Maps

100 maps found.

1924, Goose Green Ref. POP717560
1924, Goose Green Ref. POP717563
1921, Goose Green Ref. POP717571
1919, Goose Hill Ref. POP717581
1898, Goose Green Ref. RNC717569
1946, Goose Green Ref. NPO717570
1940, Goose Green Ref. NPO717575
1896, Goose Green Ref. RNE717560
1895, Goose Green Ref. RNE717567
1896, Goose Green Ref. RNE717571
1945, Goose Green Ref. NPO717567
1946, Goose Green Ref. NPO717569
1940, Goose Green Ref. NPO717573
1919, Goose Green Ref. POP717565
1919, Goose Green Ref. POP717566
1898, Goose Eye Ref. RNE717557
1898, Goose Green Ref. RNE717565
1896, Goose Green Ref. RNE717569
1898, Goose Green Ref. RNE717570
1895, Goose Hill Ref. RNE717581

Books

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Memories

1,071 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.

The Fox And Goose Public House

Hello from Australia. I was hoping that someone looking through these "memories" might remember The Fox and Goose Public House on Penn Road. I think that this is the picture of it. My mom was the cleaner ...Read more

A memory of Penn by Kathy Adams Nee Cook

Early Years Of My Life

I was born in 1936 in Shipley nursing home and we lived at 1 The Green, Micklethwaite until 1944. My father died in 1941 and my mother was left with me and brother John, surname Walker, to bring up on her own. ...Read more

A memory of Micklethwaite in 1930 by Christine Elliot

Those Were The Days

I remember Rye Lane in Peckham as a very busy shopping centre. I was born in the area and lived in Mcdermott Road in the prefabs (it is now a Charlie Dimock Garden) until I married  in Blenheim Grove Church (behind the ...Read more

A memory of Peckham by Maureen Roose

Childhood Memories Great Bardfield 1969

My late parents were the landlord and landlady of the Vine public house. I was just coming into teenage years. Friends came from the base who lived in the village. The pub itself was refurbished in ...Read more

A memory of Great Bardfield in 1969 by Dawn Willshere

Follets

As one who was born in Kingston Hospital before WWII, I grew up not far away in Long Ditton. My job in the late 1940s was to go to Kingston Market on Christmas Eve and buy a goose for our Christmas dinner from Follets, when ...Read more

A memory of Kingston Upon Thames in 1948 by Derrick Mallett

The Happiest Days Of Your Life

Brambletye school, well set between the beautiful Ashdown Forest and thriving town of East Grinstead on the Sussex/Surrey border was a paradise on Earth for any schoolboy with an aesthetically romantic (!) ...Read more

A memory of Brambletye House in 1959 by Giles Daubney

The Goose

I went to Mitcham Grammar in the fifties, turning left out of the school gates you could walk up to a small parade of shops. There was a small grocery shop on the corner owned by a rather corpulent elderly man. He had a huge white goose ...Read more

A memory of Mitcham by Bob Ford

My First School

The Anson family arrived at Strensall in 1957. My father was at the camp as a 'skill at arms' instructor until 1959 attached to the K.O.Y.L.I. I can remember the first day at school in Strensall village.I caught the bus which ...Read more

A memory of Strensall in 1957 by Kathryn Anson

Tuckers Cafe Commercial Street.

I well remember their delicious very large cream puffs, we would try to make them last as long as possible while friends and I sat and enjoyed them; also their goose loaves - so crispy. My husband Terry and I ...Read more

A memory of Maesteg in 1950 by Brenda Smith

Living In Jaywick

My mum, dad, 2 brothers and 2 sisters lived at the bottom of Vauxhall Avenue - it was about 1963/64. It was a great place to live as kids, not so easy for my parents. We kids would collect water from the standpipe at the alleyway ...Read more

A memory of Jaywick in 1963 by Hazel Methven Nee Sullivan

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Captions

195 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.

Caption For Blakeney, Excursion Trip To See The Seals C1955

The 'Snow Goose' ferry leaves the Quay, still busy with fishing boats. The large building behind is the Blakeney Hotel, which opened in 1923.

Caption For Tavistock, Bedford Hotel 1893

Tavistock's Goose fair is held in Bedford Square on the second Wednesday in October.

Caption For Penn, The Village 1968

The hotel on the left here is The Fox and Goose, one of several large pubs on the main road at Penn, a reminder that this has for centuries been a major line of communication.

Caption For Pendleton, 1921

The village was once nicknamed 'the goose village', because it was said that geese from Pendleton tasted better than any others in Lancashire.

Caption For Malmesbury, The River C1960

We are still in Baskerville, looking in the opposite direction to photograph M13030, with Goose Bridge to the extreme left of the photograph.

Caption For Pendleton, 1921

sticks and just watch the stream.The fortunes of the village have fluctated with time, and week-enders and in-comers now make up a large part of the old village.The village was once nicknamed 'the goose

Caption For Malmesbury, Baskerville C1955

Here the River Avon flows under Goose Bridge. This steep old bridge was unfortunately modernised in the late 1960s, but the medieval cutwaters underneath still remain.

Caption For Tring, St Peter And St Paul's Church C1960

They depict a pig wearing a friar's cowl; a fox running off with a goose; and a monkey in a religious habit carrying a bottle in one hand and a book in the other.

Caption For Whitwell, High Street C1955

In 1808 a diarist wrote that he attended an expensive dinner where twenty people consumed beef, chicken, ham, goose, duck and pie for 15s per head.

Caption For St Annes, Orchard Road And The Hydro 1901

E Clarke (right) was amongst the good family grocers in St Anne's, and the shop also sold to the hotels. G Benner & Company in the Square was another—it had a good motor delivery service.

Caption For Chesterfield, Queen's Park 1902

They never got further west than Chesterfield where they had a station at West Bars near the Market Place, and extensive goods facilities.

Caption For Leeds, The Post Office And Revenue Office 1897

The running of the postal service in Victorian times was considered vital to the public good.

Caption For Lytham, The County Commercial Hotel 1907

Clifton Drive, a splendid thoroughfare, good hotels and good schools coupled with a salubrious climate all helped.

Caption For St Austell, The Railway Station 1912

There is a large goods siding and shed to the left (now the bus station), while on the right are smaller sidings with animal pens, a loading gauge and a shunting signal.

Caption For Helensburgh, The Esplanade 1901

Here we have a good view of the beach, sea wall and the grassed-over area where trippers could sit and relax. Beyond are the Esplanade shops and cafes.

Caption For Liskeard, King Doniert's Stone 1938

The stones have a Latin inscription, which reads 'Doniert ordered this for the good of his soul'.

Caption For St Ives, Old River 1914

Although the railways were well established by the start of the First World War, barges such as these still did plenty of trade carrying grain and other goods along the Fenland waterways.

Caption For Sheet, The Old Cooper Built Door 2004

The roads were kept in a good state of repair, enabling high speeds to be maintained by the best of coaches.

Caption For Staithes, High Street C1955

Mr Manship's Central Café, seen in the centre of the photograph, no doubt offered a good range of refreshments, whilst gifts could be bought at the gift shop on the right of this view.

Caption For Swanage, 1897

For hundreds of years smuggling was a major industry in Swanage: the smuggled goods were hidden in the local caves and quarries.

Caption For Southend On Sea, The Golden Hind And Pier C1950

The summer entertainment, 'Bubbles', is advertised on the Pier Pavilion.Those walking on the pier have a good view of the activities below.

Caption For Paignton, Pier From The Hotel 1896

of the pier, taken seven years after the previous two photographs, shows that Paignton then had interesting shops; advertisements offered Turkish baths, drinking chocolate, a drug store, cleaners, and good

Caption For Dronfield, Chesterfield Road C1965

It closed to passenger traffic on 2 January 1967 and to goods traffic a few months later, though some private sidings continued in use until June 1969.

Caption For Sandringham, House From The Lake C1955

Sandringham has been a royal palace since 1861, when Prince Albert purchased the estate to give his son, the Prince of Wales, a country estate with good shooting, well away from the temptations of London