Places
2 places found.
Did you mean: butter ?
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
124 photos found. Showing results 161 to 124.
Maps
13 maps found.
Books
Sorry, no books were found that related to your search.
Memories
1,359 memories found. Showing results 81 to 90.
The Baker In The High Street Roughly Opposite Anderson's Ironmongers.
Can anybody remember the name of the Baker in the High Street. I can remember him doing his weekly afternoon delivery round to our house being Wingate Cottage behind ...Read more
A memory of Stanstead Abbotts by
St Catherines
My grandfather, Jim Kenchington, bought St. Catherines in 1961. It is the first house (partial) on the right, next door to Lasts Butchers. It was in a very sorry state when he bought it (for £900!) There was an article in the local ...Read more
A memory of Botesdale by
Boyhood
I was born in 1922 in Mundford where my Father was the village policeman. We had no motor car, indeed in those days there were not many people who could afford this luxury. The village was small, however it was self-contained and provided all ...Read more
A memory of Mundford in 1920 by
Shops And Businesses
This is the Broadway as I knew it. Both the Middlesex registered Driving School Morris 1000 and the East Sussex registered Morris 1000 truck MPN556 date this to after 1958. On the right beyond Eastman's the cleaners were WF ...Read more
A memory of Haywards Heath
Holidays In Coldingham
Until we emigrated to the U.S. in 1948, my family spent our summer holidays in Coldingham with Cha Crowe & family, also, Johnny Walker, known as Walker the Butcher whose son Ian still has his butcher shop in Eyemouth. They ...Read more
A memory of Coldingham in 1940 by
Beanz Dreamz...
Our family moved to Friars Road in the summer of 66, from a damp house in Boothen Green, which looked over toward the Michelin Factory. I was 5 years old. My father Graham was a former art student at Burslem College of Art under the ...Read more
A memory of Abbey Hulton by
Harriott Brothers The Butcher's Shop
My Father was Arthur Harriott who owned Harriott Brothers Butchers Shop (which can be seen at the bottom left-hand corner of the picture) together with his Brother, Edward. We lived in "Old Sarum" which is the ...Read more
A memory of Droxford in 1950 by
Tottenham Lane 1957 65
I was born in Muswell Hill Cottage Hospital in 1957. We lived at the off licence in Tottenham lane opposite the police station....Victoria wine. I went to Rolkesly Infant and Junior and had best friend Robert in the infant ...Read more
A memory of Hornsey by
Whitehill In The 60s And 70s
My husband Vic moved into the brand new council estate in 1968 with his parents and sister - Champney Close. His house backed onto the common and MOD training land. He’d stand up on the embankment watching the trains pass ...Read more
A memory of Whitehill by
Langdale House Salford
I lived in Langdale House, Salford. It was a block of masonettes, there were two other blocks on the same road, Patterdale and Ennerdale. We lived on the 3rd floor, overlooking a small play park and a row of tiny one bedroomed ...Read more
A memory of Salford in 1960 by
Captions
310 captions found. Showing results 193 to 216.
Hudson's Cycles are on the corner, next door to a butcher's.
Opposite is H E Rose, the butcher.
It was once busy with butchers' cries.
On the right is the butcher's shop.
The single-storey extension on the nearest house has been demolished, but there is something similar on the adjacent house.
The buildings in the distance, including National Stores and Jarvis, the butchers, have been demolished.
Cook's the butchers (right) were 'noted for sausages and pork pies', according to their fascia.
The van (right) belongs to Banyard's the butcher's, whose shop was in nearby Church Street.
Shoppers calling into J Coomber the butcher (second on the right) had to rely on their bicycles to transport their goods home.
The Dog Inn is on the right, and Sanderson the Butcher is across the road on the corner.
The shop next door with the two gables and jettied front was C J Newell's butcher's shop.
Members of the Jewish community who had sought refuge in the castle either died in the flames when it was set alight or were butchered as they attempted to escape.
On the extreme right is part of Eastmans Ltd the butcher's, which remained there until 1956.
Opposite the building, across the Shambles, are ancient folding tables, once used by butchers.
An unusual sculpture of its 16th-century priest, Macobus Kasey, still attracts many visitors to this busy village which has three pubs, a butcher, a baker, a school and a health centre.
Of the shops visible here, none is still in retail use except what was Walton's pork butcher's on the Market Place corner (right).
Beyond is the Shoulder of Mutton, whose landlord Frederick Godday was also a butcher.
The next building down had been Goymour's the butchers until 1950.
A fine picture taken around 1905 shows that the added part had been a butcher's shop (and a public house called the Dial) run by the Crawley family.
International Stores became a butcher's shop in the 1970s, and by 1983 the site was Savory & Moore, the chemists.
Opposite, in a view eastwards towards Dorchester, is a bullish advertisement for W W Hoskins and Son, high class butchers: `We buy and sell only the best`.
Sydney Carter's butcher's shop occupied the cottage on the left from about 1914 to 1946.
George Lowe's butcher's shop has pride of place here, next to the emporium of T L Jones.
Behind the mini-van on the left, the Butchers Arms had replaced a much older half- timbered building damaged extensively by fire in 1939.
Places (2)
Photos (124)
Memories (1359)
Books (0)
Maps (13)