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Memories
497 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
What A Fright
If you have read my account as a child at Felkirk Church, I as a grown man and with some time on my hands, visited Felkirk Church on many occasions. It was on the last occasion where I went there around 15.00 hours. I recall that the ...Read more
A memory of Ryhill in 1976 by
Thorpe Road Cemetery.
my dad fred hunter was the 1st cemetery suprintendant of horden cemetery ,my mam eva was a sherburn hill lass until marrying my dad and moving into the cemetery house ,I can recall my mam saying as we looked out of the house window ...Read more
A memory of Horden by
The 70's At The Lake
My memories are of living at 37 pickmere lane from 1969 age 7. My mum Beryl Owen still lives there now and I still live in Wincham. I will always remember the "bob bob bob" of the motor boats which I could here from my bedroom ...Read more
A memory of Pickmere by
Tanktops And Bellbottoms
Tank tops and bell bottoms-memoirs of a Birkenhead lad I was born in Birkenhead in 1954 at the back of Central Station, opposite the Haymarket, and still remember being hungry all the time. We were poor, as was everyone ...Read more
A memory of Birkenhead by
Pleasaunce
My nan lived at 11 Basket Gardens, which was near the pleasaunce, and she would take us there when we visited her. It was a wonderful place, my favourite being the stepping stones which led through a small stream, My school, the Gorden, ...Read more
A memory of Eltham in 1954 by
Pilgrims Way Childrens Home And St Patrick Open Air School
I was in pilgrims way childrens home in bower mount road Maidstone from age 12-15.it was a very strict regime but I liked it there. however we were made to go to choir practice every ...Read more
A memory of Hayling Island by
Part 16
Conclusion On my last visit it was hard to see where the village was. The small triangular field is now a park but it looks so small. The place I remember seemed so much larger than Small Park that is now there. Having been raised ...Read more
A memory of Middle Rainton in 1945 by
Part 14
Trawlers go out for quite a while. The first catch goes into the bottom of the hold, and ice put on top. Later catches go on top, iced again and on until the hold is full. Depending on the size of the catch, this can take a ...Read more
A memory of Middle Rainton in 1945 by
My Roots 1962 Onwards Annitsford John Douglas
my first school was annitsford 1966/67 the first week kept running out off school didnt like it we lived in a flat jubbilee terrace cobble stones next too the railway line when the trains went by with ...Read more
A memory of Annitsford by
My Early Chidhood
I was born at 32 Pisgah Road which was the bottom end cottage of a row of three opposite Pisgah Chapel. The cottages had no back entrances. There was a pathway running in front of the three cottages with an outside toilet ...Read more
A memory of Talywain in 1945 by
Captions
107 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
There are two pairs of stones in the buck and two pairs and a centrifugal dressing machine in the round house.
Between the lions is a statue of Major-General Charles Compton, third Baron Chesham, the commander of the Bucks Militia, who fought in South Africa during the Boer War.
This is not a real castle, of course, but rather a battlemented house of about 1818; it was greatly enlarged by Edward Buckton Lamb, that eccentric Victorian architect, and others by 1870.
Just north of Chipping Norton, in the parish of Great Rollright, lie the Rollright Stones, set in a circle about 100 feet in diameter.
Just north of Chipping Norton, in the parish of Great Rollright, lie the Rollright Stones, set in a circle about 100 feet in diameter.
The Coronation Stone was placed upon a stone plinth set within decorative railings right in the heart of Kingston outside the Kingston municipal offices in 1850, but as traffic increased in the 20th
The stone-fronted houses match the shops with their sturdiness and `built to last` qualities.
Back in the Market Place, the clock tower is an architecturally undistinguished brick structure with a stone plaque telling us that its foundation stone was laid on 26 January 1899.
The village of Muker, set toward the western end of the dale, dates back to 1274.
Partly bare stone and partly whitewashed, and with numerous stone-mullioned windows, its cross passage is behind the two-storey porch.
The village of Muker, set toward the western end of the dale, dates back to 1274.
Stone from Waddington Fell was used to rebuild the church of St Helen in 1901.
At the southern end of Back Street, mud walls survive opposite the 17th-century Old School building, and the turn-of-the-century Stone House displays the builder's artful use of a cheaper brick shell adorned
Stonehenge is the most well- known stone circle in the world.
Through Stone Bow we look back across the setts to its rear, with the High Street stretching away into the distance through the archway.
This building is still standing in Town Street, and was built in the early 1880s in local stone quarried at Golden Bank.
This building is still standing in Town Street, and was built in the early 1880s in local stone quarried at Golden Bank.
The stone flaming urn of the war memorial, designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens, holds centre stage at the crossroads in this attractive village built exclusively in the native Cotswold stone.
Founded in 1609 by Robert Sackville, Earl of Dorset, as almshouses for twenty-one poor men and ten poor women, it was completed in 1619 in the local sandstone and is set back from the High Street.
Going back under the railway viaduct, we ascend Toothill Lane to its junction with Leeming Street, which crosses the foreground.
Records show that St Lawrence stands on the site of a Christian church dating back to at least 1108.
Caldecott is situated in the rural Welland Valley; its origins go back to Roman times.
This old dome-shaped weather-beaten pump dates back to medieval times, and is situated at an important junction in the middle of this historic town.
The weekly market which dates back centuries is held every Thursday.
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