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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 351 to 360.
Holidays At Clearbrook
My Grandparents lived at Clearbrook, and as a child I used to spend nearly all of my Summer Holidays with them. I used to love going for rides on the train to Tavistock and Princetown. My Gran took me on a train to ...Read more
A memory of Clearbrook in 1955 by
The Best Years Of My Life
Happy memories indeed. For an eight year old living in the village in the mid 1950s it was heaven. Long summer evenings and school holidays playing in woods, open fields and on building sites. Or cycling (yes at ...Read more
A memory of Earls Barton in 1955 by
Childhood Holidays
My grandparents lived at Clearbrook, and as a child I used to spend nearly all of my summer holidays with them. I used to love going for rides on the train to Tavistock and Princetown. My gran took me on a train to Princetown ...Read more
A memory of Clearbrook in 1955 by
Duffers
We are in year 1955 and I'm sure you older ones from around here will remember what Duffers were, this was a task game where all the gang joined in. We had different modes which would take our fancy, pole vaulting was where we would cut a ...Read more
A memory of Newburn in 1955 by
Hilly Fields 1955
My former surname was Lovelock, I attended Chace Girls' School in Rosemary Avenue and I used to go through Hilly Fields on my way home from school to Crews Hill where I lived. Yes, I too remember the talent competiton held in the ...Read more
A memory of Enfield in 1955 by
Abridge Picture A106012
This photo appears at the back of Essex Living Memories (pages 112 - 113) and in "I Remember When ... Memories of Britain (page 134)". The two ladies in the foreground with the prams appear familiar - The lady on the left ...Read more
A memory of Abridge in 1955
Senghennydd Railway Station
At 17 years of age, after interviews at British Railways commercial HQ at Cymric Buildings in Cardiff, I started work as a Booking Clerk at Senghennydd Station, replacing David Sellick who lived overlooking the ...Read more
A memory of Senghenydd in 1955 by
Graham & Fishers
The building nearest the camera on the right is (was) Graham and Fishers - founded by my great-grandfather Tom. His sons Alg (my grandfather) and Spencer worked in the business all their lives, and my father Douglas worked there ...Read more
A memory of Chatteris in 1954 by
Eastwood Nottinghamshire
I lived with my grandmother (Elizabeth Jones), mother and sister at 72 Church Street Eastwood until I was about 7 years old (1956). My grandmother owned 4 (possibly 5) cottages in a row (ours being number 72) in Church ...Read more
A memory of Eastwood in 1954 by
George Maddison
thanks to this photograpgh i have identified a photograph of my late father taken in 1954 we all thought it was the hexham bridge but now know it is the bywell bridge by the number and type of arches over the river thanks philip maddison
A memory of Bywell in 1954 by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 841 to 864.
Here Withypool is viewed from its six-arched bridge over the Barle. The squat tower of St Andrew's Church can be seen above the old Methodist chapel (centre).
The shopping arcade was very much a Victorian concept, enabling the shopper to browse without getting wet on rainy days.
The roads of the New Forest tend to be much busier these days than they were when this photograph was taken.
The cannon would not have been much use in 1940. Mablethorpe is to the right and north.
There is no north aisle, but instead the plain Norman arch on the left is for a transept which contains the organ.
This view remains much the same today.
It was flanked by the high Abbey precinct wall, and the arched entrance with supporting towers formed a porch.
The waves of the sea echo along the Chine on wilder days, whilst much of the Island's southern coastline can be seen from the Observatory.
This graceful arched bridge over the River Frome has wooden rails, which still guard the road.
The ever-changing coastline has very much dictated the fortunes of Aldeburgh, but one thing which has not changed is the activity of local fishermen, who park their boats on the shingle bank which runs
The wonderfully over-the- top Baroque town hall is a triumph for the town, and much better than the pallid neo-classical one it replaced.
By the date of this photograph, much of the town's main streets were established, and they display the characteristic detail of the period: projecting shop fronts proudly display their goods (including
The hill-top town of Shaftesbury, or Shaston as it is sometimes known, owes its foundation to Alfred the Great, showing much evidence of its Saxon origins.
Tiny fishing smacks still set out from the cove each day, much as they probably did in 1588 when the Spanish Armada was first sighted off the Devon coast.
Apart from improvements in the sea defences, the view is much the same today. It was here that Sir John Millais painted that most famous of pictures, 'The Boyhood of Raleigh'.
Most obviously, a rood screen, erected in memory of Harold Woollcombe-Boyce, who died on active service during the Great War, now spans the chancel arch.
The church hall, in Rectory Road, was much more central to Pitsea than the medieval church, perched on its hilltop site.
This 16th-century arch, leading from the original village down to the harbour, was once fitted with a portcullis and gates as a protection for the settlement against pirates and sea-raiders.
When it was built in 1832, the Grosvenor Bridge was said to have the longest single stone arch span in Europe (200ft).
The high arches of the nave arcades echo the proportions of Canterbury cathedral.
This photograph was taken in the year that Giles Gilbert Scott designed the much-loved red telephone box, which was soon to become a familiar sight all over the country.
It was much restored in the 19th century. The wall of the cloisters, a feature of monastic buildings, can be seen on the right of the picture, although no monks ever dwelled within these!
The gardens on the left are much smaller since the road has been widened.
North Bovey in the latter half of the 19th century, was initially less than impressed with his flock: 'My new parishioners were very turbulent people ... the women were awful ... the whole village was much
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