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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 391 to 400.
Hebburn On Tyne
My Grandfather Thomas Hugh Devlin (Tom), retired Fire Commander, was born in Hebburn On Tyne, England on 25th August 1923. If anyone has any photos, information or memories, it would be much appreciated.
A memory of Hebburn in 1920 by
Helmshore 1950 1964
We lived at No 23 Broadway, Ronald my dad, Ruth my mum, Colin, me, Glenda and Kenneth. Next door was a working farm as the houses had only just been built. On Thursdays they used to run cows from the railway station to the ...Read more
A memory of Helmshore in 1950 by
Help Needed With Info About My Stay At Langley House
Hi, I'm not sure if anyone can help me but I was taken to Langley School when I was about 8 years old (1965). I can't seem to find out much information about the school and just why I was ...Read more
A memory of Baildon in 1965 by
Hertford Road Barking Happy Childhood Memories
I stumbled across your article and it brought back happy childhood memories. Like you I also lived in Hertford Road Barking up until the summer of 1970 when we moved to Fairlop. Our homes were ...Read more
A memory of Barking by
Heysham Tower
This is not so much a personal memory, as a personal connection! My great-great grandparents lived at the Tower. Thomas John Knowlys (b.1803) and his wife, Anna Maria, (MarIea, not Maree-a!!) nee Hesketh, lived and died there, and ...Read more
A memory of Heysham in 1860 by
High Street
Just to the right of the photograph, partially obscured by the tree is 27 High Street, where my family lived and, after the second world war, I lived with my Grand Mother, Mary Dixon, until 1953. The house to the left was occupied by Miss ...Read more
A memory of Skelton by
High Wycombe, England
Went shopping on these streets many times in the 1960's, was happy to see when visiting in 2012 that not much has changed.
A memory of High Wycombe by
Highwood Hospital
I spent nine months at Highwood Hospital between May and December 1951. I celebrated my 12th birthday in Poplars 3, a girls' ward almost at the end of the drive. I remember so many things about my time there I could almost ...Read more
A memory of Brentwood in 1951 by
Hill Street Penybont
I used to visit my grandmother - who lived on the aptly named Hill Street - throughout my childhood. My Gran was Ruth Robbins (nee James) who lived all her life in Hill Street, two of her daughters and their families also ...Read more
A memory of Abertillery in 1952 by
Hillikers Faggots
My Nan and Grandad lived on the corner of Factory Road, and Cranbury Road, opposite Stan Brehaut the photographer, who went on to work with Jack Hargreaves in his programme 'Out of Town'. The Centre of Eastleigh holds such fond ...Read more
A memory of Eastleigh in 1956 by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 937 to 960.
The call of the sea must have been too much for him, for within a year he had left to go to Whitby and embark on what became a famous career.
This building, next door to the gallery and library, is much the same today as it was in the early 1920s.
The 32-arch, 470-yard-long bridge of character was built in 1864 to replace a medieval crossing of the Trent's flood plain, which featured in the Civil War during 1643.
This photograph clearly illustrates the flatness of much of the reclaimed land that forms the island and which the sea attempted to reclaim in the devastating floods of 1953.
When Leeds town hall was opened by Queen Victoria, the streets were lined with palm trees and triumphal arches.
Much has changed hereabouts, and the dual-carriage- way southern bypass, Southway, is a mere 50 yards to the south.
Much of the hall and the railway has been demolished.
This is very much an archive photograph, for only the bank on the left survives from 1890: Queen Victoria's statue, commemorating her Golden Jubilee of 1887, was moved to the abbey park in 1946, while
A little further downstream, just through the railway bridge, the view down river from the Staines bank has changed; now there is extensive housing development on both banks, much fortunately still hidden
This scene has not changed much since the picture was taken; we may be thankful that a bypass routes most traffic past the village.
Beaumont trained at Versailles and was in much demand, but spent the last 40 years of his life working for James Bellingham at Levens Hall.
The view is north-eastwards from Spyway Road over Chaffins Copse (centre), and seems to have been taken as much for the neatly thatched haystack as for the general view.
This much later building is the principal house in Henllan; here we see it standing rather sombrely waiting for some social occasion to bring it to life.
Much of the stone from the quarries used to be taken to Weston along linking tunnels which pass beneath Weston Road. These were later to be used as air-raid shelters during the Second World War.
In recent times the village gave a name to the much-loved Dorset folk-singing group the Yetties.
The 15th-century arched doorway (centre left), once entrance to the town jail, is worth a look.
The Empire Cinema dominates to the right of the picture, next door to the arched entrance to the Telford Library.
The church stands halfway up a hill overlooking the village rooftops and contains a large and impressive Norman font.The chancel arch is 13th-century, and the church contains several memorials to
In those days it was still very much a village.To the north of the church were the remains of a motte, the village was served by the early Georgian church of St Mary and St Margaret, and nearby
It has some Norman work, an east end with lancet windows of about 1200 and much other medieval fabric.
Replacing much smaller and increasingly inadequate local facilities dating back to the 1830s, the requisite funds came in from across the social spectrum.
This photograph shows a similar view to O51014, but much has changed in the intervening five years.
The 'new' Mitre Inn looks much the same today as it did in 1955. It is worth a close look to appreciate the carvings on the beams and the grapevine design on the square drainpipes.
It is generally agreed by those outside the profession that lawyers charge too much. Here is the evidence. This house was built by a lawyer in the early 1600s.
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