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Maps
1,353 maps found.
Books
3 books found. Showing results 889 to 3.
Memories
2,048 memories found. Showing results 371 to 380.
Childhood Memories
Just a few memories from when I lived in Althorne. We moved there from a very different way of living and were told we would find it hard to Fit in. Well in the summer holidays of September 77 we all turned up Mum Ann, Dad Brian, ...Read more
A memory of Althorne by
Childhood Memories
I was born at no 3 Sussex Street off West Street, Oldham. Our house had one room downstairs one upstairs. No back door you had to go up the street and down an alleyway to use the tippler toilet. The downstairs had a large black ...Read more
A memory of Oldham in 1940 by
Childhood Memories
RE: Growing up in Fawley Memories of my misspent youth growing up in Fawley were brought to the fore last Marc;, as my dear mum passed away, myself, husband and youngest son spent 5 lovely days in a rented house in Hythe as we ...Read more
A memory of Fawley in 1951 by
Childhood Memories Of Barnes. 1956 1963
I was born in Cleveland Gardens In April 1956 and went to Westfield Infants until just before my eighth birthday and then we moved to Surrey. I have one particular memory when it was my fifth birthday. I decided ...Read more
A memory of Barnes by
Childhood Memories Of Pershore Hall
My parents and I lived in one of the flats in Pershore Hall for about two or three years, when I was a toddler in the early 1960s. Probably between 1963 and 1965 (I was born in 1962). Naturally my memories are ...Read more
A memory of Pershore Hall by
Childhood Memory Of The 1960 S
My Grandparents Wilfred and Dinah Newton ran the Black Lion pub in the 1960s, I believe, although I do not remember going there. But what I do remember as a 3 or 4 year old is going for a walk with my ...Read more
A memory of Llanfair Talhaiarn by
Childhood On Castleford Road
I remember the fields and Beckbridge prefabs. I and my sister attended the infants school , set back from Castleford road sadly no more except the walls remain .Swam in the old Baths where asda, s store now stands.I ...Read more
A memory of Normanton in 1961
Childhood Summer Holidays At Taylor's Rock, Woodhouse Eaves
I spent many a summer holiday as a child (between 1976 and around 1983) at Taylor's Rock on Beacon Road, Woodhouse Eaves. I still consider it to be the only place I have ever truly ...Read more
A memory of Woodhouse Eaves in 1982 by
Children Home In Stroud
I was taken to the home by a lady in uniform from Hystfield, near Berkeley, Glos. I had no idea where I was going and how long I was going to be there. The reason I taken there was that my mum was ill and in hospital and the ...Read more
A memory of Stroud in 1956 by
Childrens Beach Events Mid 1950s
I can remember organised races and games, promoted by the publishers of 'Sunny Stories' and the Hulton Press comics, which took place on Viking Bay or Louisa? Bay. You needed to have a copy of one of the papers ...Read more
A memory of Broadstairs in 1954 by
Captions
1,059 captions found. Showing results 889 to 912.
Now a tree-clad hilltop fort, this is another example of the many forts built by the Iron Age people. To date it has never been excavated.
'The Queen of Welsh resorts', Llandudno preserves much of its Victorian flavour, with its sweeping promenade faced by numerous hotels, its expanse of sands between the headlands of the Great and Little
The name derives from bos, Latin for ox, and ton, Anglo-Saxon for township. A Roman villa was here from AD200.
The tower of St Wilfrid's Church had to be the perch of the photographer for him to take this shot.
Frith's Victorian photographer was in the lane leading to the abbey gateway, and looking across the Market Place to what is now undoubtedly the finest building in Abingdon: the Town Hall.
This route heads for the beautiful Mendip Hills, the carboniferous limestone ridge that separates the Avon valley and Bath and Bristol from the rest of Somerset.
A late Edwardian scene before development took place along Grand Parade, and when grassy sand dunes filled the space where the Embassy Centre is now situated.
Worthing's was a good example, with screens to protect the band from the sea breezes and an elegant wrought iron openwork cupola to its ogee roof.
These timber-clad cottages, standing at the foot of the white cliffs, are part of a small community which developed both as a bathing resort and as a residential quarter in the closing years
These timber-clad cottages, standing at the foot of the white cliffs, are part of a small community which developed both as a bathing resort and as a residential quarter in the closing years
Trefriw, like so many Welsh villages, boasts a long history which is not always evident from the predominantly 19th- century buildings.
The Floating Bridge was for many the only way to cross the river at this point. This 1950s photograph somehow captures the spirit of that austere period following the war.
Nestling in a combe between two rocky hills, the tower of the parish church of St Michael is clearly visible in this view of the town, taken from the Cobb, on which the Duke of Monmouth landed on 11
Three hundred years ago, Bothwell was a strategically important village, its bridge being the only one over the Clyde apart from Glasgow Bridge.
Here is Larne the holiday resort, with its own segment of the rugged Antrim Coast.
The heart of Georgian Weymouth overlooks the sands from the Gloucester Hotel (top left) and the Royal Hotel (centre left), in a broad sweep around to the Victorian spire of St John's Church and Brunswick
Now a tree-clad hilltop fort, this is another example of the many forts built by the Iron Age people. To date it has never been excavated.
The wheeled bathing machines of earlier pictures have been replaced by this array of circular tents, allowing Edwardians to divest themselves in privacy.
Until 1880 this area was the butchers' shambles, then replaced by the pump (in the shelter, foreground).
This photograph shows Witton Gilbert's war memorial in its original position on part of the dene on a popular and well used walk down to a bathing hole where people used to swim, and where parents brought
The village sits high above the flood plain of the Medway. This peaceful scene shows the 14th-century five-arched ragstone bridge, which is considered by some to be the finest in the south-east.
Just horse-drawn traffic, a bicycle and one distant motor car are the only vehicles in the street.
The tower of St Wilfrid's Church had to be the perch of the photographer for him to take this shot.
Here in what was thought to be the largest village in the Fylde we have a good example of a Fylde cruck-built thatched homestead, of which very few remain.
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