Merry Christmas & Happy New Year!
Christmas Deliveries: If you placed an order on or before midday on Friday 19th December for Christmas delivery it was despatched before the Royal Mail or Parcel Force deadline and therefore should be received in time for Christmas. Orders placed after midday on Friday 19th December will be delivered in the New Year.
Please Note: Our offices and factory are now closed until Monday 5th January when we will be pleased to deal with any queries that have arisen during the holiday period.
During the holiday our Gift Cards may still be ordered for any last minute orders and will be sent automatically by email direct to your recipient - see here: Gift Cards
Places
24 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Lulworth Camp, Dorset
- Shorncliffe Camp, Kent
- Bovington Camp, Dorset
- Camp, Lincolnshire
- Camp Hill, Dyfed
- Bulford Camp, Wiltshire
- The Camp, Hertfordshire
- Camp Hill, Warwickshire
- Blandford Camp, Dorset
- Pirbright Camp, Surrey
- Otterburn Camp, Northumberland
- North Camp, Hampshire
- Castle Camps, Cambridgeshire
- Rollestone Camp, Wiltshire
- Camp Corner, Oxfordshire
- Westdown Camp, Wiltshire
- Camp Town, Yorkshire
- Camps End, Cambridgeshire
- Camps Heath, Suffolk
- Shudy Camps, Cambridgeshire
- The Camp, Gloucestershire
- Camp Hill, Yorkshire (near Sowerby Bridge)
- Camp Hill, Yorkshire (near Kirklington)
- Bisley Camp (National Shooting Centre), Surrey
Photos
2,582 photos found. Showing results 121 to 140.
Maps
130 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 145 to 1.
Memories
1,301 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.
Air Raid Shelter Camp Field, Hesketh Bank
As a child, I used to spend many an hour playing with friends on the old air raid shelter. I have tried to tell my own children what it was like and a bit about the hisory of it, but I can't find any photos, land maps or mention of it anywere. Was wondering if anybody could help?
A memory of Hesketh Bank by
Young Days In Bexley
Other peoples memories are bringing back some of my own. Walking from Bexley to the Regal for Saturday morning movies across the heath. Frog spawn from the river at the mill. Walking to school past the brewery to the ...Read more
A memory of Bexleyheath in 1945 by
Ty Gynn Caravan Site
Hi, My family used to holiday in a caravan on Ty-gynn (sorry unsure of the spelling) camp site, we holidayed there from the late 1960's to about 1974. The caravan belonged to the mother of a work mate of my late father, the ...Read more
A memory of Towyn in 1968 by
Donnington School
I went to school here in the 50s/60s; it was known as Wroxeter and Uppington C of E School. There were just two classes, the big class run by Miss Thomas the Headmistress and the little class run by Mrs Saltmarsh. Our dinner ...Read more
A memory of Donnington by
Wallsend 1954 68
Born in the Green Maternity Hosp 1954, lived in Windsor Drive, Howden, Sandown Gardens, Howden and Prospect Ave. I remember being taken to the Masons Arms at Bigges Main in a pushchair, parked outside the corrugated iron lean to ...Read more
A memory of Wallsend by
Norton Manor
I joined the army at the age of 15 and was posted to Norton Manor Camp on the outskirts of Taunton. At first we were not permitted to go out of the camp but when we did it was always Taunton that we visited. I have fond memories of ...Read more
A memory of Rumwell in 1961 by
Army Barracks Overlooking Vivary Park
I lived in the Army Barracks [Jelelahbad] from around 1960-61 and went to Mary Magdalene School which is now closed and used as an auctions room. One teacher I recall was a Mr Oak and pupils were Margaret ...Read more
A memory of Taunton in 1960
Wartime Camp At Horton Chapel
I was a child living in a large house next to the river at Horton Chapel adjacent to a bridge. In the Second World War in 1944 prior to Normandy, a squadron of Canadian Engineers camped next to the river and built a ...Read more
A memory of Chartham in 1944 by
1950s
I was born in the war years in the area where the Workmen’s Club was later built and later moved to Hall Lane Est ( 28) as the first intake. I remember well the coal loader at the end of Railway Terrace and the great times out and about around ...Read more
A memory of Crook by
The War Years
I was born in Ryde in 1938 and when war broke out, my mother and myself moved in with my grandparents, Laurence and Lucy Stroud (nee Meecham) into what is now Wellwood Grange but in those days was just Wellwood. It was the home of ...Read more
A memory of Binstead by
Captions
198 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.
Holiday camps like Caister's offered inexpensive breaks for the whole family - with all costs included.
French soldiers were held as prisoners at Odiham during the Napoleonic wars, living in a camp dug out of an old chalk pit. The churchyard contains the graves of several prisoners.
Holiday camps like Caister's offered inexpensive breaks for the whole family - with all costs included.
Originally the Swan, the hotel is here called the Ivelchester, the town's name until the 1930s, which derives from the Saxon 'Givelcestreand', describing a Roman camp on the River Givel.
Jax, a cheerful low-price dress shop for younger customers, replaced the more staid Co-op; Millett's, which began by selling army surplus goods, branched into camping equipment and tough outdoor clothes
The village became Increasingly popular with visitors because of its proximity to Blackpool, but caravans and a holiday camp seem at odds with a village recorded in the Domesday Book.
As caravanning grew in popularity during the 1950s, many small sites began to compete with the already established holiday camps, providing facilities, shops and often entertainment in a purpose built
Behind the pub and the house rears the wooded slopes of Anstiebury Camp, one of Surrey's finest Iron Age hillforts, dating from the second century BC; its ramparts enclose over 11 acres.
On the hill beyond stands a Martello tower and the fortifications of Shorncliffe Camp, whose construction was undertaken under Sir John Moore during the Napoleonic War.
Jax, a cheerful low-price dress shop for younger customers, replaced the more staid Co-op; Millett's, which began by selling army surplus goods, branched into camping equipment and tough outdoor clothes
Those who wanted an inexpensive holiday could book into Seaburn Camp, which even as late as 1960 looked like a film set from a prisoner of war movie, but with flowerbeds.
The main street, Watchhouse Road, may have taken its name from a lookout camp here at the time of the Napoleonic Wars.
The fields of Whitecliff Farm (foreground) hosted summer camps for militia and artillery volunteers in late Victorian times.
Holiday camps like Caister's offered inexpensive breaks for the whole family, with everything included in the cost.
Those who wanted an inexpensive holiday could book into Seaburn Camp, which even as late as 1960 looked like a German Stalag with flowerbeds.
All the way north from Burnham to Brean Down, the six miles of road behind the sand dunes and beaches has a string of bungalows, chalets, shops, caravan parks, amusement parks and holiday camps, as well
Holidaymakers at this time could be forgiven for thinking that there was something of an army camp about the site!
On the hill beyond stands a Martello tower and the fortifications of Shorncliffe Camp, whose construction was undertaken under Sir John Moore during the Napoleonic War.
During World War II British soldiers camped in the grounds, whilst the house was used by a London-based engineering company whose premises had been bombed.
Here holiday makers could enjoy the quiet attractions of the 'Constitutional Holiday Camp' well away from the bustle and bright lights of its noisier and bigger neighbour.
Originally it was the site of an Iron Age camp, then a Roman temple, and later an Armada beacon.
Here holiday makers could enjoy the quiet attractions of the 'Constitutional Holiday Camp' well away from the bustle and bright lights of its noisier and bigger neighbour.
Essendon is the nearby chaletm with the Municipal Camp Field behind (left centre). The 'Trio', a coaster, is moored in the harbour (right). The 1960s saw the building of a bingo hall (centre left).
With Camp Wardens on hand to curtail anything too boisterous, this now seems a golden era – carefree youngsters left to their own devices.
Places (24)
Photos (2582)
Memories (1301)
Books (1)
Maps (130)