Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Hest Bank, Lancashire
- Kents Bank, Cumbria
- Copthorne Bank, Sussex
- Banks, Lancashire
- Sutton Bank, Yorkshire
- Astwood Bank, Hereford & Worcester
- Dacre Banks, Yorkshire
- Ten Mile Bank, Norfolk
- Matlock Bank, Derbyshire
- Bank, Hampshire
- Hesketh Bank, Lancashire
- Far Bank, Yorkshire
- Bank's Green, Hereford & Worcester
- Banks, Cumbria (near Lanercost)
- Banks, Dumfries and Galloway (near Kirkcudbright)
- Bunsley Bank, Cheshire
- East Bank, Gwent
- Hanwood Bank, Shropshire
- Hoole Bank, Cheshire
- Howbeck Bank, Cheshire
- Papermill Bank, Shropshire
- Pickup Bank, Lancashire
- Malkin's Bank, Cheshire
- Meal Bank, Cumbria
- Sandy Bank, Lincolnshire
- Scilly Bank, Cumbria
- Steel Bank, Yorkshire
- Bogs Bank, Borders
- Alsagers Bank, Staffordshire
- Bury's Bank, Berkshire
- Brandon Bank, Cambridgeshire
- Cat Bank, Cumbria
- Cadney Bank, Clwyd
- Dawley Bank, Shropshire
- Dean Bank, Durham
- Lade Bank, Lincolnshire
Photos
1,065 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
786 maps found.
Memories
6,726 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Grandmother
Born Glasgow 1952, visited my granny at 249a Edgware Road on many occasions, she lived above Barclays bank.
A memory of Colindale by
A Memory Of Heswall Children's Hospital
Anybody remember me in Heswall Children’s Hospital. My name then was Veronica Roberts I had a RTA on the way home from school beginning of summer 1957.I had a broken leg, concussion and a broken nose. I had my ...Read more
A memory of Heswall by
Timber
I lived in Malvern Road and remember the winter of '47 when we had six weeks of snow and wonderful tobogganing on the slopes. My dad was the manager of Park&Brown Jeffery Street and a skilled wood man who was able to build me an ...Read more
A memory of Gillingham by
Post Office
I remember that postage stamp machine outside the post office. If you put a halfpenny in the penny slot & flicked it in forcefully you obtained a penny stamp. My mother made me & a friend, who shall remain nameless, ...Read more
A memory of Skelmanthorpe by
Harrow Driving School Rayners Lane 1985 1986 Approx
Memories of getting the tube from Arnos Grove to Rayners Lane and then the long walk up Imperial Drive - until reaching the driving centre. The set up included traffic lights, zebra crossings, ...Read more
A memory of Harrow by
Larner And Mustoe Families
I am very interested in Northleach because my family connections, the Mustoes and Larners, go back several hundred years there and certainly in the case of the Larners back to the 1600's. Both families were shepherds ...Read more
A memory of Northleach by
Caravan Holiday In 50s
My parents had a caravan at The Old Coastguards close to Seasalter Sailing Club from 50s to 70s. It had only 3 caravans on it. I regularly got up early as a child to accompany the site owner, a super guy, while he followed the ...Read more
A memory of Seasalter by
A Holiday From Glasgow
I went to fornethy residential school twice in my childhood, each time my mum was having a child. 1960 and 1962. I spent 6 weeks each time. I have read thru most of the comments here, and I’m so glad for me ...Read more
A memory of Fornethy Residential School by
Lord Mayor Treloar Hospital Sandy Point
At the age of 12 I was a patient at Treloars in Alton, having been diagnosed as having TB knee - a clout with a cricket ball was a little more serious than just a swollen knee, and I was sent to ...Read more
A memory of Hayling Island in 1953 by
Post War Harlesden.
I was born in Tredegar, South Wales in April 1941. My mother had been evacuated to that small welsh town when she fell pregnant with me in 1940. We lived with her parents. My dad was away doing War things. We moved back to London ...Read more
A memory of Harlesden by
Captions
2,423 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
These are the premises of the bank run as Cunliffe Brooks & Co, one of Manchester's private banks.
The words 'Old Bank' inscribed over the entrance of the building in the centre refer to Waldron and Hill, the first bank to open on this site in 1780.
The building on the corner with the clock showing 2.20 (right) is Williams Deacon's Bank.
Established in 1827, the Huddersfield Banking Company was only the second joint stock bank in the country, created under an Act to prevent a recurrence of the banking crisis of the previous year
At the other end of Grove Street, Bank Square took its name from the Union Bank of Manchester, with its fine clock and cupola.
Of the businesses that surrounded the square in 1922, only four remain in their original positions: Barclay's Bank, originally built for the East Cornwall Bank in 1885 with the town clock on its corner
This is not actually a Roman bank, but one constructed in Saxon times to protect the villages in the fens from flooding.
In 1737 a Stafford mercer, John Stevenson, started a bank, one of the earliest outside London.
Bishop's Waltham is still remembered for having the only privately owned bank in the country, before it was sold to Barclays in the early 1950s.
On the right is Lloyds Bank, built in 1795-97, with Adam-style doors and ground floor windows, as Spink and Carss' Bank.
Another view of the Parade, showing Lowmans, baker; Lloyds Bank; Jenkins, newsagent and tobacconist; National Provincial Bank; Dews, children's clothing; and an estate agent.
In the 19th century, banks often built very imposing buildings to reflect their status in everyday life.
This view of King Street looks east towards the grand Portland stone bank at its end.
This view, looking west from the present Caversham Bridge past the Reading Rowing Club behind the coach, shows well the flat south bank in contrast to the steep and heavily treed Caversham bank.
This fine village could support its own bank (the white-painted building in the centre) in 1960.
To the right is the grandiose Italianate bank of 1883 by the noted architect John Gibson, now the Natwest Bank; its fine banking hall has recently been very well restored.
Lloyds Bank on the left has moved, and the National Provincial Bank further up on the left is now Barclays Bank, which has been altered extensively.
The magpie building in the centre here is now the National Westminster Bank – when the photograph is enlarged, a sign is visible which reads 'District Bank'.
Ivy-clad Ilam Rock rises dramatically from the banks of the River Dove.
At No 11 next door to the Capital & Counties Bank (which later became the National Provincial Bank), is the hardware store of Miss Edith Annie Miller.
A branch of Barclays Bank lies further down the street on the corner.
On the right is a half-timbered building that houses a bank.
The Hepworths shop in photograph No 25657 was taken over by a local bank and given a splendidly bulbous and fruity Flemish-style ground floor soon after 1890.
In the 19th century, banks often built very imposing buildings to reflect their status in everyday life.
Places (158)
Photos (1065)
Memories (6726)
Books (15)
Maps (786)