Places
30 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Enfield, Greater London
- Southgate, Greater London
- Edmonton, Greater London
- Enfield, Republic of Ireland
- Winchmore Hill, Greater London
- Palmers Green, Greater London
- Oakwood, Greater London
- Forty Hill, Greater London
- Bush Hill Park, Greater London
- Grange Park, Greater London
- Ponders End, Greater London
- Bush Hill, Greater London
- Enfield, Hereford & Worcester
- Enfield Lock, Greater London
- Enfield Town, Greater London
- Enfield Highway, Greater London
- Enfield Wash, Greater London
- Brimsdown, Greater London
- Bulls Cross, Greater London
- Freezy Water, Greater London
- New Southgate, Greater London
- Lower Edmonton, Greater London
- World's End, Greater London
- Hadley Wood, Greater London
- Holdbrook, Greater London
- Upper Edmonton, Greater London
- Botany Bay, Greater London
- Bowes Park, Greater London
- Clay Hill, Greater London
- Crews Hill, Greater London
Photos
107 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
146 maps found.
Memories
84 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
Bits I Recall
Trolley buses ran along Green Lanes from Finsbury Square; turning right for Enfield at Mason's Corner. The 244 route went from Collegiate School, Winchmore Hill to Muswell Hill. Chalkleys the bakers was on the corner of The Green ...Read more
A memory of Winchmore Hill by
Flamstead End School /Hammond Street
Hi..I too went to Flamstead End junior school..and remember Mrs Sibley and Mr Cave...Mr Cave lived in Pottars Bar and drove what seemed a large car then - an Austin Cambridge I think....there was also a Miss/Mrs Butterfield ...Read more
A memory of Cheshunt by
Sunny 1950''s Sunday Mornings
I have many memories about the old St Mary's Church. Until I started thinking of them I realised that I have not got one involving a rainy day apart from when my Grandad was buried in the churchyard. He was laid ...Read more
A memory of Clayton-Le-Moors in 1954 by
More Of Enfield
Swimming at the open air pool was so compulsory at George Spicer and then Kingsmead schools but then we grew a little and in the holidays worked at Pearsons and danced at the Court above Burtons in the market square. Those days it was ...Read more
A memory of Enfield in 1970 by
Old Manor Cafe
My memory of Blackwater started when I was 14, for those of you who don't know what the Old Manor was, it was a transport cafe, which stood on what is now a supermarket site, on the right, at the junction with Rosemary Lane. In the ...Read more
A memory of Blackwater in 1960 by
With Mum And Dad In Church Street, Enfield, Middlesex.
I believe this is a photograph of me, James Ernest Thomas Massey, being pushed in my pram by my father Ernest James Massey, and mother Rosina Massey, towards our home above Dolcis shoe shoe at 5 Burleigh Way, Enfield Middlesex, sometime in the first year of my life. God Rest their souls.
A memory of Enfield in 1945 by
When I Joined The Royal Air Force 22nd May 1952
I attended the Presbyterian Church Rossett Primary School in Station Road before attending the new school near Tom Bishop's shop, where I first bought my first cigarettes, Willy Woodbines, 5 for a ...Read more
A memory of Rossett in 1952 by
Walker, Newcastle Upon Tyne
I was born in Moorland Crescent in the 1950’s. This council housing estate was built a few decades earlier and has a variety of different style good quality houses. Most people had nice gardens with flowers etc and ...Read more
A memory of Newcastle upon Tyne by
Will It Be Open?
My family moved from Bermondsey, where we shared my grandad's house, to Enfield, where Mum and Dad had managed to buy their own house (for £2,000) in 1960. It was some years before Dad could afford driving lessons and then a car. We ...Read more
A memory of London in 1966 by
Earith Was In Huntingdonshire And Still Is
I was born in St Ives in 1939 but lived in Earith at what is now number 43. Next door was my Grandad's grocer's shop - Bert Russell. I moved to Peterborough in 1958 where I still live in Werrington Village. ...Read more
A memory of Earith in 1940 by
Captions
22 captions found. Showing results 1 to 22.
There was probably a settlement at Enfield when the Roman legions marched along nearby Ermine Street, the important Roman highway that can still be seen adjacent to Enfield's High Street.
It was while staying at Enfield that Henry VIII's only legitimate male child became Edward VI on the death of his father.
Charles Lamb, the essayist, came to live in the country town of Enfield two centuries ago.
The ornate Victorian shop fronts of Dawson's and the branch of the Enfield Co-operative store, on the right, with their elegant lanterns, are in contrast to the stern brick frontages across the
Despite its closeness to London, Enfield has always been a self-sustaining community, with many municipally- backed leisure facilities such as this impressive swimming pool, which we see here being enjoyed
Although there had been some kinds of industry in Enfield in medieval times, for instance the flour mill, Enfield's first real factory did not start its working life until 1816.
This was about the last period in Enfield's history when the on-street parking of vehicles was quite so easy - note the complete absence of yellow lines.
By 1572 there were several settlements established around a part of Enfield known as Forty Green (now Forty Hill).
By 1572 there were several settlements established around a part of Enfield known as Forty Green (now Forty Hill).
Situated on its northern edge, Enfield is one of the most attractive market towns within the Greater London area; it was well-established by Domesday.
The London Borough of Enfield will not be remembered for its sympathetic approach to the conservation of its historic buildings.
Until the arrival of the Piccadilly Line in 1933, Cockfosters was little more than a rural hamlet, and even now it is on the very northern edge of London as it extends out into Enfield Chase.
underground station and the parish church, this is a wonderful neo-Tudor pub of 1936 by A E Sewell; he also designed the Crown and Anchor in High Street, Chipping Barnet, and the Goat near Forty Hill, Enfield
AT the start of the Victorian era, all the roads around Enfield had been turnpiked.
To the west of the town centre, and parallel with Chase side, this picturesque street has to be seen by any visitor to Enfield.
One stop down the line from Enfield town, Bush Hill Park station was opened in 1880 to service this development by the Northern Estates Company.
Taking its name from the south gate to Enfield Chase, and overlooking the Lea Valley, Southgate was a part of Edmonton until the late 19th century.
Enclosed from Enfield Chase in 1777, and acquired by royal physician Sir Richard Jebb, Trent Park covered some two hundred acres.
On the site of Pearsons until the mid 1920s was Enfield Palace, which probably gained its name as the inheritor of parts of the demolished Elsyng Palace to the north of the town, which lay within the Forty
WHAT of Enfield's future?
To the left of the Italianate Corn Exchange, G C Flanders advertises the various cycles sold in the shop: Swift, Rover, Royal Enfield, Rudge and Whitworth amongst them.
Her stays in Enfield were in 1564, 1568, 1572 and 1587.
Places (30)
Photos (107)
Memories (84)
Books (1)
Maps (146)