Places
17 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Bridge End, Oxfordshire
- Bridge End, Lincolnshire
- Bridge End, Essex
- Bridge End, Bedfordshire
- Bridge End, Clwyd
- Bridge End, Warwickshire
- Bridge End, Surrey
- Bridge End, Durham (near Frosterley)
- Bridge End, Northumberland (near Hexham)
- Bridge End, Hereford & Worcester (near Tirley)
- Bridge End, Hereford & Worcester (near Bosbury)
- Bridge End, Shetland Islands
- Bridge End, Cumbria (near Carlisle)
- Bridge End, Northumberland (near Hexham)
- Bridge End, Devon (near Kingsbridge)
- Bridge End, Devon (near Sidmouth)
- West End, Yorkshire (near Pateley Bridge)
Photos
40 photos found. Showing results 1,461 to 40.
Maps
520 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 1,753 to 2.
Memories
1,924 memories found. Showing results 731 to 740.
Hertford Road Barking Happy Childhood Memories
I stumbled across your article and it brought back happy childhood memories. Like you I also lived in Hertford Road Barking up until the summer of 1970 when we moved to Fairlop. Our homes were ...Read more
A memory of Barking by
Croglin History
My grandparents lived at bridge end croglin first house over the bridge les and Ella knubley with my aunty Edith. I spent most if my childhood helping them out with their animals and gardens,catching rabbits and mowdies and have some ...Read more
A memory of Croglin by
The Sound Of Bells...
Working on my bungalow today in the ancient, beautiful Dorset town of Sherborne, I kept on hearing the tolling of the local Abbey bells. Not really unusual, except today, the sound seemed to 'resonate', and take me 'way back' ...Read more
A memory of Acton by
Stroud Bridge.
Hi,just hoping someone can help me.My wife has been tracing her family tree.Her relatives came from the Bere Heath area.Her maiden name is Stroud. I have noticed on my ordnance survey map there is a bridge close by called Stroud ...Read more
A memory of Bere Heath by
Boarding School In Woking
When I was Five we lived in Byfleet and often visited the Woking Lido in Summer. I nearly killed myself by sliding down the slide unsupervised. Fortunately my father saw me and dragged me out. When I was Six my sister and I ...Read more
A memory of Woking by
Happy Days Of Youth.
My first memories of Motherwell was living down the Daisy Park at 18 Braidhurst Street and watching the new housing scene being built opposite my house ,the old mill used provide a perfect brae for our bogies which consisted an ...Read more
A memory of Motherwell by
St. Neot's, 1956 1961.
St. Neot's changed my life! Beginning an apprenticeship at a long gone Huntingdon firm I was obliged to attend the then new St. Neot's Technical College one day a week. The head was the late Louie Mountford. We 'part time' ...Read more
A memory of St Neots by
Grew Up In Northwood
I was born there in 1957 and lived there until 1975. Rhodes had those lovely handmade sweets. There was a Delicatessen next door..always had a lovely smell of roasting coffee - and fabulous wheels of Brie.. The reindeer pub ...Read more
A memory of Northwood
Personal Memories
Memories from many years ago. My father David Dickson was the dentist who built the house at 9 Newcastle Street which is where I spent my early years.. After the war we moved to Birkland Villa which we entered from a laneway just ...Read more
A memory of Worksop by
"Digger" Hunwick Growing Up At No 7, Hall Road.
Born under a table in the front room of No.7 Hall Road on 16/7/1944 while an air raid warning sounded to herald the German V1s presence above. I attended Aveley Infants and Primary schools between 1949 and ...Read more
A memory of Aveley by
Captions
1,770 captions found. Showing results 1,753 to 1,776.
From the bridge it was once possible to see a windmill built on a high bluff of rock above the river.
By 1958 cheap Italian and Japanese textiles were being dumped on the market and countries like Canada and the US had placed a tariff on British cloth.
The busy A59 road now divides Gisburn, but it still has its cobbled forecourts and white cottages in the main street. Here we will find the Ribblesdale Arms.
St John's Bridge is on the left. The Avon Mill at this time was occupied by Hugh Dryden & Co Ltd, who sold antiques and works of art here until the late 1970s.
Belfast had a very effective body managing and improving its harbour long before it had a council able to provide roads, drainage and oversee housing.
The tenements could only expand lengthways along their own ‘backsides’, and most buildings had a jumble of outhouses, barns and sheds at the rear.
Prize money of 300 guineas was announced for a competition in 1866 to design and lay out an area for 'the delight and pleasure of the public'.
The local population in the Middle Ages made a living from agriculture, fishing, boat-building, and ferrying traffic up and down the river.
It was once Shergold's grocery, and still has beautiful tiles on the walls.
AND SO, with the new millennium, to modern times. It cannot be claimed that Stafford celebrated the event with much originality or enthusiasm.
It was built by Sir William Stradling during the reign of Edward III, and remodelled during the Tudor period. There are two wards, the outer defended by a gatehouse with a portcullis.
This had already been the capital of the Trinovantes, the tribe whose territory covered Essex and east Suffolk.
The horse-drawn trams were a long-established feature of the city, and the system was still being extended up the Cregagh and Anderstown Roads.
The new mills and factories not only changed the skyline of Carlisle: they had a radical impact upon the very nature of the city.
The estate dates to the early 13th century, and was owned by William de Polesdene. It was later occupied by Thomas Slyfield, and was granted to John Norbury in 1470.
Walsall has always adapted to changing economic climates and consumer demand, from its first industries in limestone, coal mining and metalwork through to the leather trade and now retailing.
.` In 1962 Mrs C Nicholls, born in 1872, recalled walking to St John`s School, Bradmore Green from Hooley: `We used to walk up to the Star [near Star Lane], turn left over the railway bridge
The town also acquired that other symbol of Georgian respectability and status: Assembly Rooms, in Bell Street.
Places (17)
Photos (40)
Memories (1924)
Books (2)
Maps (520)