Places
2 places found.
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Maps
18 maps found.
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Memories
338 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.
Ightham Village
My sisters Rita, Susan and me all attended Ightham Primary School, the headmaster was Mr Foster, he travelled every day from Maidstone by car, Mrs Kath Gordon, Miss Tomkins being the other teachers, Mrs Hussey replacing Miss ...Read more
A memory of Ightham by
Jeff Knott
I spent my first years at 115 Leigh Rd and then moved across the road to 38-40 Leigh Rd-right across from Nutbeem Rd. I remember Stanley Brehaut the photographer. I went to Barton Peveril and then on to Loughborough to run for their ...Read more
A memory of Eastleigh by
Just After The War
My name was Mary Butterworth and I was born at 25 Egerton Street in Winton. I left Winton Senior School in 1946 and began work in a baby linin shop on Patricroft Bridge. The shop was called Turners, next door to Tatham's the ...Read more
A memory of Patricroft by
Kingsbridge School And Friends
My name is David Thomas. I was born in 1938, in Plymouth, but my parents lived in Warren Road in Kingsbridge. Next door lived Billy Maddick, and I would go there to listen to 'Dick Barton, Special Agent' because I ...Read more
A memory of Kingsbridge by
Kingsley School Chelsea
Kingsley Secondary School, Hi, my name is Richard Hood and I attended Kingsley from 1958 to 1964. I have very fond memories of the school together with the many classmates who are fondly remembered. It’s a shame that I ...Read more
A memory of Chelsea by
Leigh Road And Living In Eastleigh
My grandmother lived in a flat in the Eagles building behind Collins the butchers. In the 1951 picture, the girl on the bicycle could easily be me! I would have been 10 then and my coat was a light green with black ...Read more
A memory of Eastleigh by
Life In Oxshott In The 1940s And 50s The Ridgeway
I lived in Oxshott from 1943 to 1957. I was actually born in a nursing home at 1 Avenue Elmers, Surbiton, a building which has been converted to luxury flats now. My maiden name was Huitt and I had ...Read more
A memory of Oxshott by
Lillah Street ( Off Cross Lane ),Salford...Lilian Bond,Joseph Burton & Hilda Hibbert
Hi everyone. My mum is Salford born and bred .Her name was LILIAN BOND born in 1947. She lived at 21 Lillah Street,next to the `corner`shop at 23, which was previously owned ...Read more
A memory of Salford by
Locating Family
My father John Ormston lived in Coronation Terrace, Broomhill until he married in 1947. His mother was Harriett Hannah, whose maiden name was Tuck, but she had married Thomas Gray before my Grandfather. All I know about my ...Read more
A memory of North Seaton by
Long Walks For Little Boys
I remember we used to walk from my grandma's house in Nottingham Road opposite the Fire Station down through the park, cut through to Burton Street and about halfway up Burton Hill. I was never quite sure why we went ...Read more
A memory of Melton Mowbray by
Captions
202 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.
This is the heart of the town, and markets have been held here for 800 years; the basic size and shape of the market place has remained largely the same throughout that period, as evinced by
This is the heart of the town, and markets have been held here for 800 years; the basic size and shape of the market place has remained largely the same throughout that period, as evinced by
Its landmark features are the ancient Barton Bridge in the centre, also known as Packhorse Bridge, and the spire of the parish church of Holy Trinity to the left.
Beyond, stretching from right to left, is the line of West Street through to the Town Hall and Market Place, with the chimneys of net-makers Joseph Gundry and Company (centre left), Ewens and Turner in
Endowed in the 16th century, the free Broughton Grammar School also took children from Barton and Haighton.
Marks & Spencer had replaced F Spence & Son, a furnishers with an impressive window display.
St Giles' Church is over 800 years old and accepted as one of the most attractive in England.
Looking along the broad sweep of Lyme Bay toward the eminence of Barton Cliff, with the protective harbour walls jutting out to sea, and the signal mast of the coastguard station clearly visible.
Over 20 ships were wrecked in the bay between 1850 and 1917.
The parish boundaries meet here with those of Myerscough and Barton; indeed, one boundary cuts through the Roebuck's bowling green.
In the foreground is Barton Farm, a dairy farm worked by the Chard family.
Barton Bridge closed in favour of road traffic.
In this village churchyard there is a 19th-century memorial to thirty hop pickers who drowned when their cart slipped over a crumbling bridge and dragged them into the depths of the River Medway.
Smithill's Hall occupies a site where, according to tradition, a chapel dedicated to the Blessed Virgin was consecrated in AD793 and the wandering court of King Egbert, father of Alfred the Great, was
The tall building behind Underwood's shop (now The Corner Shop) is the old Harcourt shoe factory - recently converted into flats and a sound studio.
The Nottingham Co-operative Society (centre) is no longer on the left of the High Street - the building is now a pet shop, and the Co-op has moved to a more modern building across the street.
The Nottingham Co-operative Society (centre) is no longer on the left of the High Street - the building is now a pet shop, and the Co-op has moved to a more modern building across the street.
This is all that remains of the magnificent west front of the Abbey, now reduced in height and stripped of its facing stone.
Mr Barton gave the land and £1,000 towards the cost on condition that there should be no pew rents as there had been in the older church.
Tewkesbury's cross stands at the meeting point of the town's three main roads – the High Street, Church Street and Barton Street.
The village gets its name from a Barton (or Berton), the old word for a rickyard.The village church of St James was remarkable for its time in that it was built all at once, and not over a couple
This view shows the two bridges at Barton upon Irwell both swung to let the paddle steamer 'Ivanhoe' pass.
Beyond the tithing of Barton and after crossing water meadows, we come to the pretty village of Bishopstoke.
There are two mill streams, one known as the Barton River, from which water is provided for the Itchen Navigation Canal, and this branch, which follows the Fair Oak Road with Montague Terrace on the right
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Memories (338)
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