Places
Sorry, no places were found that related to your search.
Photos
5 photos found. Showing results 921 to 5.
Maps
83 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,127 memories found. Showing results 461 to 470.
Larkfield
I lived on Auchmead Rd from 1957-79 and now I live in the States. Life has not been bad, but there's never a day goes by, that I do not think of home. When we were weans, we used to have concerts in the backyard, singing, dancing ...Read more
A memory of Greenock in 1979 by
Larkswood Pool
Although I have put 1961 for this shared memory, any year between 1959 and 1966 would fit the bill, because I used to be there most days from early morning till late, from early May till early September when the pool shut. I went ...Read more
A memory of Chingford in 1961 by
Larne In 1946 48
Father worked at the Harbour for several years before moving back to London. He was a great rugby player and instigated the building of a Changing Hut on the Rugby Pitch from reclaimed materials and it was christened The Harry Rees ...Read more
A memory of Larne
Learned To Swim
Just below the bridge on the ovingham side most of the lads learned to swim and through stones at what we thought was rats now I know they were water voles a much endangered species .Waste from Corbridge and other places flowed ...Read more
A memory of Prudhoe by
Leaving A Mark On The Landscape
It was 1966 myself and 2 colleagues were bouncing across the downs in a Landrover when I first saw Imber. What a beautiful little village nestled in the bottom of the valley. It's red brick manor house next to the church ...Read more
A memory of Imber by
Lee Pool
Although I used to take my two children to the pool from Stubbington when we lived there in the 1960s my memory is of the 1940s when it was an adult pool with a high diving board. A swimming gala was put on by the Navy and we sat ...Read more
A memory of Lee in 1965 by
Leigh School
My sister and I used to spend every summer in Leigh, so much so that we even attended the School. I think it helped that our granny was Mrs Faulkner (Dorothy)the Infant school teacher. Grampy was Sandy, our mum Jean was born and ...Read more
A memory of Leigh by
Leverington N.U.S.Camp.
I at last made it back to England after many years living in Australia. With time to spare one weekend, I thought why not? So off to Leverington I went.The train no longer goes to Wisbech. So by train to Peterboro, then bus ...Read more
A memory of Leverington
Life In Cannich And Fasnakyle
My family and I moved from Elm Park in Essex to Scotland in the last weeks of 1948. My father, Leon A. Lalonde, had accepted a position as Chief Mechanical Engineer with John Cochrane and Sons, a construction ...Read more
A memory of Glen Affric in 1949 by
Captions
1,233 captions found. Showing results 1,105 to 1,128.
Beyond is the crocketted spire of the church, which also received the Gregory Treatment: it is very much over-restored.
On the south-east side of the village the five-arch stone bridge, perhaps of the 16th century, steps quietly across the very reedy Rotherby Brook.
The fake timber framing is ill considered and out of place, while the rear extension leaves much to be desired. The village along Main Street possesses no outstanding architecture.
These ruined windows and arches are the remains of the cloisters. Situated in the north-west Cotswolds, Hailes Abbey was founded in 1246.
This is a 16th-century building par excellence, much altered and added to down the centuries; it is timbered, tile hung and jettied, and bears a cluster of tall chimneys.
The fake timber framing is ill considered and out of place, while the rear extension leaves much to be desired. The village along Main Street possesses no outstanding architecture.
It was erected in 1907 as a memorial to M J B Baddeley, whose guide books were greatly esteemed at that time and for much of the earlier part of the 20th century.
Much of the distant area is now pedestrianised.
Miss Billenge, who then ran the mill, always kept the wheels turning to provide the power, although at times lights would flicker throughout the village if too much power was being used at any one
On the right are Tudor Shops, a high quality Tudor range, with arched shop windows on the ground floor, restored between 1978 and 1981.
Although spoiled by modern development, the tangle of streets around the old town is worth exploring and there is still much fine Georgian and Victorian architecture to be seen.
This meant that once again Bristol could compete for trade; throughout much of the 19th century it had lost business owing to high dock charges levied by the money-grabbing dock company.
The almost intimidating main gate in Dock Road was built in 1719; the Royal arms in coloured relief above the main arch are those of George III, added in 1811.
By the mid 16th century much of the castle was in ruins, though some construction work was done at this time, including the superb banqueting hall.The castle was sold to the corporation in 1897 by
These have gone and there are much more modest trees in their place. The village is a mix of 17th-century timber-framed cottages, and 1820s and 1840s to 1850s Bedford Estate cottages.
In the foreground is the multi-arched bridge across the River Honddu, which lends its name to Brecon's Welsh designation – Aberhonddu.
Beyond is the crocketted spire of the church, which also received the Gregory Treatment: it is very much over-restored.
Much of the church is 15th-century, restored in the 1860s. Wall plaster has since been removed to reveal bare stonework. There is a Charles I letter over the north door.
Under the spreading chestnut trees of St Mary`s churchyard, and on the opposite side of the village street, the photographer`s activities generate much interest from a mixed audience of both children
Since 1890, there has been much change here; on the left hand side are nasty 1960s rebuilds, and several others have been rebuilt on the right.
The waters glide under the noble railway viaduct with its lofty arches and embattled parapet.
Wicker baskets carried by the ladies (in the right-hand rowing boat) were very much a feature of life until quite recent times.
The par- ish, which included Etal, Kimmerston, Hetherslaw and Crookham, suffered much during the wars with Scotland.
It is a town with sprawling suburbs and a centre marred by ring roads and the enormous Four Seasons Shopping Centre (1972-76), which demolished much of the northern part of the old town.
Places (0)
Photos (5)
Memories (1127)
Books (0)
Maps (83)