Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Holme-on-Spalding-Moor, Yorkshire
- Holme, Yorkshire (near Holmfirth)
- Holme, Nottinghamshire
- Holme, Cumbria (near Hale)
- Holme Lacy, Hereford & Worcester
- Flat Holm, South Glamorgan
- Holmes Chapel, Cheshire
- Holmes, Lancashire
- Holme, Humberside
- Holme, Bedfordshire
- Holme, Cambridgeshire
- Holme, Yorkshire (near Bradford)
- Holme, Yorkshire (near Kirklington)
- Kirton Holme, Lincolnshire
- Holme Pierrepont, Nottinghamshire
- Runcton Holme, Norfolk
- Forest Holme, Lancashire
- Denton Holme, Cumbria
- Holme Green, Berkshire
- Holme Mills, Cumbria
- Holme Slack, Lancashire
- East Holme, Dorset
- Cross Holme, Yorkshire
- Holme Green, Yorkshire
- South Holme, Yorkshire
- Shirley holms, Hampshire
- Willow Holme, Cumbria
- Holme Lane, Nottinghamshire
- Holmes's Hill, Sussex
- Reeds Holme, Lancashire
- Gullom Holme, Cumbria
- Great Holm, Buckinghamshire
- Holme Chapel, Lancashire
- Holme Green, Bedfordshire
- Holme Hale, Norfolk
- Holme Hill, Humberside
Photos
178 photos found. Showing results 81 to 100.
Maps
276 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
854 memories found. Showing results 41 to 50.
Elmdon Airport 1939 Onwards
These early memories were passed down to me by my grandparents (Bridgwater) who lived in Elmdon House Farm from 1936. Two of their sons worked on the building of the airport and I believe some of the workers ...Read more
A memory of Elmdon by
Going To The Shops...
As a fully paid up member of the 'Baby Boomer' generation, born in 1947, I've been reading all the stories posted on this lovely website (which - like many others, I suspect - I came across purely by chance). I was born in Perivale ...Read more
A memory of Wembley by
Shooters Hill Grammar School 1951 1959
I was there from 1951-1959. Some of the happiest days of my life. A day started with assembly with prayers said and some hymns sung. An awful cacophony of weedy and breaking voices. Various announcements ...Read more
A memory of Shooters Hill
The Globe Cinema, Deepcut.
As a young child I spent a lot of time with my father in The Globe AKC cinema in the early 1960’s. At that time it was in Deepcut camp & was used by soldiers based in the camp. My father was the projectionist & ...Read more
A memory of Deepcut by
Growing Up In Mitcham
I was born Leslie Dennis Crutch in Grove Road 1948. My brother Ken was born 9 months after dad (Ronald Kenneth) had gone to Normandy as part of the landings - I was born 9 months after he was demobbed (funny that) to mum Winifred ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham by
54 Albert Road
I lived in 54 Albert Road, Parkstone, from 1962 until 1972. My paternal grandparents lived at 56 Albert Road, next door. They'd lived there from the 1930's onwards. The back garden was very big and long, plus sloped downhill. I used ...Read more
A memory of Parkstone by
I Lived Here
This was the first home I ever knew and remains, to this day, the one I hold as the true definition of 'home'. Waterloo House was where I was brought as a newborn in June 1974, and where I lived so happily until 1980 when we were, ...Read more
A memory of Heptonstall in 1974 by
Hop Picking
Paddock Wood, in particular Beltring, the home of the famous Whitebread Oasts, was the centre of the Hop Gardens of Kent. The Gardens were set out with rows of elevated wire tressles which were supported at intervals by poles. In ...Read more
A memory of Paddock Wood in 1940 by
Gillingham, Engine Shed
I lived in Malvern Road and later in Napier road. Spent many happy hours around the engine shed area "spotting". Also doing bike rides along the shore towards Rainham. My farther ran the timber yard in Jeffery street. happy days.. I'm 88 and still holding on in Gravesend, my birth place.
A memory of Gillingham by
Weekends At Chapel Row
I didn't live in Bucklebury but was born in Cold Ash where I lived prior to moving to Thatcham. Unfortunately my father died as the result of a motor cycle accident when I was eight years old, and social care being what it ...Read more
A memory of Bucklebury by
Captions
249 captions found. Showing results 97 to 120.
On the south wall is Diana Warburton's monument; it is unusual in that she is depicted as a skeleton holding her winding sheet upon which is written her obituary.
Kendal was granted the right to hold a market as early as 1189, when it was also made a barony.The Market Place had been enclosed on four sides until 1909, when it was opened to Stricklandgate,
The Georgian Town Hall of 1810 regularly holds antiques auctions and the town is well-known as an antiques centre with plenty of shops in which to browse.
At the annual Clipping ceremony, parishioners hold hands and form a ring round the church while singing hymns, continuing a local tradition that is centuries old.
The essence of the village still holds firm, with some delightful cottages. Note the Swithland slate roof, small upper rooms and window shutters in this photograph.
At the ceremony villagers gather in the churchyard, hold hands, and form a circle round the church while singing hymns.
The window shows him dressed in brown and golden robes with one of his hands holding a cross and the other raised in blessing.
As the reign of Queen Victoria receded, a slightly more laid-back atmosphere was staring to take hold. The Great War - only a year away - would change things for ever.
As the reign of Queen Victoria receded, a slightly more laid-back atmosphere was starting to take hold. The Great War – only a year away – would change things for ever.
A carved wooden Indian holding a cigar still stands silent guard above one of the shop fronts in this street; it was once used to symbolise to the illiterate that the shop was a tobacconist.
The old market cross on the village green at Great Longstone has stood there since medieval times, when the village was granted the right to hold a weekly market.
Edward I was renowned for his military strong- holds, especially in North Wales.
This is summer: awnings give shade to the shops on one side of the street, and one of the boys holds a cricket bat.
Such was the concern in 1791, that two beacons were erected, illuminated by lanterns holding many candles; one became the lighthouse, and another stood about 400 yards north of Cart Gap.
Its most recognisable feature was its distinctive 125ft-high water tower holding 200,000 gallons (right); nicknamed 'the onion', it is still regarded as a local landmark.
A plague had prevented the Court from holding the trial in London.
As practically the west-end of Portsmouth, Southsea holds a unique position among watering-places.
The crane on a mobile gantry, although restricted to its tracks, allows greater access by reaching more deeply into a ship's holds. Folkestone
The window shows him dressed in brown and golden robes with one of his hands holding a cross and the other raised in blessing.
Tradition holds that St Aidan preached here in 651 and erected a cross, from which its name derives, 'the place of the cross'.
photograph, show little indication of the enormous weight of motor traffic which this section of the main High Street had to bear; the construction of a by-pass brought an end to the regular bottlenecks and hold-ups
Later, after becoming widowed, she married him, and Swarthmoor Hall still holds some of their possessions.
It was Roger de Swinnerton, Lord of the Manor, who obtained a charter from Edward I to hold a market here every Wednesday and an annual fair on the feast day of Our Lady's assumption.
It was Roger de Swinnerton, Lord of the Manor, who obtained a charter from Edward I to hold a market here every Wednesday and an annual fair on the feast day of Our Lady's assumption.The manor later
Places (45)
Photos (178)
Memories (854)
Books (0)
Maps (276)