Places
6 places found.
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Photos
2,394 photos found. Showing results 1,061 to 1,080.
Maps
41 maps found.
Books
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Memories
2,822 memories found. Showing results 531 to 540.
Church St, Woodlesford
I was born in Church St, Woodlesford in 1930. The cottage where I was born belonged to my great grandma's family called Denkin. I attended Woodlesford school which is still being used for local families. There is a ...Read more
A memory of Woodlesford in 1930 by
Year Of 1959
My grandmother came from Shepton Mallet and left to live in West Yorkshire. I came to live for a short while and attended school out on Charlton Road. The house I lived at was the last one on Waterloo Road at its junction with ...Read more
A memory of Shepton Mallet by
East Chevington The Drift
I am the daughter of Doreen Smith, daughter of Frederick Steve Smith & Elizabeth Smith (The siblings consisted of Albert, Frederick, John, Violet, Nellie, Millie, Elizabeth or Lizzie who died of TB, Jim, Doreen). ...Read more
A memory of North Seaton in 1930 by
Greasborough Dam
I was born on Church St, Greasbrough, gran and granddad lived close by in a row of cottages alongside the top club now a car park? My father worked in the local pits and we moved several times. At age 10 we moved back to ...Read more
A memory of Greasbrough in 1963 by
Roy Hamilton (1961)
Another chap I clearly remember in the year I worked at Law Junction was Roy Hamilton who lived in a cottage overlooking the station. Like the old gentleman who was frequently drunk, Roy was also disabled and walked with the aid of ...Read more
A memory of Law by
Our Early Life
We lived my Dad (Roly Inman) Mum (Topsy Inman) with me Michael, and Roger in Shotover up the rough lane off the road by the grass triangle and near the school. I remember Miss Swithenbank who used to teach and lived in ...Read more
A memory of Burley in Wharfedale in 1950 by
Cullercoats Personal Links
My Nana Simpson (nee Brunton) was a fisherwoman who used to sell fish on the front from a creel on her back years before I was born. My Grandad contracted Polio in his 50's and Nana had to work hard long hours to ...Read more
A memory of Cullercoats in 1949 by
Childhood Memories
My sister Margaret and I would walk from our "Yarford Cottage "through the US army camp at Tetton Park on our way to school which was then next to the church. Charlie Barrett was the game keeper, Captain and Mrs Pawson ...Read more
A memory of Kingston St Mary in 1943 by
Bower Yard
We have many happy memories of the Bower Yard in 1962. We moved into our first marital cottage at 75 on the day we got married. The cottage was mid terrace overlooking the river and the wharfage on the opposite side. We paid ...Read more
A memory of Ironbridge in 1962 by
Cottages On The Green
Does anyone remember the cottages on the Green in Denham 1940-1950's? My husband's family used to live there and I would love to know more.
A memory of Denham by
Captions
2,020 captions found. Showing results 1,273 to 1,296.
Note the cottage's tall chimney, creating the draught necessary to produce a good fire.
The cottages beside the Nonconformist chapel - now the village's United Reformed Church - have hardly altered, but there is no trace of the cricket pitch, as the site is now covered with trees and bushes
This is one of several mock-Tudor cottages built by John Martineau for his workers.
The clump of trees just in front of it marks the position of Barstable Cottage, one of the thousands of small tenements swept away by the New Town.
Neatly-kept stone and timber-framed cottages punctuate the lane that is the main street. This area is described as a walkers' paradise; one of the many footpaths is signposted behind the school sign.
The two houses on the left were owned by Spicer Brothers, who owned the paper mill, and were called Orps Mill Cottages. In 1878, they were insured for £210 and the fuel houses for £40.
By 1930 a War Memorial has appeared, while the cottage beyond, Old Tythe, then the post office, is now no longer a shop.
Down in this very picturesque village, the cottage beyond the lych gate has the village hall attached at the far end, all beneath a continuous thatched roof.
The village street at Bothenhampton (middle distance, left to right), with suburbia beyond, seen from the vicinity of Quarry Farm with an apple orchard and thatched cottages above the stream
The journalist-cum-explorer Henry Morton Stanley was born John Rowlands in a cottage beneath the castle.
This whole beautiful stretch of the North Pembrokeshire coast is studded with small settlements like Abereiddy, where low, single-storied stone cottages squat in sheltered coves and on the exposed clifftops
A modern stone house now fills the gap between the hall and the stone cottages.
Hope Cottage near the church is dated 1888, and at No 16 Church Street a tall tree has replaced what looks like a broken-off post (right).
Mill Cottage is on the right, and the River Welland is at the other side of the house. The timbers of the upper storey have since been covered over by sandstone-coloured paint.
This leafy suburb of Tunbridge Wells boasts a broad and spacious green, fringed by cottages and trees.
Rectory Cottage with its church-like doorway (left) was occupied by W Wigg, 'Sign Writer and Decorator'. The ridged roofline to the right is the Foster-Mellier Memorial and Reading Room of 1905.
The smoking chimney of the paper mill is in the middle foreground, with the cottages of Chartham Hatch just behind.
This view looks eastwards along a mile of National Trust cliffs towards the coastguard cottages on the 495ft summit of White Nothe (top left), which are the highest buildings on the Dorset
An isolated village of flint and brick cottages, to the west of Chichester. In the village are Adsdean, a gabled Tudor style house of around 1850, and the parish church of St Mary, built in 1859.
This is not the only tribute to the fallen heroes; there is also a bronze statue by Jennie Delahunt of two soldiers sharing water, and round it there were cottages built for the returned heroes in
The estate vilage of Arlington with the old post office - now Mill Cottages - lies alongside the Lynton to Barnstaple road.
A row of cottages was demolished and the War Memorial of 1921 relocated here.
Note Hawthorn Cottage on the right, which serves teas and sells postcards.
The former forge has become Gallery Cottage, now with a raised central gable. Pond House has the former village pump outside, here being used by two children.
Places (6)
Photos (2394)
Memories (2822)
Books (0)
Maps (41)