Places
19 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
- Walpole St Peter, Norfolk
- Ampney St Peter, Gloucestershire
- St Peter's, Gloucestershire
- Saltfleetby St Peter, Lincolnshire
- St Peter's, Tyne and Wear
- Thorpe St Peter, Lincolnshire
- Toynton St Peter, Lincolnshire
- 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 South Elmham, Suffolk
- St Peter The Great, Hereford & Worcester
Photos
1,681 photos found. Showing results 161 to 180.
Maps
97 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
434 memories found. Showing results 81 to 90.
St Peter In Chains & St Gildas School Crouch Hill
My family lived on Mountview Road N8, from 1959 until 1971. We were blessed with a ground floor flat with cellar, in an old Victorian House at ,No. 35. We were opposite the reservoir, so had a ...Read more
A memory of Crouch End by
Myrtle Street
i was brought up in myrtle street all during the war ...i remember the Tivoli picture house, i well remember the life we lived ...so poor but a real community spirit...our doctor was Dr. Black, up Lapage St. we first went to Bowling ...Read more
A memory of Bradford
The Awakening
On the right of the photograph the second shop belonged to Arthur Sansom, the Newsagents and Confectioners. It has a sign board above the shop front: PICTURE POST. In the Easter holidays of 1959 at the age of 14½, I took my first ...Read more
A memory of Locksbottom
Moulds My Dad's Old Shop
After the war Dad found work as an assistant in a long established family-run department store called Moulds. Situated in Leatherhead High Street, it was an imposing sort of place with double glass doors set well back from ...Read more
A memory of Leatherhead by
Belleville School
A lady writing on here mentioned a couple of places in Battersea that bring back memories. First of all, she mentioned Meyrick Road. I never lived there, but my mum and dad did when my mum was carrying me. My mum and dad were Mr. and ...Read more
A memory of Battersea by
Crescent Road School
I was at Crescent road school in 1947 and had Mrs Payne headmistress and mr chinery, I also remember Mr Davies,I lived in south road, at the back of us was the fairfield, which we had great fun playing in,when I first went to ...Read more
A memory of Erith
Epsom Army Cadets
We were part of the 3rd Cadet Batallion of the East Surrey Regiment. Our base was the wooden huts erected behind Snows cycle shop in East Street after a German bomb obliterated the infants school that was there. The Officer in charge ...Read more
A memory of Epsom by
1973 Demolition Year For The Market Buildings
I arrived in Wolverhampton when demolition of the market buildings was under way. The buildings in front of the church (in the photo) must have already been long gone, but the buildings on the side ...Read more
A memory of Wolverhampton
The Woodland, Colliers Wood.
I, too was born in Colliers wood in 1938 and I believe the nursing home was called The Woodlands. I grew up in Mitcham until I was 11 years old and went to a prep school in Mitcham park for 3 years where the principal was a ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham by
Oak Hotel Maple Road 1955 1962
My name is Peter West and I started my life and spent the first 7 important years at the Oak. My dad was the landlord and and his father before him up until 1962 when he retired and I was whisked away in tears to go to ...Read more
A memory of Surbiton by
Captions
392 captions found. Showing results 193 to 216.
The present building is later; it perhaps dates from 1904, when the name was shortened.
The church has a fine Horsham stone roof and a large brass on the floor of the nave to Thomas Noland, Prior of the Cluniac St Pancras at Lewes, who died in 1433.
Chalfont St Giles retains much more of its heritage and character than its southern neighbour, Chalfont St Peter, with a High Street lined with good buildings, a pond and the parish church
The church of St Peter and St Paul, another of the marshland churches, is located by the side of the A158 main road to Skegness - during the summer this is a very busy road indeed.
'The Prisoner of Zenda' was showing at the Regal Cinema in the elegant North Yorkshire spa town of Harrogate when this picture was taken.
The church of St Peter and St Paul, another of the marshland churches, is located by the side of the A158 main road to Skegness - during the summer this is a very busy road indeed.
Church Lane runs north from the High Street towards its eastern end, with St Peter's Church a short way along it.
It is coming up to ten minutes to eleven by St Peter's clock as one of the new electric tramcars rattles along Bridge Street on its way to Saltney.
The tram is at the junction of Cotes Avenue.
The church of St Peter, in North Street, has a superb Norman doorway, possibly the best in the county (so the experts say), and the church has further Norman architecture inside.
Easily the oldest building in Farnborough, the parish church of St Peter dates from about 1200, although there is evidence to suggest a Saxon church may have occupied the site before
In 1844 it was acquired by the Dean and Chapter to use for St Peter's School, which had outgrown its former site.
This view shows the tower of St Peter's Church from the now much-municipalised Reading bank.
The tower of St Peter's Church was built in the 15th century.
In 1712 St Peter's Hospital looked after around three hundred sick and poor people.
Much of the quaintness of St Peter's was lost when Sir George Gilbert Scott 'restored' it in 1867.
The road off to the right is St Peter's Street.
St Peter's, the Victorian church in the middle of the picture, was Aberdovey (or Aberdyfi's) first church, though the song 'The Bells of Aberdyfi' suggests that an earlier church lies drowned beneath the
During a restoration in 1965, statues of St Peter and St Paul by Eric Winters were placed in the central niche, a gift of the Friends of Lavenham Church.
St Peter's Church was 'pulled down' in 1560, and this building was built in 1863.
A statue of St Peter, the cathedral's patron saint, stands high on the gable.
A small-scale start for what is now Highlands End Caravan Park. here we are Looking north towards St Peter's Church, on The Mount.
The 100-foot high slender stone tower of the church of St Peter and St Paul domi- nates this village built on a hairpin bend.
The tower of St Peter's can just be seen above the roofs on the right-hand side of the picture.
Places (19)
Photos (1681)
Memories (434)
Books (0)
Maps (97)