Places
12 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
191 photos found. Showing results 641 to 191.
Maps
115 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 769 to 1.
Memories
1,374 memories found. Showing results 321 to 330.
Summers At Mappleton
We (Nelson family) used to share a bungalow on leased land from Len the farmer, Mappleton with the Grimsby family in the early late 40s early 50s. One of our neighbours was a relative of David Whitfield I remember harvest ...Read more
A memory of Mappleton by
Summers In Portrush
We lived in Belfast and our summer holidays were in Portrush. My father was a pianist and his dance band played the summer season at the Seabank Hotel. I and my sister remember playing on the beach at The Arcadia as this was a ...Read more
A memory of Portrush in 1947 by
Summers In Blackhall
My Grandma - Bertha Lanaghan - lived in Third Street for over 50 years. She made hookey rugs as big as a room from old blankets, coats, etc whatever she could get, to sell for extra money. She dyed the wool three ...Read more
A memory of Blackhall Colliery by
Summerford [Boys Paradise]
I was born at Maryfield 25 Feb 1941, a screaming, greetin 10 pounder. The family moved to Summerford the next year. As I got older I began to realize I had landed in boys' paradise, so many things to do and so much to ...Read more
A memory of Camelon in 1940 by
Summer Of 1990
I was lucky enough to go abroad for our family holiday every year. Towards the end of the 1980s my second holiday around August time would be to go to Treyarnon Bay with my best friend Becci and her parents, and I fell in love ...Read more
A memory of St Merryn in 1990 by
Summer Hols In Milford On Sea
When I was a child, living in Coventry, my parents used to pack me off to Milford to get some fresh sea air and spend quality time with my cousins! My best times were when we went off to buy sweets - I loved ...Read more
A memory of Milford on Sea in 1961 by
Summer Holiday, 1958
My family and I stayed in the Elmhurst Hotel, Cromer for two weeks during August 1958. My brother and I made several coach excursions from Cromer - to Yarmouth, Lowestoft, Sandringham, King's Lynn and Ely. I went alone to ...Read more
A memory of Cromer in 1958 by
Summer Days At Ovingdean
My mother and I had many happy summer days at Ovingdean in the 1960's. It was easy to catch a bus there from central Brighton, disembarking near St Dunstan's home, walking by underpass beneath the busy main road, then taking ...Read more
A memory of Brighton by
Summer Of 64
In June 1964 a group of us Belfast grammar school boys crossed the sea to Liverpool and took the long coach journey south to spend the school summer vacation working in the Bournemouth beach cafes. Three of us shared a bedroom ...Read more
A memory of Bournemouth in 1964 by
Summer In The Country
In 1949 when I was six, my two cousins and I were sent to Burnham Beeches for a holiday. We lived in the East End of London. We loved it there, it was summer and very hot, to play all day in the fields was such freedom. The ...Read more
A memory of Burnham in 1949 by
Captions
1,131 captions found. Showing results 769 to 792.
They are about to walk the plank down to the shingle beach beside the cafe (bottom left). Lulworth was a favourite stopping point on services between Weymouth and Swanage.
Concerns were aroused after a number of incidents where bowls fell over the cliff and narrowly missed people on the beach below.
Subsequent silting of the river mouth and its movement to the east thanks to a shifting shingle beach led to the decline of the port at Steyning, and the establishment of the town of New Shoreham by the
Beyond the line of bathing machines, waves crash against the beach in this turn-of-the-century photograph. Much of the town's architecture dating from this period survives today.
The inscription on the stone says that unscrupulous thieves plundered the bodies as they lay on the beach.
We view the town from the beach below the Royal Standard. The North Wall (right centre) has since been joined to the mainland (in 1979) by a random wall of rough boulders.
Note the wheeled bathing machines down by the sea, and the curious beach tents and a few deckchairs. Long skirts and parasols are the fashion for the ladies.
A steeply shelving beach on the left-hand side contrasts strongly with the gently sloping mud flats on the other side of this river.
It is afternoon milking time, judging by the shadows, at Seatown Farm in Sea Vale Lane, which leads from Chideock to a beach beside the Anchor Inn.
The low coastal cliffs below the village provided a pleasant walk above the beach. Hidden by the trees is St Peter's Church, believed to have been founded in 967.
It had its own private staircase down to the beach.
Llangranog has a small, sheltered bay with a sandy beach on which about 20 ships were built during the 19th century. Like Tresaith, it became popular with holidaymakers from the 1930s.
This scene has hardly changed for many years; the beach at Polridmouth is still only accessible on foot.
The tall building with a flag flying at the top (right) was the Beach House Temperance Hotel.
Scarborough's sandy beaches are still as popular with northern holidaymakers, who still throng to the seaside town for the donkey rides, candy floss and sticks of rock as they did 50 years ago.
To the left, overlooking the beach, stands the lifeboat station and, on the right, one of the town's two lighthouses.
The ship on the beach is typical of the two-masted coastal schooners that plied their trade in the days before motor vehicles came to be used for the moving of commodities.
The valley of the River Seaton runs inland from the beach to Hessenford.
The beach tents give the picture a period feeling. A bandstand once stood on the open area in front of the Marine Hotel.
Although Wells is a natural seaside resort with a soft sandy beach and shallow sea for bathing, the lookout and lifeboat station in the background mark the possibility of dangers, particularly for those
These dunes were banked up to stop sea encroachments, and this set of steps had to be erected to enable access to the beach.
Note the wheeled stalls on the beach, and the row of chairs all in a line.
The long promontory of Filey Brigg, part of a huge curve of cliffs, shelters this long stretch of firm beach from the worst of the north-east gales. A new parade was constructed in 1955.
At the beginning of the last millennium, marauding Danes landed on these sandy beaches and put the village of Exmouth to fire and sword.
Places (12)
Photos (191)
Memories (1374)
Books (1)
Maps (115)