Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Lee, Devon (near Ilfracombe)
- Lee-on-the-Solent, Hampshire
- Lee, Hampshire
- Brabourne Lees, Kent
- Lee Moor, Devon (near Wotter)
- Lee, Northumberland
- Lee, Strathclyde
- Lee, Greater London
- Lee, Devon (near Berrynarbor)
- Lee, Shropshire
- Lees, Derbyshire
- Lees, Greater Manchester
- Merry Lees, Leicestershire
- Nash Lee, Buckinghamshire
- Lee Common, Buckinghamshire
- Lee Mill, Devon
- Lee Moor, Yorkshire
- Stanton Lees, Derbyshire
- Constable Lee, Lancashire
- Lee Brockhurst, Shropshire
- Lee Ground, Hampshire
- Lee Head, Derbyshire
- North Lees, Yorkshire
- Boughton Lees, Kent
- Brown Lees, Staffordshire
- Long Lee, Yorkshire
- North Lee, Buckinghamshire
- Calton Lees, Derbyshire
- The Lee, Buckinghamshire
- The Lees, Kent
- White Lee, Yorkshire
- Holland Lees, Lancashire
- Lee Chapel, Essex
- Lee Clump, Buckinghamshire
- Lee Gate, Buckinghamshire
- Sheldwich Lees, Kent
Photos
353 photos found. Showing results 61 to 80.
Maps
1,430 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 73 to 2.
Memories
440 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.
Market Drayton Revisited
I visited my mother in the Midlands (Shrewsbury)recently. A trip to Market Drayton on Wednesdays is mandatory (my stipulation) each time I travel from my home in Essex where I have resided for many years now. ...Read more
A memory of Market Drayton in 2010 by
The Stone Family Of Margate
What wonderful memories I have of my childhood holidays in Margate. Reading others memories bring them all racing back. The children born just after the war were so lucky. Although we really had nothing as regards money ...Read more
A memory of Margate in 1880 by
A Wartime Child
I was born in 1935 at 25 Cambridge Road, maiden name Lee. There were six of us, parents, 2 older sisters, Beryl and Gwen, and grandmother. I remember many of the shops from the late 30's to the early 50's when we moved to ...Read more
A memory of North Harrow in 1930 by
Childhood Memories
Knutsford holds a special place in my heart as I was born there in 1956 and spent nearly eight years of my childhood growing up in this then safe and close community. I have very strong memories of family, home, school and ...Read more
A memory of Knutsford in 1962 by
Memories Of Benson
My memories of Benson started in 1946/7 when we moved to Sunnyside, which in those days did not have the recreation field. Nor did the village have street lighting apart from a couple in the High Street, one of which was on the ...Read more
A memory of Benson in 1947 by
Happy Childhood Memories
I have very fond memories of living in Winscombe as a child, in fact they were some of the best years of my life. I was living in Yadley Lane, and loved to take walks up the old railway line which ran past our house, in ...Read more
A memory of Winscombe in 1978 by
1958 1964
My name is Steve Whitfield, we lived in Whitecroft (on the Crossroads) and that is where I grew up. Went most of my time to boarding school with my two brothers, dating back to the 1960s. My father was employed as Chief Accountant for ...Read more
A memory of Quernmore by
Nash School
I went to live in Nash in 1955 as a foster child. I attended Nash School from 1955 - 1958 when Mrs Jones was the headmistress. The school sadly closed in 1958 and we were moved to Burford School near Tenbury Wells. Life at Nash ...Read more
A memory of Tenbury Wells in 1955 by
Childhood On Osborne Terrace
In 1949 the houses on Osborne Terrace were just being built, as soon as they were coming available the council were moving people in, our family moved into no 21. I was 4 years old. It was a lovely place then, nice ...Read more
A memory of Stacksteads in 1950 by
1939 Onwards I Remember
I was born in 1939, the year war started, and remember being lifted out of bed in the middle of the night and the barrage balloons looked like big elephants in the sky. I also remember the table shelter in the lounge which ...Read more
A memory of Harborne in 1940 by
Captions
93 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.
In 1852 a suspension bridge was built over the Dee to link the suburb of Queen's Park with the Groves on the north side of the river. The bridge was rebuilt in 1923.
Eccleston is a few miles up the Dee from Chester. Here the river charts a more leisurely course as it makes its way to the sea. This photograph depicts the chain-operated flat-decked ferry.
The premises of Shepherd & Dee, the boatbuilders, are now two art galleries. Behind are the church tower and the chimneys of Brakspear's Brewery.
Enamel signs for Brooke Bond Tea on the village shop, a hostelry called the Bee and a small cottage displaying signs for the Aberconwy Institute 1915 and Llyfrgell y Sir or County Library suggest localised
Even from distant Clee Hill in Shropshire they enable you to instantly pinpoint the location of Brierley Hill.
Even from distant Clee Hill in Shropshire they enable you to instantly pinpoint the location of Brierley Hill.
The village also had a butcher, another grocer, two boot makes, an undertaker, a plumber, two carpenters, a market gardener and bee keeper and an insurance agent, as well as the three public houses.
Forever associated with its famous International Eisteddfod, Llangollen stands on the River Dee, seen here from the four-arched town bridge.
If there is any breeze blowing, it will blow onto Clee Hill, and consequently the village can sometimes be very bleak.
Polperro's cottages, many slate-hung and with outside stone staircases, seem to grow out of the very rock, and the town has been poetically described as 'a human bees' nest stowed away in a cranny of the
In February 1955, a meeting of Four Marks residents was held at the Bee Hive Cafe to voice their demand for a 30 mph speed limit on the A31. There had been several accidents, some fatal.
Burton is considered by many to be one of the most picturesque villages in the Wirral, and it is enhanced by the wonderful panorama over the Dee Estuary to the hills of Wales.
Eccleston is a few miles up the River Dee from Chester. Here the river charts a more leisurely course as it makes its way to the sea.
Local limestone and St Bees sandstone were used in its construction.
Down below at the foot of the hill, the wind blowing off the summit on a cold day can make the village of Clee seem bleak.
On the right hand side the four gables now mark four long-standing businesses, those of Downside Pharmacy, the Coulsdon Fish Bar, Jeff Dee and Pandora News.
In 1410, the rector of Walkern had his hive of bees stolen, along with the honey, by one John Coke - it is said that the hives were kept in Beecroft Lane.
By the banks of the Dee. Though used by excursion and pleasure craft, the river at Chester was last used commercially in the 1930s when a barge took a cargo of tar from the gasworks to Queensferry.
Now the Bee Hive Store and Post Office have been built at the end of the terrace and provide service six and a half days a week.
A border town with a ruinous castle built by Henry III, Hawarden lies close to Chester on the former main road into Wales from the Dee lowlands and the Cheshire Plain.
On the apocryphal 'clear day' it is possible to see the Malvern Hills, Bromsgrove, the Lickey Hills, Frankley Beeches, Clent, Abberley and the Clee Hills.
Places (49)
Photos (353)
Memories (440)
Books (2)
Maps (1430)