Places
36 places found.
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Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Rochester, Kent
- Chatham, Kent
- Gillingham, Kent
- Rainham, Kent
- Cliffe, Kent
- Hoo St Werburgh, Kent
- Allhallows, Kent
- Strood, Kent (near Rochester)
- Isle of Grain, Kent
- Brompton, Kent
- Cooling, Kent
- Cuxton, Kent
- Lower Stoke, Kent
- Halling, Kent
- Stoke, Kent
- Frindsbury, Kent
- Wigmore, Kent
- Luton, Kent
- Grange, Kent
- Hempstead, Kent
- Middle Stoke, Kent
- Fenn Street, Kent
- Lords Wood, Kent (near Chatham)
- Wayfield, Kent
- Lower Bush, Kent
- St Mary Hoo, Kent
- Upper Halling, Kent
- Twydall, Kent
- High Halstow, Kent
- Grain, Kent
- New Town, Kent (near Rochester)
- Moor Street, Kent
- Allhallows-on-Sea, Kent
- Broad Street, Kent (near Gillingham)
- North Street, Kent (near Stoke)
- Park Wood, Kent (near Chatham)
Photos
87 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
273 maps found.
Memories
72 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Cooling Castle Farm
To the right of the photograph is a driveway into the interior of the original castle that was the entrance to Castle Farm operated by F.Elms & Sons and in particular my uncle Harry Elms. He bought the Farm in about 1930 having ...Read more
A memory of Cooling in 1955 by
Andrew Duncan Home For Boys
At the age of 13 I suffered a nervous breakdown due to problems at home. It was decided by my doctor to send me away from home to give me a break. My mother took me to a mainline station in London where I was handed over ...Read more
A memory of Shiplake by
Happy Days
I lived in Sudbury, Wembley and went to Sudbury primary then Wembley girls grammar We lived in Medway Gardens and had family in Beaumont Avenue. Remember the swimming pool and going to ballet classes with Suzanne Cash? Also going to De ...Read more
A memory of Wembley by
Medway Drive Perivale
I was born on 24 September 1937 when my parents were living at No 54 Medway Drive, Perivale, Greenford. I thought I was born in a maternity hospital ( possibly Perivale Maternity Hospital, but no records now exist for this ...Read more
A memory of Perivale in 1940 by
Paddock Wood Huts
Not sure how long I went with my grandparents, then when they passed away my parents, but I was born in 1941 and I know we were still going there until we migrated to Australia in 1961. We 'lived' in the first hut on the right ...Read more
A memory of Paddock Wood
Grain Fort
After the war in 1946 my father, a sergeant in the MPSC, was transfered to Darland camp in Gillingham but as there were no married quarters available there we, as a family, were billeted in the Coastguards quarters on the Isle of ...Read more
A memory of Isle of Grain in 1946 by
Lampits Hill
I was born June 1953 in the white bungalow just to the right of the woman in the photo. It was called "Meadway" and my parents moved there in 1950 when there was just fields opposite where the houses can be seen. My sister still lives ...Read more
A memory of Corringham by
My Chatham
Born and bred in Grove Road off Luton Road, went to the schools of All Saints and Fort Luton. I found Chatham to be a friendly town with memories of seeing Arther English at the Empire, seaside at the Strand, being a 19th Medway west boy ...Read more
A memory of Chatham by
Growing Up In Buckhurst Hill 60's 70's
I used to live in The Meadway, and went to St Johns infants School-a few memories of playing on 'the boxes' at play/lunchtime. These were actually old beer crates, and long before health and safety spoiled ...Read more
A memory of Buckhurst Hill by
Mickleover, Pastures Hospital C 1955
I was nursing at Pastures from 1962 to 1968. This is not Ridgeway, it's Masson House, the male acute admission ward - originally called The Male Reception Hospital. There was a villa called Ridgeway though, with ...Read more
A memory of Mickleover
Captions
77 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
A similar view taken thirty years later, showing the river Medway as an industrial highway.
This photograph is taken from across the River Medway and showing Victorians strolling along the Undercliff walk and the 'horseway' path down to the river Medway, and Victorian children leaning on the
Here we see the River Medway being used as an industrial highway: barges and log rafts float downstream past the Archbishop's Palace and All Saints Church.
in this book show a vanished Medway, with timber rafts towed by barges outside the Archbishop's palace, a once-familiar scene of the river as an industrial highway that is no more.
This settlement commanded the lowest fording point on the River Medway, and here, in 455, the invading Jutes under Hengist defeated the native forces led by Vortigern.
Yalding stands near the confluence of the Medway, Beult and Theyse rivers, and has long been popular with the sailing fraternity.
A view from the west bank of the River Medway, looking to the medieval bridge and Aylesford.
Allington is a hamlet on the Medway just to the north of Maidstone.
The River Medway traditionally separates the Men of Kent on its east side from the Kentish Men on the west, but bridges such as this one unite the two 'tribes'.
At this point the River Medway ceases to be tidal; the electrical sluice gates here, thirty feet wide and fifteen feet deep, are an essential part of the flood control scheme of the Medway Valley.
One of these boats, the 'Kingswear Castle' (which entered service the year before), is preserved and operates in the River Medway area of Kent.
This photograph looks down Bank Street towards the High Street and the River Medway.
Although actually very old, this is another Medway-side village that was left with a distinctly Victorian appearance by the 19th century building boom, when it was a source of brick earth and also chalk
Maidstone Bridge, which spans the River Medway, lies at the bottom of the hill.
Another evocative view of the Medway, this time looking downstream round the meander bend.
This picture shows the transformation of the River Medway into a recreational highway rather than a commercial one.
Looking across the River Medway to the tower of All Saints' Church.
The River Medway broadens at Maidstone, on its way to meet the Thames estuary, and the locks here were built in 1792 and mark the tidal limit of the waterway.
The lake was created in the mid-18th century by damming the little river Len, which flows into the Medway near the Archbishop's Palace.
Beyond is a glimpse of the industrial Medway.
This is the view from Rochester Castle looking across the River Medway.
It is a delightful village on the northern edge of Ashdown Forest above the River Medway.
A tranquil scene on the River Medway, looking towards the magnificent All Saints, Maidstone's parish church, dating from 1395.
Although actually very old, this is another Medway-side village that was left with a distinctly Victorian appearance by the 19th century building boom, when it was a source of brick earth and also chalk
Places (57)
Photos (87)
Memories (72)
Books (2)
Maps (273)