Maps

7,210 maps found.

1919, Street Ref. POP841609
1919, Turfmoor Ref. POP854430
1919, Upham Ref. POP856887
1919, Whitford Ref. POP869306
1919, Wick Ref. POP869729
1946, Ashill Ref. NPO627695
1919, Waddon Ref. POP859336
1919, Whitchurch Ref. POP867546
1899, Humber Ref. RNC741969
1899, Woolston Ref. RNC874369
1898, Bolham Ref. RNE645559
1895, Bradford Ref. RNE647848
1897, Bridgend Ref. RNE650107
1899, Blackhorse Ref. RNC642642
1899-1900, Coleford Ref. RNC675245
1900, Bradwell Ref. RNC648022
1898-1900, Cove Ref. RNC679143
1900, Fremington Ref. RNC709271
1900, Dipple Ref. RNC691043
1898-1900, Crook Ref. RNC683935

Books

32 books found. Showing results 193 to 216.

Memories

314 memories found. Showing results 81 to 90.

The 697 Bus From Tiverton To Wellington Via Huntsham

I suppose one of the advantages of being "old" is having both the pensioner's free bus pass and the time to use it! So having retired to the middle of Devon with my wife Elizabeth in 2006 I ...Read more

A memory of Huntsham in 2008 by John Howard Norfolk

Teignmouth Folk Festival 2008

A weekend long folk festival in June attracted crowds of spectators to the street entertainments around Teignmouth and also to the concert performances in the Carlton Theatre. Many of the entertainers were morris ...Read more

A memory of Teignmouth in 2008 by John Howard Norfolk

The Real Family Of Axmouth Devon Uk

My Grandmother ELLEN REAL was born in Axmouth 1875. Her grandmother was a Lace Maker and one of a few lace makers who contributed to making Queen Victoria's Wedding Veil.  My father (William Tom Sparkes) told me ...Read more

A memory of Axmouth in 1947 by Kay Foulger

Sydney Wood

My father, Sydney Wood was born in Malborough in 1914. He moved away to get married in 1940 but always considered Malborough as home right up until his death in 1992. He always maintained that he was the young water carrier in this ...Read more

A memory of Malborough in 1920 by Tony Wood

Summer Holidays Spent With My Aunt In Weare Giffard

My happiest memories of childhood are the weeks spent with my aunt who lived in Weare Giffard. Coming from London I felt I had arrived in paradise. My aunt, lived in a bungalow called ...Read more

A memory of Weare Giffard in 1958

Staying At Mrs Robbins Guest House 1952

We, the Brown Family from Wembley Middlesex spent two wonderful holidays with Mrs Robbins on the front at Instow. Mrs Robbins had been our neighbour at Lonsdale Avenue Wembley before returning to her native Devon ...Read more

A memory of Instow by Jennifer Keen Nee Brown

Station Master Audley End

Not so much a memory as a request! My great-grandfather William Saward was Station Master at Audley End for 38 years, between 1857 and 1895. He lived in the Station House, where my grandfather Bertram was born and became a ...Read more

A memory of Audley End by david_saward

St Michael And All Angels Church Of England School

I would love to hear of anyone who went to Tatenhill school around the late 1940 into the 1950s. It was such a magical time with Miss Read our teacher who inspired us and fired our imagination. ...Read more

A memory of Tatenhill in 1948

St Mary's School

It is believed that this was a training college for Church of England vicars and then it was subsequently used as an orphanage run by the Catholic Rescue Society and staffed by the Sisters of Chariry, a French order of nuns. ...Read more

A memory of Gravesend in 1930 by colingbedford

St Mary''s School Parrock Road Gravesend

St Mary's Boys returned from Ugbrook, Devon the estate of Lord Clifford to Gravesend when the war ended in 1945 and I was resident there until 1954. Although called a school it was in reality an ...Read more

A memory of Gravesend in 1945 by Delvin Flynn

Captions

227 captions found. Showing results 193 to 216.

Caption For Calstock, Viaduct 1908

The construction workyard on the Devon bank has been cleared, but the wooden ketch 'Garlandstone' can be seen being built at James Goss's shipyard just behind the viaduct.

Caption For Beer, The Village 1892

Beer was the birthplace in 1788 of the smuggler Jack Rattenbury, who lived a life of adventure landing untaxed cargoes along much of the Devon coast.

Caption For Ashburton, West End C1955

Ashburton was the terminus of the nine-mile branch of the Buckfastleigh, Totnes and South Devon line, which was completed in 1872.

Caption For Abinger, Abinger Bottom 1924

It was installed on a nearby hilltop in the year this picture was taken, before being transferred to Hartland in North Devon in 1955.

Caption For Dawlish, The Seafront From The Royal Hotel 1890

A place familiar to all train travellers through Devon, Dawlish nestles across the sides of a broad combe, with the railway line protecting the town from the sea.

Caption For Plympton, St Mary's Church Reredos 1898

The only other one in Devon is at Ashwater.

Caption For Axmouth, The Village 1898

Before railways and metalled roads, there were only two main routes into Devon.

Caption For Bottesford, Market Street C1955

An expansive village, it sits on the River Devon, about a mile north of the Grantham Canal of 1797.

Caption For Culbone, The Smallest Parish Church In England 1929

Nearing the coast, in a steep wooded combe 400 feet above the sea, Culbone's church is well-known to walkers along the Somerset and North Devon Coast Path , but is inaccessible by public road

Caption For Braunton, Old House Church Street 1900

As much as any other, this view illustrates the timelessness of North Devon.

Caption For Swanage, Old Harry Rocks 1890

These Cretaceous rocks mark the eastern end of the Devon and Dorset World Heritage Site that is popularly known as the Jurassic Coast.

Caption For Launceston, Square And War Memorial C1922

Barclay's Bank, originally built for the East Cornwall Bank in 1885 with the town clock on its corner, placed there in 1922 and still running today; Lloyd's Bank (centre left), which took over the earlier Devon

Caption For Hamble, The Village C1955

With its steep, winding streets and pretty cottages, there is a definite hint of Devon or Cornwall about it.

Caption For Exmouth, A Cockle Woman 1906

This old woman is 'scratting' (scratching) the sands for the dark-coloured Devon cockles.

Caption For Mullion, Golf Links 1911

Golf was hardly played outside Scotland until the 1860s, when the first English club, the North Devon at Westward Ho!

Caption For Runcorn, The Docks C1900

By far the most important trade at Runcorn was china clay from Devon and Cornwall, bound for the Potteries.

Caption For Quarr Abbey, C1875

The abbey was founded in 1132 by Baldwin de Redvers, afterwards Lord of the Island and Earl of Devon.

Caption For Paignton, Church Screen 1889

Here eleven generations of Kirkhams resided, and became involved with important offices in Devon.

Caption For Exmouth, From The Pier 1906

It was 1,900 feet long and constructed from Devon limestone.

Caption For Bottesford, Market Street C1955

An expansive village, it sits on the River Devon, about a mile north of the Grantham Canal of 1797.

Caption For Exmouth, A Cockle Woman 1906

This old woman is 'scratting' (scratching) the sands for the dark-coloured Devon cockles.

Caption For Mullion, Golf Links 1911

Golf was hardly played outside Scotland until the 1860s, when the first English club, the North Devon at Westward Ho!

Caption For Newark, Cemetery Avenue 1904

Burials were forbidden within the town, and a plague pit was opened at the southern end of Millgate near the bridge over the Devon.

Caption For Lyme Regis, Pinhay 1922

This mansion on Lyme's western cliffs, a mile beyond Ware, was the far point on Jane Austen's walk from Dorset into Devon in 1804.