Places
12 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
191 photos found. Showing results 741 to 191.
Maps
115 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 889 to 1.
Memories
1,374 memories found. Showing results 371 to 380.
The Swimming Pool Pre Lido Days.
Seeing this photo of the Swimming Pool brings back so many memories. It was where I took my Life Saving Certificate, and where we spent day after day with our friends and family. The day we moved to Prestatyn ...Read more
A memory of Prestatyn in 1958 by
East Barnet Village 1958 +
A 14 year old brought to the top of Longmore Avenue from the Thanet beaches! Cycling down to the village - walking with bike back up after the first third - so steep the gradient! Peter, Edna, June and Douglas ...Read more
A memory of East End Green in 1958 by
England 30th May 1942
I lived in Robin Hood Road, Sheepridge. Joined the Army in 1958 and came to Australia in 1968, and now live in the most expensive place on the planet. I wonder what happened to the people at Deighton County Secondary Modern ...Read more
A memory of Brighouse in 1958 by
Childrens Convalescence Home
I worked as a pre student nurse at the children's home. We took children from the West Yorkshire area suffering from Asthma and Eczema. Children from the age of 2 yrs until 12 yrs. A very strict Matron, scary in ...Read more
A memory of Hornsea in 1958
Childhood Holidays
My gran bought 3 caravans in 1957 which were on the caravan site at Lower Largo. My parents, brother, me, my aunt, my uncle and their 2 children all spent all our holidays there - summer, easter, bank hols, etc. Us children ...Read more
A memory of Lower Largo in 1957 by
Broadstairs And St Mary's Home 1957
I was 6 years old and had had bronchitis and asthma and so I was sent away from smoggy London to St Mary's Home in Broadstairs. I was taken with other young children on a train by a nurse in a brown uniform. ...Read more
A memory of Broadstairs in 1957 by
Leven In The 1950s
I was five and lived on Links Road where my father had a grocer's shop. I was able to run down the burn path to the beach to swim in the sea or play in paddling pool. We would go to the summer shows in the Beach pavillion ...Read more
A memory of Leven in 1957 by
Childhood Memories
Wonderful memories of Greatstone. My fifth birthday. A picnic on the vast sandy beach, playing hide & seek in the sand dunes, swimming in the sea-the water I recall was rather murky & the beach very muddy when ...Read more
A memory of Greatstone-on-Sea in 1957 by
Kirkcaldy Castle Near The Beach
I used to play in the castle and what we thought were dungeons in the middle to late 1950s. It was our playground for many years. We went to the beach nearly every day summer or winter. Loved the place to bits. My ...Read more
A memory of Kirkcaldy in 1957 by
Stoney Beach & The Lifeboat Station
Parents in the (old) Kinmel Arms, boozing over an extended lunch time - my brother and me exiled to the adjoining Stoney Beach where we passed the hours away crushing the softer red ...Read more
A memory of Moelfre in 1957 by
Captions
1,131 captions found. Showing results 889 to 912.
In this photograph the children are enjoying the delights of a typical English beach holiday. The cliff pathway in the distance is the start of a scenic walk to Cromer, some three miles away.
Sandsend is just three miles along the sandy beach from Whitby.
After exploring the beach all day, they were guaranteed to re-appear at the caravan door at teatime.
The town possesses one of the most extensive, and certainly one of the safest, bathing beaches in the kingdom.
Mr Boyd had clearly set his stall up to catch the eye of the visitor with spades for the beach along with gifts and photographs to take home.
Prestatyn is a very popular holiday resort, with three beaches and major leisure facilities. Its development from a little village straggling up a single high street began in 1870.
Erosion causes precipitous breaks, producing two miles of sheer cliffs from West Bay to Beach Road at Southover (right), where the boats and a cafe can be glimpsed.
Budleigh's long beach is made up of millions of large pebbles, or 'pobbles', as they are known locally.
or by taking a carriage or charabanc along the lanes, admiring the views across to Bournemouth, the Needles and the Isle of Wight as they went.The attraction of Studland is not only the splendid beach
As the tide is in, they are full of visitors in our photograph; the pebble beach is covered, so we see only the sandy bit of Heysham.
The wonderful sandy beaches of the Sands have a backdrop of stunning rock formations in shale and sandstone.
Another fort to have suffered from erosion is Sandown Castle on the Isle of Wight, which was built close to the beach in 1545.
The beach in the foreground seems to be a result of inadequate dredging. It provided extra space for spectators when regattas took place.
Although this photograph was taken for the view of the hotel above the bathing beach, of special interest here is the group of four new radio masts out on Poldhu cliffs.
Broadstairs still remains quieter and more select than its larger and noisier neighbours, and is especially in high favour with family parties, who find quite a little paradise on the sheltered beach.
Famous for the quality of its beaches, Millport developed as a resort following the construction of the harbour and the introduction of a ferry service to and from Largs.
Sussex beaches are mostly shingle above high water mark, so it is understandable that the two miles of golden sand between the mouth of the River Rother and the shingle banks of Dungeness should develop
Every effort has been made to intensify the holiday atmosphere: there are 'cabin' style chalets daubed with bright colours, rustic seats, flower-bedded lawns and plenty of beach space.
The Sandygate lane leading to the beach was made possible by removing an old cottage between Cambrian House and St Julian's Terrace.
The white building was the Coastguard Station, built in 1884-1904 here on the corner of South Parade to replace the Watch House, which was on the beach. Next to the flagpole is a signalling device.
Modern dormer windows tell us that 'home improvements' are on their way for these small Welsh cottages, and this lady offers morning tea and coffee in hers to visitors on their way to the beaches nearby
Beyond the building to the right is the John Collins Pleasure Beach. The big dipper (right) was dismantled in the 1970s - a big wheel had suffered a similar fate at an earlier date.
Stanley Park is next to the beach. There is a railway station nearby.
The beach is famous for its prettily-marked pebbles. Thanks to the absence of the railway, this charming little spot retains much of its primitive simplicity.
Places (12)
Photos (191)
Memories (1374)
Books (1)
Maps (115)