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Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 431 to 440.
My Top Ten Memories Of Collyhurst
I also remember Christmas1948, going out the side front door and seeing everywhere were covered with snow. It were so cold but it were beautiful. Now bonfire night were somethink else, we held our bonfire ...Read more
A memory of Collyhurst by
Best Drop
It was about 1953. Saturday afternoon was a great day down at the Imperial picture house in Newburn. Roy Rogers and Trigger, Gene Autry with his guitar and six guns, Flash Gorden with his ray gun, Batman and his cape. I remember an older ...Read more
A memory of Newburn by
Not So Much A Memory, More Of A Query.
This bridge is usually referred to as a seven arched bridge but looking at this 1888 photograph, there appears to be eight of them. The tunnel nearest the camera still exists and I recall how it once gave access ...Read more
A memory of Looe by
Richard Alibon Infants And Junior School
I used to live st 30 Rogers Road and attended Richard Alibon school, my first teacher there was Mrs Rees a right strict woman, no talking in class she had a hard sharp face with greying blonde hair in a bun, ...Read more
A memory of Dagenham
Some Memories From 1916 To The 1950s
My father believes the man in the carpenter's apron in photographs 60995 and 60995x may be Francis New. The carpentry business he is standing in front of was eventually taken over my grandfather, John ...Read more
A memory of Chilton Foliat
Northolt Wood End
Our family moved to Northolt (Mildred Avenue) around 1956 from Harlesden and I left in 1978. I have great memories of Wood End infants/junior school. Playing near Northolt Park Station and anoying the station master who we ...Read more
A memory of Northolt by
The Arch Tto The Slag Heaps
Hi, I also remember Pengam, I went to school in the 1950s, a Mr Preist was the head then. I used to come down from Fairveiw through the arch and into the school. I love looking back and how wonderful Wales was. ...Read more
A memory of Pengam by
Regent Cafe & Ice Cream Parlour
I was a projectionist at the "CURZON" cinema in Cheam Road form 1962 - 1986 and would always go to the Regent for lunch..Was always a good meal and you could get 3 courses for around 2/6d.. Served by two lovely waitresses ...Read more
A memory of Sutton by
Properties & People
I, Ray Murphy, came across your site, re Shaw Mills, Yorkshire, U.K., as I was looking into events of my past life, for the benefit of my son’s Australian family, at the time of my 84th birthday, 19/9/35. I am the Patriarch of ...Read more
A memory of Shaw Mills by
Reflections Upon The Changing Face Of Stafford Since 1964
It’s a rather sad fact that you only come to appreciate a town several years after you have left it. At the age of 19 I was sent to live and work in Stafford between 1964 and 1979, before ...Read more
A memory of Stafford by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 1,033 to 1,056.
It was said that the dragoons left town in as much haste as did the Mayoress.
The village sits three miles west of the Tunbridge Wells on the East Grinstead road, which is much busier today than when this picture was taken some 50 years ago.
Canford Bridge has three arches of Portland stone over a languid length of the River Stour, and carries the road from Wimborne to Poole.
The actual battle took place below the escarpment in the much flatter area between Radway and Kineton.
The pub dates from about 1840, and used to have a later elaborate arched canopy, now long gone. The pub is now called the Villagers.
Once the sixth wealthiest of England's medieval monasteries, it was dissolved by Henry VIII in 1538, and much of its stonework was carried by river to London.
When the route was first laid out it was deemed unlikely that there would ever be much expansion here and it was known locally as 'David Lewis's Folly' after the Councillor who decided on it.
The scenic St Ives branch railway follows the coast, with a four-arched viaduct crossing the little valley behind the beach; the station platform is just beyond.
The bypass on the south side of town was opened in 1926; it was much needed to relieve the narrow streets of both local china clay and through traffic.
By coincidence, a young engineer by the name of Isambard Kingdom Brunel had been staying in Clifton for his health, spending much of his time sketching in the Gorge.
This fine five-arched bridge over the River Derwent at Rowsley has carried traffic for nearly four hundred years.
It's quite possible that the attendant pictured here is the much-loved 'Sammy the Boatman'.
With smartly-dressed attendants very much in evidence we may be viewing an early morning scene as the boats are lined up and ready but there are few paying customers.
In the 19th century much reconstruction had taken place. By 1926 its owner, the Honourable Mrs Wilson-Fulmer (Lady Baillie) had begun a 30 year restoration project.
As a result of the expansion of the town since 1959 due to London overspill, much of the center was redeveloped.
Although much eroded by weather, the cross is adorned by an interlaced rope pattern and various sculptures, including a horse and its rider.
On the left is now either cleared or a car park, and the road is much wider. Here the river Trent is the boundary between Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire.
Indeed, in 1924 the bank liked the style so much it demolished the building on the far left and added a further bay in the same style. Later the Midland Bank, it is now the HSBC.
Beaufort Square is very much the hub of Chepstow.
The vicar could not afford to keep the cottages, and the Church Commissioners sanctioned their sale to the then tenants, much to the annoyance of a local entrepreneur, who wanted to demolish
The Common is much appreciated by the local residents.
It was built on the site of Mother Downes' charming thatched cottage in 1870 and was much enlarged twenty years later.
The Broads have been called the pleasure grounds of Norfolk; they are the remains of a huge estuary that once spread over much of the eastern part of the county.
This view, looking along the Roath Brook, does not give much idea of the park's scale. But at a total of 102 acres, the park was a pretty immense area for a day out.
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