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
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Low Row, Yorkshire
- Low Bentham, Yorkshire
- Low Hutton, Yorkshire (near Malton)
- Low Fell, Tyne and Wear
- Low Dalby, Yorkshire
- Lowe, Shropshire
- Fenton Low, Staffordshire
- Low Angerton, Northumberland
- Low Barugh, Yorkshire
- Low Bradley, Yorkshire
- Low Ellington, Yorkshire
- Low Fulney, Lincolnshire
- Low Gate, Northumberland
- Low Laithe, Yorkshire
- Low Leighton, Derbyshire
- Low Marnham, Nottinghamshire
- Low Snaygill, Yorkshire
- Low Street, Essex
- Low Town, Shropshire
- Low Valleyfield, Fife
- Low Barlings, Lincolnshire
- Low Bradfield, Yorkshire
- Low Burnham, Humberside
- Low Grantley, Yorkshire
- Low Hauxley, Northumberland
- Low Hawsker, Yorkshire
- Low Hesket, Cumbria
- Low Whita, Yorkshire
- Lowes Barn, Durham
- Cauldon Lowe, Staffordshire
- Low Borrowbridge, Cumbria
- Low Bridge, Wiltshire
- Low Coniscliffe, Durham
- Low Crosby, Cumbria
- Low Grounds, Yorkshire
- Low Torry, Fife
Photos
267 photos found. Showing results 121 to 140.
Maps
509 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
637 memories found. Showing results 61 to 70.
I Break My Arm
Soon after the end of WW2, we stayed in Frampton on Severn, at the home of my Uncle Percy and his wife Mary. My Uncle Percy worked on an Estate, possibly Frampton Court. With some of the local lads we liked to visit, what ...Read more
A memory of Frampton On Severn in 1947 by
Flimby
I cannot remember a time where Flimby did not feature in my life. My father was born on Ryehill Road, and my grandfather was born and bred in Flimby. It once was a pit village and my grandfather John Watters was an engineer, his father was ...Read more
A memory of Flimby by
Paddock Wood Huts
Not sure how long I went with my grandparents, then when they passed away my parents, but I was born in 1941 and I know we were still going there until we migrated to Australia in 1961. We 'lived' in the first hut on the ...Read more
A memory of Paddock Wood
Harrogate Station Square
Here is Station Square appearing as its architects intended, an open airy town centre piece. The gardens in the foreground are the Coronation Gardens of c.1953, which complimented the Victorian square admirably. Just as ...Read more
A memory of Harrogate in 1965 by
Military Music On Promenade And In Park
My National Service was spent in The Alamein Band of The Royal Tank Regiment which for 3 seasons, 1949 to 1952 played at Bognor Regis for two months on the promenade bandstand in the afternoons and in ...Read more
A memory of Bognor Regis in 1950 by
Kingsbury Swimming Pool
I remember queuing outside the pool for what felt like hours on a hot summer's day. The price to get in went as low as 1d - or am I mistaken? We used to climb up a drainpipe at the back of the pool to get in, not to save ...Read more
A memory of Kingsbury in 1953 by
Happy Memories
Living in Low Fell the Ravensworth Arms was our 'local' and a circle of friends was formed in the late 1960s and we still remain friends 40 years on, although only two still live in Lamesley. My parents met their friends and I met ...Read more
A memory of Lamesley in 1967 by
2 Years In The Village
Sometime around 1956, for about two years, two of us shared a cottage in Iford village (one of the first two as you came off the main road from Lewes). We worked for Mr Robinson milking his Guernsey herd and doing ...Read more
A memory of Iford in 1956 by
Cookridge Once Fields And Farms
I moved from Holbeck in 1948 into one of the first estates to be built in North West Leeds, Ireland Wood (Raynels). In 1950 I went to Cookridge School, then a wooden hut right slap bang opposite where Cookridge ...Read more
A memory of Cookridge in 1950 by
Wickham Bishops Born And Bred
In 1950 I was born on a cold winter's night to my mother Rosemary Jesse, at 'The Black Houses', Kelvedon Road, Wickham Bishops, built by architect, designer and socio-economic theorist Arthur Heygate Macmurdo. ...Read more
A memory of Wickham Bishops by
Captions
477 captions found. Showing results 145 to 168.
On the right, the coal wharf is now home to the new fish market and National Marine Aquarium, and the harbour now has lock gates to prevent it drying out at low tide.
Low tide reveals a large expanse of golden sand here at Chapel Porth.
High Sweden Bridge is a picturesque packhorse bridge over the Scandale Beck between High Pike and Snarker Pike (there is a Low Sweden Bridge further down the valley).
The low arched door led to a basement store where imported goods could be held until duty was paid.
Swanage has an advantage as a resort in that there is little difference between high and low tides, allowing good bathing at most times of the day.
The river is tidal, and although there is nothing but mud here at low tide, it was navigable by small coasters well into the 20th century. Here we see imported timber in a yard on the left.
This rugged and sublime rock mass is divided from Marazion by the sea, but at low tide visitors can tread a causeway to the island.
A low mound is all that remains of the castle that gave the village its name.
Despite the shingle, patches of sand uncovered at low tide made the beach a popular attraction.
Thereafter the resort expanded on to the low-lying ground between the old hillside village and the sea.
The cast-iron breast shot waterwheel is inside the building and is dated 1800, with the initials of John Lowe, the miller.
More trees obscure this view across the stream to Low Green, and Buckfast & Son's shop (behind the second tree from the right) has closed, but the buildings have changed little.
A path leads from the tiny village across the fields to low cliffs above this quiet beach.
Par Beach is seen at low tide with the china clay port of Par in the background.
Although the River Wyre is here quite wide, it could be forded at low water, and Shard derives from a dialect word meaning 'cattle crossing'.
This harbour dries completely at low water. In common with Whitby, it was the stablishment of a railway service, in 1883, which affected community lifestyles drastically.
This good bronze by Tweed was unveiled in 1910; it still surveys the square, although the low stone walls either side of the plinth have been removed.
The beach is seen at low tide, with striking clouds and the sun glinting on the surf.
The countrywide low point of early 1960s building design has clearly arrived at Ashby, with the larger building towards the bottom right of the photograph standing out in an otherwise well-ordered townscape
At low tide the sluice was opened and the harbour flushed: hence Seaton Sluice.
The landscape in this photograph gives the appearance of great antiquity, with low stone walls and irregularly-shaped fields where sheep graze.
The low tower of Bentley church can just be seen against a curtain of trees in this photograph. The base of the tower is over 500 years old, while the top is more recent.
The current lock gates, erected in 1913, held back water for unloading ships at low tide. They are now used to sluice the channel clear of pebbles.
The arrival of the overhead tram wires at the turn of the century put paid to this practice, for they were too low for the circus wagons to pass underneath.
Places (90)
Photos (267)
Memories (637)
Books (0)
Maps (509)