs, is named Roman Road, for it follows the line of a roadway constructed by the Romans in AD 142 along the south side
In 1635 the town archery butts stood at the eastern entrance to Twickenham in Richmond Road - a reminder of the need for a standing army in a constant state of readiness for war abroad.
There have been several royal visitors to Basildon over the years.
The Antonine Wall is being put forward as a World Heritage site, in collaboration with Germany, Austria and Hungary to mark the European boundary of the Roman Empire.
The first sod of the railway line at Clitheroe was cut on 30 December 1846.
At the top of the High Street on the right is the Cowes Advertiser office, but just before that is the NSPCC charity shop.
We are looking from just inside Birmingham Road up Castle Hill, with Tipton Road off to the right. On the extreme left is the Station Garage, then an Austin dealership.
Situated three miles south of Rhyl, Rhuddlan was once a strategic location, as it was the lowest point at which the Clwyd could be crossed.
A former royal manor, Bray is well known for the song 'The Vicar of Bray', celebrating the vicar who changed sides several times during the Civil War and after to keep his living.
Few buildings remain which pre-date the Enclosure Acts, effectively extinguishing the ties within rural communi- ties in much of Leicestershire, and indeed the Midland counties.
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