Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Bangor, County Down
- Newcastle, County Down
- Greyabbey, County Down
- Donaghadee, County Down
- Downpatrick, County Down
- Portaferry, County Down
- Dromore, County Down
- Hillsborough, County Down
- Downings, Republic of Ireland
- Killyleagh, County Down
- Ardglass, County Down
- Rostrevor, County Down
- Dundrum, County Down
- Newtownards, County Down
- Warrenpoint, County Down
- Ballygowan, County Down
- Ballywalter, County Down
- Ballyward, County Down
- Bishops Court, County Down
- Boardmills, County Down
- Culcavy, County Down
- Katesbridge, County Down
- Killough, County Down
- Millisle, County Down
- Portavogie, County Down
- Saul, County Down
- Seaforde, County Down
- The Diamond, County Down
- Audleystown, County Down
- Kearney, County Down
- Annaclone, County Down
- Ballyhalbert, County Down
- Ballymartin, County Down
- Clare, County Down
- Conlig, County Down
- Dollingstown, County Down
Photos
945 photos found. Showing results 1,841 to 945.
Maps
459 maps found.
Books
49 books found. Showing results 2,209 to 2,232.
Memories
8,155 memories found. Showing results 921 to 930.
Born In Lower Bedfords Road
I was born in Lower Bedfords Road and as a young child I can remember cattle coming down the road to go in one of the fields in Bedfords Park. My mum used to shoo them out of the garden with a tea towel. I ...Read more
A memory of Havering-atte-Bower in 1960 by
22 Church Street
I lived at 22 Church Street until 1963. My family moved from there in November 1963 as the property was being demolished to make way for a car park! I remember watching from the bedroom window a huge fire which burnt down the Gaumont Cinema.
A memory of Stroud in 1963 by
Home Again
Here I am again, 11 years later only this time with my wife, to show her where I came from. The lady that now owns the bungalow where I was born very kindly let us have a look inside the house, which has changed so much since the ...Read more
A memory of Weybread in 2010 by
My First School Alby Hill 1944
My mother and her mother were born in my great-grandparents' cottage at Hanworth Common. Richard and Blanche Craske they were. Well dear old Richard was really my step great grandad. The true one was ...Read more
A memory of Aldborough in 1944 by
Childhood In The 1950s
It breaks my heart to see how the years, short-sighted councillors and rapacious businessmen have ruined this once noble and beautiful seaside resort. How could anybody have countenanced destroying this view for the ...Read more
A memory of Bridlington by
Burgh Heath Sugar Bowl
I remember the Sugar Bowl very well as I used to swim there. I was a boarder at Red House School further down the Brighton Road, does anyone remember that? Best days of my life (another story), Walton on the Hill for ...Read more
A memory of Burgh Heath in 1960 by
Stacksteads Boyhood.
My family moved from Haslingden to Newchurch Road in 1950 opposite the Farhome Tavern. As an eight year old I attended Western Junior School until 1953 leaving to attend Blackthorn Secondary Modern until June 1957 when our ...Read more
A memory of Stacksteads in 1950 by
Portmanmore Road 1964 Part Two
My dad was from Bridgend and my mother was from Llanharran. In 1961 soon after they’d got together, I was conceived, they left the valley's and moved in with my Nan, Maureen Payne / Pobihem, and Step Grampy, Polish ...Read more
A memory of Splott in 1964 by
Tin Tan Tommy
I moved to the hill as a child with my brother and sisters in the early 1950as to Dagnam Park Square. We had a lovely wood there to play in. Tin Tan Tommy was our best game, standing on the sand bin spying out the other kids and ...Read more
A memory of Harold Hill in 1956 by
The Best Memories
I was born in Otley hospital as were most from Guiseley and all around. In 1969 I was posted there as a police officer and stayed until 1974. My daughter was born there in 1972 and my dad died there on his 81st birthday. I know ...Read more
A memory of Otley in 1969 by
Captions
2,258 captions found. Showing results 2,209 to 2,232.
In 1916, the L31 Zeppelin was shot down and crashed in the farm estate of Oakmere House. The local people rushed to the house and woke Mrs Forbes, who appeared at the door in her night clothes.
The fortress was built by William Fitz Osbern between 1067 and 1071, and was one of a chain of strongholds erected to hold down south-east Wales.
James O' Neill bought the living for himself when St Mary's had become run down; he remained there for 35 years. St Mary's had been the centrepiece of the old order, but could it remain so?
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, through lanes and across Farthing Down
The steps lead down to the Linolite factory, which incorporated C R Luce`s brewery, and the Postern Mill (which was irresponsibly demolished in 1984).
This magnificent building has a history all of its own. 'No part of Henry VI's scheme for a college was of greater importance than that of a church', according to the Eton guide book.
In the Middle Ages the settlement at Twickenham was a cluster of houses in streets around St Mary's Church and in narrow alleys nearby leading down to the river.
The painter J M Whistler visited the fashionable seaside town of Lyme Regis in 1895.
By 1891 the local fleet was down to 174 boats employing 860 men and boys and landing an annual catch valued at just under £3000.
The tenements could only expand lengthways along their own ‘backsides’, and most buildings had a jumble of outhouses, barns and sheds at the rear.
The structure jutted 1,240 feet out to sea and a small rail link brought passengers and their luggage down to landside porters.
Geoff Cox said: 'I think the negative image goes back to Lorraine Chase and the Luton Airport advertisement (for Campari); it led to the naff town idea.
The town's original swimming pool was built in Mereway in 1896, and used for many years before closing due to pollution of the water.
hill of lime or loose stones' is one meaning suggested in a recent book, or if we believe the name has a Celtic derivation, we end up with 'the shelter on a rock'; but no one can really pin the meaning down
The local population in the Middle Ages made a living from agriculture, fishing, boat-building, and ferrying traffic up and down the river.
When Basildon New Town was built, the plotland houses were torn down by the thousand.
No sooner had Thomas Mildmay obtained the manor of Chelmsford than the townspeople began to clamour for a new Market Cross: the old one was falling down around the judges' ears.
Every morning some of the inmates would wend their way into the town to work in the houses or the inns.
In 1897 the commissioners were landlords to a yard employing nearly 9,000 on the County Down side.
By the time the railway arrived in Blackpool in 1846, the town was already a resort attracting several thousand visitors a year. Baileys Hotel, later the Metropole, had opened in 1776.
The town was changing, and the old order was changing with it. 45 new residential roads were added to the street map in the 1920s.
The parish church, dedicated to St John the Baptist, developed from the Norman period onward through the Middle Ages, and is down in a dip at the junction of several streets.
The west end was boarded up, and the aisle was left with five rather than the seven bays initially planned; the pulpit ended up more than half way down the church.
However, it would be over 50 years before the General Enclosure Act was passed in 1858, which would enable further parts of the Heath to be enclosed, and the skeletal structure of the town to
Places (198)
Photos (945)
Memories (8155)
Books (49)
Maps (459)