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Memories
779 memories found. Showing results 41 to 50.
Ann Levers Recollections
I remember Ann Varley as she was then called. I was a mate of Peter Simpson who lived on Queens Terrace & I lived in Custom House Lane. Peter's grandfather was called Potts & was the landlord of the Steamer Hotel. ...Read more
A memory of Fleetwood in 1947 by
Apprentice Gardener
I was an Apprentice Gardener at Eccles Borough Council and started 22nd August 1966 at Library Gardens with the Gardener there Tommy Cambell. I was only 16 years old and I loved working there. Tommy was a great character and ...Read more
A memory of Eccles in 1966 by
Aroon The Raws
AROON THE RAWS l9th.March, 1980 Memories of bygone days, We now live in different ways, A modem world..treats us proudly, This we acclaim, oh so loudly, Yet somewhere, hidden in our minds, We all live in ...Read more
A memory of Trabboch in 1948 by
As A Child
My gran stayed in a wee cottage across from Kinears (the grocer), used to play rounders at auld beenie Aggie's front door. Play areas were the lintholes, the wells green, the mear, swam in the summer after building a dam at the bridge ...Read more
A memory of Balcurvie in 1952 by
Ashhurst Way Memories
I was brought up from the age of two living in 63 Ashhurst Way and what lovely memories I have got. I was brought up in a large family. A lot of people I can remember are no longer with us and the friends I had Tony ...Read more
A memory of Rose Hill by
Aston Terrace
I was born on Alexander Road in 1944 and moved to 79 Aston Terrace in 1945 and these were one of the best times in my life. We were known as the middle row and I can remember most people in the row; Tylers, Barnses, Davises, Scotts, ...Read more
A memory of Aston in 1950 by
At My Nannies Near The Allotments
My nannie lived on East Street, which had a break in the street to go through the allottments. My nannie was called Hilda Lee, nee Marsh. I have fond memories too of Grandad Lee who passed away when I was around ...Read more
A memory of Darfield by
Audenshaw Public Houses
I am trying to research a Thomas Wilkinson b 1803 in Audenshaw, married a Maria of Buxton, he was an Innkeeper in the 1820s and 1830s when several of his children were born. The 1841 census states that he is a Soda Water ...Read more
A memory of Audenshaw
Auntie Vi In 1952
My mother, Evelyn (Evie) Smith and my sister Susan(14) and I ( Polly aged 9) visited for about a month with my Auntie Vi in Sutton Mandeville on our way back to the USA after living in Egypt for a year. Auntie Vi had a ...Read more
A memory of Sutton Mandeville in 1952 by
Ay, Them Were The Days!
I was born in Manor Drive in 1948, in the white house at the top left of the picture. Each house from bottom left working up and then back down again was the Simmons family, then Coppack, Clewes, Fowler, Emptage, Lyons, ...Read more
A memory of Barnton
Captions
291 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.
Gazing up the street past Wilks Teenage Fashions (left) with the Elkes Cafe above, we can see Barclays Bank. This was built in 1921 on the site of Huggins & Chambers, an ironmonger's.
The existing water supply failed in 1868, when old pumps and barrels were used.
The following year, Hertford was back in Scotland, burning five market towns, sacking 243 villages, and laying waste to crops. Edward VI of England was destined not marry the Queen of Scots.
This narrow but busy street is located between the Market Place and Wide Bargate, and is for pedestrians only now - the traffic lights have gone.
These limestone crags, at the western end of Stoney Middleton, are the haunt of modern rock climbers, and the 200 routes up them have gained evocative names such as Aurora, Alcasan and Armageddon
Mells Manor, largely Elizabethan, was built on the site of a medieval monastic manor.
Famous as the birthplace of John Macadam in 1756 and of Robert Burns in 1759, Ayr was founded under a charter granted by William the Lion. This view looks towards the New Brig and Main Street.
We are looking back across the Wye to the village. A quay has been constructed in front of Quay House on the left, where there appears to be a good fire burning in the grate.
The church on the left is St John's, the tower of which is topped off with a small spirelet and dates from the 13th and 14th centuries.
Following the burning of Rye in 1377 and of Winchelsea in 1380, Bodiam Castle was built in 1385 because of the imminent threat of invasion by the French.
In the 1790s the Kennet and Avon Canal swept past at first floor window level of the 17th-century George Inn to cut it off from the High Street.
This is not Isaac Newton's Woolsthorpe, but the village west of Grantham in rolling countryside right on the Leicestershire border; it has fine views of Belvoir Castle a mile away on its hill on the other
In 1879 Stratford acquired a striped, turreted, gabled fantasy known as the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre. Mercifully, some might say, it burned down in 1926.
Many villagers left their homes here between 1830 and 1850 when the parish gave them money to go to Australia.
This thatched cottage with its distinctive pargetting (moulded plaster decoration) was home to one of East Dereham's more infamous sons, Bishop Bonner, the Rector of nearby St Nicholas's Church in the
It is probable, given the number of stone circles found on Dartmoor, that a family or a group of families erected them for ritual worship, either to venerate the dead or for an astronomical purpose.
The church on the left is St John's and dates from the 13th and 14th centuries. The tower is topped off with a small spirelet, which can just be made out.
Demolition took its toll on the left side of this picture.
Blinkhorn & Son is clearly to be seen on the left, and beyond that is Currys electrical store, which also sold cycles.
Here we see motorists in the village—they are probably touring the area.
Walmgate has been burned and bombarded with cannon fire, and there was an attempt to undermine it using gunpowder during the siege of York in 1644.
The church on the left is St John's, the tower of which is topped off with a small spirelet and dates from the 13th and 14th centuries.
In the 12th century Alresford was a prosperous community - so much so that it was later considered one of England's most important wool markets.
These six ancient graves hewn from solid rock close to the chapel of St Patrick lie on the impressive Heysham headland.
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