Maps

593 maps found.

1898-1901, Rootham's Green Ref. RNC819840
1898-1901, Salph End Ref. RNC824507
1898-1901, Odell Ref. RNC795944
1898-1901, Melchbourne Ref. RNC777791
1898-1901, Little Barford Ref. RNC756863
1901, Lower Dean Ref. RNC768988
1898-1901, Chadwell End Ref. RNC666018
1898-1901, Chapel End Ref. RNC666399
1898-1901, Cople Ref. RNC677177
1898-1901, Bushmead Ref. RNC657481
1898-1901, Clapham Green Ref. RNC669406
1898-1901, Brickhill Ref. RNC649718
1898-1901, Bourne End Ref. RNC646888
1919, East End Ref. POP697176
1919, Emmaus Village Carlton Ref. POP701254
1919, Harrowden Ref. POP727697
1919, Hatch End Ref. POP728271
1919, Cotton End Ref. POP678650
1896, Biddenham Ref. RNE639667
1946, Sevick End Ref. NPO827822

Books

2 books found. Showing results 73 to 2.

Memories

168 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.

Cargo Fleet

When I look back, they were probably the best years of my life though I didn't think so at the time, my mam had parted from my dad, I was 12, had never heard of Cargo Fleet, had lost my dad and was taken to this place Id never ...Read more

A memory of Cargo Fleet in 1968 by Alison Jones

Chickenley 1965 To 1973

I was born in Dewsbury in 1965 and moved to Chickenley when i was 1 and a half,i no longer live there,we moved out in 1977 to the West Country,it was great growing up in Chickenley.I remember as kids playing on the ...Read more

A memory of Chickenley in 1973 by John Qureshi

Childhood

My father was the village policeman until 1958 and we lived in the Police House which doubled as a Police Station (there was a counter for public use at the front of the house). We left for Corby in 1958 when I was 6. My memories ...Read more

A memory of Woodford Halse in 1957 by Alan Hamilton

Childhood Memories

This August 2014, on my way back from Whitby, I took a detour and called at Reighton Gap. The last time I was there was in the late 1950s / early 60's when we stayed at the bungalow my grandmother owned on Boat Cliff Road. I seem ...Read more

A memory of Reighton by akaye73

Chiswick Memories

My parents were both brought up in the Chiswick/Bedford Park/South Acton area. I was born in 1935 and spent my early years living on the Great West Road near to the Gillette factory. During WWII I spent much time visiting my ...Read more

A memory of Acton by Colin Bowles

Cinema House

This memory is for my Pops, Mr Thomas Raymond Manley who has recently passed on.  We talked for hours about his time in Wales as a young boy.  He lived in Evanstown near Gilfach Goch and had very fond memories of visiting the ...Read more

A memory of Gilfach Goch by Becky Manley

Colerne In The Second World War

My parents and I came to Colerne in late 1939, having left London shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War, and lived at Ford, a few miles from Colerne, for a few months. That winter, of 1939-40, was a ...Read more

A memory of Colerne in 1940 by John Bunting

Coronation

I started school at Stoneleigh East infants School the year of the Coronation and remember getting my mug full of Smarties and thinking school wasn't so bad. The headmistress was Mrs Bell and my first teacher was Miss Sparrow who ...Read more

A memory of Stoneleigh by summertime_ez

Direct Enlistment

It was the 24th May 1955 when I arrived, with a number of other lads, at Inkerman Bks to begin eighteen weeks training that would "hopefully" see us depart with the somewhat doubtful tital of Military Policemen. My memories of ...Read more

A memory of Knaphill in 1955 by Derrick Palmer

Donkey Derby At Wiveliscombe

Here is another tale of recollection of the Wiveliscombe Donkey Derby. In November 1967 we had moved from the New Forest to Uppingtons, 6 High Street Wiveliscombe, a strange 3 floored Georgian house that sat ...Read more

A memory of Wiveliscombe in 1968 by Julian Bishop

Captions

111 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.

Caption For Houghton Conquest, Houghton House 1897

Sad to say, the house was largely dismantled by the Duke of Bedford in 1794.

Caption For Lavendon, The Parish Church C1965

The busy A428 Northampton to Bedford Road winds through the village from west to east, curving round the parish churchyard's rubblestone retaining walls.

Caption For Bedford, St Paul's Church C1955

Inside, Bedford's chief historical treasure is the brass to Sir William Harpur and his wife, Dame Alice.

Caption For Charminster, The Village 1922

Henry VIII awarded Russell Woburn Abbey as a reward for service, and his descendants became Dukes of Bedford.

Caption For Bedford, Biddenham Church 1897

Across the Great Ouse we reach Biddenham, now virtually joined to Bedford by housing estates.

Caption For Bedford, Bunyan's Statue 1898

This statue of one of Bedforshire's famous sons was made by the noted sculptor, Boehm, in 1873, and presented to the town by the then Duke of Bedford in June 1874.

Caption For Biggleswade, Market Place 1925

In the distance is the Town Hall, which was designed by John Wing of Bedford and built in 1844.

Caption For Bedford, Town Bridge C1960

This view was taken from near the Bedford Rowing Club clubhouse just before the buildings on the right were demolished for Swan House in 1960.

Caption For Broom, The Village 1901

Situated to the south of Alcester on the Midland Railway line, Broom railway station was the interchange for a cross-country route linking up with the Midland main line from Rugby to Bedford.

Caption For Bedford, Suspension Bridge And Embankment Gardens C1960

Although there are no records of what that might have been, the words 'Villa Bedfordia' - Bedford Town - suggest it was as much an outpouring of civic pride in the town itself.

Caption For Bedford, Corn Exchange 1897

Another stone plaque commemorates its opening in April 1974 by the then Duke of Bedford.

Caption For Northampton, Thomas A Becket Well 1922

By an ancient tradi- tion he is supposed to have stopped at a well on the Bedford Road for a drink before continuing on his way, eventually tak- ing ship for France and exile.

Caption For Bedford, The Park Entrance Gates 1921

The gates were presented to the town by the Duke of Bedford, and the park was opened by his eldest son, the Marquess of Tavistock, in July 1888 during Joshua Hawkins's fourth mayoralty.

Caption For Bedford, The Town Bridge 1921

Its foundation stone was laid by the Marquess of Tavistock, the eldest son of the Duke of Bedford, in 1811.

Caption For Bedford, The Howard Monument 1898

John Howard (1726- 1790) lived at nearby Cardington, and was twice Mayor of Bedford and in 1773 Lord High Sheriff of the county.

Caption For Bedford, The River And The Bridge 1921

To its left and out of view are the late 1880s gables of the Bedford Rowing Club.

Caption For Stroud, George Street 1910

Horwood's fancy goods shop is on the corner with Bedford Street (right).

Caption For Bedford, The River And Town Bridge C1960

The 1960s were a decade of great change in Bedford's skyline.

Caption For Bedford, St Peter's Street 1921

On the left, behind the trees, is the south entrance to Bedford School; the gates bear the inscription 'Floreat Schola Bedfordiensis'.

Caption For Byfleet, High Road 1951

The Lloyds TSB bank (right) in Bedford Park style of 1879 promised greater things than its dismal surroundings in the High Road.

Caption For Newport, St Woolos's Church 1893

The church tower was built in the 15th century on the instructions of Jasper Tudor, Duke of Bedford and uncle of Henry VII.

Caption For Ampthill, Market Place C1960

The Market Place is dominated by the Moot Hall, rebuilt by the Bedford Estate in 1852 in Jacobethan style with the re-used clock cupola from the 18th-century predecessor bursting from the roof in a bizarre

Caption For Woburn Sands, High Street C1955

Woburn Sands, right on the Bedfordshire border and bleeding across it, grew up when the railway arrived in 1846; its delightful station in Tudor cottage style is on the Bedford to Bletchley junction

Caption For Bedford, Infirmary 1897

The old Infirmary, designed by John Wing and opened in 1803, fronted Ampthill Road; it was later expanded to be the Bedford General Hospital (South Site).