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Places
35 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Wood End, Berkshire
- Wood End, Hertfordshire
- Woods End, Greater Manchester
- Woodend, Essex
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Keswick)
- Woodend, Cheshire (near New Mills)
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Egremont)
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Boot)
- Wood End, West Midlands (near Coventry)
- Wood End, Greater Manchester (near Chadderton)
- Wood End, West Midlands (near Wednesfield)
- Wood End, Hereford & Worcester
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Nuneaton)
- Wood End, Buckinghamshire (near Mursley)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Kempston)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Bedford)
- Wood End, Greater Manchester (near Mossley)
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Tamworth)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Kimbolton)
- Wood End, Buckinghamshire (near Mursley)
- Wood End, Warwickshire (near Redditch)
- Wood End, Bedfordshire (near Ampthill)
- Woodend, Staffordshire
- Woodend, Fife (near Lochgelly)
- Woodend, Lothian (near Queensferry)
- Woodend, Northamptonshire
- Woodend Green, Essex
- Wood End Green, Greater London
- Woodend, Cumbria (near Arlecdon)
- Woodend, Nottinghamshire (near Sutton In Ashfield)
- Lower Woodend, Buckinghamshire
- Upper Woodend, Grampian
- Shenstone Woodend, Staffordshire
- Lower Woodend, Grampian
- Hanbury Woodend, Staffordshire
Photos
6 photos found. Showing results 61 to 6.
Maps
150 maps found.
Books
4 books found. Showing results 73 to 4.
Memories
2,335 memories found. Showing results 31 to 40.
Picking Wild Violets
My friend Jean and I used to pick wild violets in the wood just along the towpath on the right hand side of this picture. The wood was a carpet of yellow celandines in Spring and the scent from the wild violets was reward in ...Read more
A memory of Dorney in 1958 by
Unchanged Lerryn
Lerryn is a place that one almost wants to keep secret so that it does not become a popular destination. It has barely changed in a hundred years. A beautiful and unspoilt village in a steep sided valley, Lerryn lies at the tidal ...Read more
A memory of Lerryn in 2004 by
Where I Grew Up Born 1944
My Mum and Dad moved into the village in the 1930's into a new house in Rogers Lane and lived there for 66 years. My father was the village tailor working from a workshop in the back garden. My mother was very ...Read more
A memory of Stoke Poges in 1950 by
Shops
Bryant's Post Office with Mrs Robson, a Queen Motherish figure always dressed in a black two piece, dishing out pensions, stamps and postal orders from the aloof position behind her cage. Duggie Bain's cobblers, the warm oily smell, ...Read more
A memory of Howden-le-Wear by
Mill Street Clowne. 1950
The gentleman pushing a cart in the foreground of this picture is my grandfather, Ernest Pearce (1895-1970). The cart was used to transport bundles of sticks that he cut for sale as firewood. They were sold for 4d a bundle. ...Read more
A memory of Clowne in 1950 by
Wonderful Years
Living on the island was like living in paradise - it seemed like a constant holiday! I remember walking from 'Danehurst' along Pitts Lane across Binstead Road and up Cemetary Road to school every day. I loved walking to the ...Read more
A memory of Binstead in 1955 by
What A Bike Ride!
I was born in Whitwell (Herts) in April 1949 and started my schooling at St Pauls Walden CE School in September 1953. This the hill on which I lived. As I grew older I used to ride my bike to school (very little ...Read more
A memory of Whitwell in 1955 by
The Palace Cinema
The pub on the left of the picture was renowned for a few brawls in it's time, originally called The Globe (now known as Raferty's) I recall walking down Cambridge St and seeing a man being hurled through the window into ...Read more
A memory of Wellingborough in 1968 by
History Of Clayton Family 1700s
Descendants of George Clayton Generation No. 1 1. GEORGE1 CLAYTON was born 1788 in Pickhill, West Roxby, Yorkshire England. He married ANN MUDD 08 December 1806 in Pickhill, West Roxby, Yorkshire England. She ...Read more
A memory of Pickhill in 1860 by
My Home Hawkhurst
I grew up in hawkhurst , i lived in gills green in hawkhurst , hawkhurst has a close community everybody knew everybody , most familys that lived there had lived there for years even generations . my dads family had lived there ...Read more
A memory of Hawkhurst in 1982 by
Captions
583 captions found. Showing results 73 to 96.
A scattered hillside village on a minor road in a wooded area near the Surrey border. At the top of the hill is the mainly 14th-century church of the Holy Trinity.
The Parish Church of St Peter and St Paul, Dagenham, dates back to the 13th century. In 1800 the tower collapsed and was rebuilt.
The Heath, extending from Kenwood House in the north to an area around Parliament Hill in the south, occupies some 800 acres; it has been popular with artists and authors (and the Gordon Rioters) since
A considerable transformation from the scene at the turn of the century, with the macadamised road surface, traffic lights and road islands now channelling the cars and lorries.
This is the junction of Coastal Road and Station Road, with 'Halt' signs painted on the road and squared T-shaped traffic signs gently controlling what little traffic there was.
The church of St Peter, with its 14th-century tower made entirely of wood and supported inside by a framework of huge oak timbers, also has a 13th-century chancel and a south aisle added a hundred years
Look south away from Stirling Corner and past Mill Hill Golf Club bordering Thistle Wood and Scratch Wood (a rural name now adopted by the local motorway service station), and take a moment to reflect
It is thought that the name derives from the Welsh `porth coed`, or `the harbour below the wood`, and indeed it may well have been the port for the nearby Roman town of Caerwent.
Nestled in the rear slopes of the North Downs, the village derives its ancient name from the Saxon word 'wudmeresthorn', meaning 'thornbush by the boundary of the wood', and was mentioned in the Domesday
The original tower was probably the first part of the castle to be built of stone, though its internal buildings were still wooden.
Often referred to as 'the Alpine village' because of its sylvan setting at the head of a wooded valley, the cluster of houses known as Hutton Village dates from the mid 19th century, when Mr Thomas
The great landslip of the coast between Axmouth and Lyme Regis took place on Christmas Day 1839, when a chasm nearly a mile in length was created when the existing cliffs fell towards the sea
Hancock & Wood and Roberts shoe shop are almost all that remain of this 1950s scene.
The three-gabled house on the right, Hartshorne House or the Old Hospital, 15th-century and 1576, was described in 1863 as 'an unsightly pile of wood and plaster too dilapidated to allow the lowest to
Churchgate Street lay on the main route from London to Newmarket, Cambridge, Norwich and the North.
The view across the river from the wooded slopes of Pelaw Wood is magnificent. In the distance are the cathedral and the castle, and below is the former race course alongside the river.
Porter Brook meanders its way from Forge Dam and skirts one edge of Whiteley Woods and Bingham Park before descending over the weirs into Endcliffe Wood.
This view could be Cofton Woods, Pinfield Wood or Lickey Warren, among others.
This view could be Cofton Woods, Pinfield Wood or Lickey Warren, among others.
Sherwood Forest once covered over 100,000 acres between Nottingham and Worksop, although the great ducal estates of the Dukeries enclosed much of the north part for their parks.
In the Sixties 100,000 visitors a year were holidaying at Rockley Sands Caravan Park; it covered some 600 acres of harbourside heathland and pine wood.
A swannery lay on the wooded islet in the pear-shaped lake, and a paddling pool was added later. The extensive dockland area lay out of sight behind the wooded hill and the power station.
A ship carrying cotton bales was shipwrecked off Wirral, and the bales washed ashore. Wood and parts of the ship soon sank into the sand, but the bales of cotton did not.
They were built in 1798 by Richard Pringle for John Wood of Beadnell Hall, and it was Wood who also extended the harbour for the export of lime and coal.
Places (35)
Photos (6)
Memories (2335)
Books (4)
Maps (150)