Places
15 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Pit, Gwent
- Talke Pits, Staffordshire
- Tunnel Pits, Humberside
- Bedwellty Pits, Gwent
- Fenton Pits, Cornwall
- Slay Pits, Yorkshire
- Tre-pit, South Glamorgan
- Bailey Pit, Gwent
- Gore Pit, Essex
- Moss Pit, Staffordshire
- Red Pits, Norfolk
- White Pit, Lincolnshire
- Even Pits, Hereford & Worcester
- Forest Coal Pit, Gwent
- Michaelston-le-Pit, South Glamorgan
Photos
89 photos found. Showing results 61 to 80.
Maps
84 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
867 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.
Washington Brady Square
One of three children who lived at Hillthorn Terrace, just next to the railway lines. I can remember as if it was yesterday when the coal train used to travel from Washington "F" Pit down towards Brady Square, through ...Read more
A memory of Washington by
Twelve Happy Months
I was born in Nant Gwynant in 1925 and lived there for the first 20 years of my life. In 1944 I was drafted into the army and served in German and Italy. Upon release in 1947, I decided to try and make a career in ...Read more
A memory of Nantgwynant by
1950s
I was born in the war years in the area where the Workmen’s Club was later built and later moved to Hall Lane Est ( 28) as the first intake. I remember well the coal loader at the end of Railway Terrace and the great times out and about around ...Read more
A memory of Crook by
The Past
I was born at Usworth colliery and lived at Old Row. I went to Usworth Colliery School and when I left there I went to work at Usworth pit.
A memory of Washington by
Pit Village In My Youth
My name is Ken Orton and I lived in Thornley from 1947 until 1974, the year I married. I was born in Shadforth but my parents moved from there to Thornley when I was about one month old. We lived at 72, Thornlaw North until ...Read more
A memory of Thornley by
Birthplace And Never Forgotten When Asked
I was born in Dysart to a mining family of 5 brothers, me being in the middle. My mum watched over us all and used to take us walks by the man in the rock along to Wemyss and back via the castle estate. ...Read more
A memory of Dysart by
Personal Recollections
From age 11 to 16 I lived in Station Town from 1950 to 1955, at 2 Rodridge Street,( now thankfully the street has been demolished). When I saw the old photograph of the Main Street it was mostly as I remembered it. Booth's ...Read more
A memory of Wingate by
Happiest Days Of My Life 1947 1966
I was born in Glenavon Terrace in 1945, my parents moved to Cambridge in 1946. Every year since I can remember, I spent all my holidays, Xmas, Easter, summer, every spare moment I could back in what I believe is ...Read more
A memory of Caerau by
Its Panto Time! Oh Yes It Is!
You ever been to a panto? Oh yes you have!!! Remember! You go into a large packed hot old theatre full of sticky shouting children and adults trying to look as if they are not enjoying themselves. The house ...Read more
A memory of Newcastle upon Tyne by
Goldthorpe In The Fifties
I was born in 1946 and lived in Manor Avenue. Cricket with dustbin lids propped up with a house brick in the "backins" were our stumps and we played from dawn to dusk during the summer holidays...except during Wimbledon ...Read more
A memory of Goldthorpe by
Captions
118 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.
As the name of the colliery would indicate this pit is actually in the Ely Valley and at the time of the Frith photograph would be one of the few still in full production.
mixture of a rural and industrial landscapes; to the left, corn is stacked up in stooks ready for harvesting, while to the right, behind the houses, a chimney and the huge shape of the spoil tip of the pit
An iron works was opened in 1837, but it was the discovery two years later of ironstone deposits at nearby Shotley Bridge, and the opening of coal pits during the 1840s, that sparked off the town's growth
Copper (and also, to a lesser degree, lead) have been mined here since Roman times, so that the whole area of hillside behind the town is said to have dozens of pits, caves and tunnels.
It also had nearby coal-pits, which transported some of their coal from the beach here. Strawberry Hill, above the village, was the site of an Iron Age fort.
This beautiful sunken garden has been created in a disused gravel pit. Following the death of the owner, the site was acquired by the town and first opened to the public in 1960.
But river traffic at this point has now been greatly increased with the opening of the vast Penton Hook Marina in a flooded gravel pit on the south bank, which is accessed from just below this lock.
The sinking of the Fitzwilliam and the South Kirkby pits in the 1870s led to a huge rise in the population; the town was rebuilt with hundreds of back-to-back terraced houses.
This is coal mining country, and despite all the 1980s and 1990s pit closures and the grassed- over slag heaps that dot west Nottinghamshire, Harworth still has its colliery.
The building with the tall chimneys fronts the Alton Road, and is built into the cliff of the chalk pit. Dating from c1730, it was originally a beer house, the Sign of the Castle.
The sides are covered with the remains of bell pits, ancient open-cast mines where people have dug for coal since the 13th century.
This picture looks down the village of Wales towards Kiveton Park, both pit villages which boomed from 1867 during the heyday of the South Yorkshire coalfield.
This view looks towards one of the entrances to the series of underground canals that extended to the Duke's pits at Walkden.
The perfect little port with its floating dock is surrounded by cottages, and the outer harbour is enclosed by breakwater piers.
Kinsley was the centre of conflict in 1905 when a strike led to the eviction of 100 pit families.
The tunnel is 3075 yards (2811 metres) long and was a considerable feat of engineering when it opened in 1805.
A few doors up is the distinctive facade of a small cinema, or 'flea pit' as they were sometimes known.
The rickety-looking oriel window on its timber props and horned sash window frames are Victorian additions to the centuries-old corner house, which was a shop at the time this photograph
They are flooded gravel pits and one, Stockers Lake, is a nature reserve. In 1921 Batchworth Lake, being nearest the town, was already used for recreation with rowing boats and yachts.
The Thames and Severn Canal came this way, and the route of the old towpath can still be walked for considerable sections; but it is the pits left by extensive gravel extraction that have been
This stream, the Lode Pit Beck, flows off the moor into the Aire at Shipley. A former drovers' track took trade over the hills to Ilkley and Otley.
It was bought by Harris's to store sawdust for smoking their bacon; their supplies came from W E Beint & Sons Ltd, whose sawmills at Studley were famous for making elm coffin boards and pit props for
It is the early days of motoring, and the hotels are clearly competing against each other with the facilities on offer, including inspection pits!
Walk a short distance from the hamlet and marvel at numerous waterfalls, disused pits and the course of the Roman road through Combs Wood.
Places (15)
Photos (89)
Memories (867)
Books (0)
Maps (84)