Places
23 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Chalfont St Peter, Buckinghamshire
- St Peters, Kent
- Weasenham St Peter, Norfolk
- Burgh St Peter, Norfolk
- Peter Tavy, Devon
- Walpole St Peter, Norfolk
- Ampney St Peter, Gloucestershire
- Peter's Finger, Devon
- Peters Marland, Devon
- St Peter's, Gloucestershire
- Peters Green, Hertfordshire
- Saltfleetby St Peter, Lincolnshire
- Thorpe St Peter, Lincolnshire
- Toynton St Peter, Lincolnshire
- St Peter's, Tyne and Wear
- St Peter South Elmham, Suffolk
- Ayot St Peter, Hertfordshire
- Carleton St Peter, Norfolk
- Charlton St Peter, Wiltshire
- Fugglestone St Peter, Wiltshire
- Rockland St Peter, Norfolk
- Wiggenhall St Peter, Norfolk
- St Peter The Great, Hereford & Worcester
Photos
1,748 photos found. Showing results 141 to 160.
Maps
122 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,304 memories found. Showing results 71 to 80.
Anti Invasion Devices
I spent many happy hours on Porthpean beach, both with my family and my friends during the summer holidays. I remember the anti invasion devices well as we used them as monkey bars. After the war they became very rusty with ...Read more
A memory of Porthpean in 1943 by
Antique Shop
When I was 5 years old my Mum and Dad sold everything and we sailed by cargo ship back to England from Montreal Quebec. We settled in Robin Hoods Bay as my grandma Phylis Timbrell owned and operated the Antique Shop along ...Read more
A memory of Robin Hood's Bay in 1965 by
Anvil St
I suppose it's my age, but I am getting a little nostalgic about my youth. I used to live in Anvil Street (no longer exists) and remember well my first day at school, St John's on Altom Street, now a mosque. I certainly have some well ...Read more
A memory of Blackburn by
Anyone From Or Remember Barmore Street
Hello, I spent my early childhood in Barmore Street, which holds special memories. I do have an old photo showing a Street Party, which I will endeavour to upload (not sure how yet). The Queens Head Pub was ...Read more
A memory of Battersea by
Anyone Remember An Edith Or Irene Orme
August 27th on Mytchett Rd, my gran, Irene was hit by a lorry, later dying. She left my dad, 3 yrs & two other toddlers. As an army wife, I was wondering if she had some friends that remember her. She ...Read more
A memory of Frimley in 1930 by
Anyone Remember The Original Cabin Shop/Cafe At The Bottom Of Northdown Hill?
The Cabin was a significant part of my childhood. We first moved to St Peters, into a rented house opposite the church, then up to a council house in Hugin Avenue. As I ...Read more
A memory of St Peters by
Anything
I moved to Osterley from Hounslow in 1969 aged 5. Earliest memories include Mrs Thomas's sweet shop, the greengrocer shop and the fish van that I had to buy cheap fish from for our 2 cats. Riveting stuff eh?! Spent many happy hours ...Read more
A memory of Osterley by
Arlesey Bedfordshire
When my dad was demobbed after the war in 1946, we had to move back to London because of his job. We had all our funiture put on a lorry, and the local publican, a Ted Bland, delivered us to a requestioned place over a shop in ...Read more
A memory of Arlesey in 1940 by
Around Rochdale
I enjoyed reading Peter Butterworth's memories of Smallbridge. I went to the same school( Halifax Rd), 1937-44. My name then was Sylvia Higgin (now married to Stanley Rudman - since 1959). My younger brother, Trevor Higgin, also ...Read more
A memory of Smallbridge in 1940 by
Around The Chalk Pit
I lived at 1 St. George's Close, off Chalk Pit Avenue from 1946 to 1954. At first, the Chalk Pit was still there, as was the Oast House, where the shops are now on the corner of Chalk Pit Avenue and Main Road. I first ...Read more
A memory of St Paul's Cray in 1946 by
Captions
474 captions found. Showing results 169 to 192.
The 20th century, however, saw the oysters blighted by disease, floods and harsh winters, and the industry finally petered out in the 1970s.
Situated at the west of end of St Peter's Street, this fine Regency terrace was constructed between 1827 and 1831 on the site of the bowling green to provide houses for 20 middle-class families.
This event survives as Horndon-on-the-Hill Feast & Fayre, which takes place at the end of June, to mark St Peter's Day.
The village's mid-Victorian Baptist chapel stands close to the 13th-century church of St Peter and St Paul.
Trendy Top Pic fashions have moved into Milling's old shop, but Peter Leigh & Son's traditional grocers survive next door.
The spire of the Norman church of St Peter and St Paul can be seen above the trees.
Continuing north-west towards Felbridge from the Moat Road junction we see the Italianate Church of Our Lady and St Peter, looking south east.
He was also responsible for rebuilding St Peter's, Harborne.
Looking up towards St Peter's Church, it is easy to appreciate Colchester's early appeal as a defensive settlement: the steep approaches would always have stood in its favour.
In 1844 it was acquired by the Dean and Chapter to use for St Peter's School, which had outgrown its former site.
Much Wenlock is the most delightfully evocative town, so much so that Ellis Peters (the local author of the Brother Cadfael detective books set in the 12th century) once said of the town that you almost
The magnificent 15th-century church, dedicated to St Peter and St Paul, was funded by local merchants.
The foreground is now the east part of Peter Pan's Adventure Island amusement park.
Visit the church at Yateley, and have a look at the glass in the 13th- century east window: it depicts Peter and John, and is the work of William Morris and the Pre-Raphaelite artist Sir Edward Burne-Jones
St Peter's was originally a chapel of ease to Cartmel Priory, and was consecrated by the Bishop of Chester on 30 June 1745.
The bell came from the mortuary chapel at Ayot St Peter, to whom it had been donated by Charles Willes Wilshere of The Frythe in 1876.
The church of St Peter can be found on one side of the river.
The parish church of St Peter and St Paul has a 12th-century base, which was subject to the chancel being widened in the 13th century, and the bell tower being added in the 14th century.
In the latter part of the 19th century, Royle Hall was the home of Canon Arthur Townley Parker, the long-serving incumbent of St Peter's.
The church of St Peter, standing further up the hill, has a nave and aisles dating from the early 13th century.The town name is believed to have come from the pagan worship of Thunor.
The steeple of the 12th-century church of St Peter and St Paul collapsed in the 17th century.
We are standing on Winckford Bridge across the Chelmer - described by Peter Muilman in his 1769 'History of Essex' as “a handsome bridge built of wood, painted.”
This event survives as Horndon-on-the-Hill Feast & Fayre, which takes place at the end of June, to mark St Peter's Day.
After 1855, the town was developed mainly by Peter Bruff, who built Marine Terrace, the central row of houses in this picture.
Places (23)
Photos (1748)
Memories (1304)
Books (0)
Maps (122)