Places
5 places found.
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Photos
48 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
28 maps found.
Books
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Memories
86 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
The Mchugh Family Nbsp 1963 1965
Hello all, my name is Terry McHugh Junior, as I am apparently the first to hit this site I will share with you my early childhood memories of that lovely village in Yorkshire, Eppleby. We moved into Eppleby in 1963, ...Read more
A memory of Eppleby by
1871
In 1871 my relatives were inn keepers of the cross keys pub. Names were Dorothy Hadfield and Abraham Barber. This I have just found out on my family history. They were in the pub in 1861 also and I think before that. I dont know if this is ...Read more
A memory of Chapel Milton by
Precious Memories!
Some of my most precious memories of life belong to Menith Wood. My parents bought a caravan where we had many happy times on the “Bird in Hand” public house caravan site, opposite the woods. I remember feeding “Thomas” the boar, the ...Read more
A memory of Menithwood by
Cross Keys Camp
Iv been trying for years to find something out about the camp . I was born there in 1948 when my farther Mr Arthur Blowes was sent to North Korea when he back from the Second World War
A memory of Roxwell by
Camberley...Where Do I Start ?!
Our family lived at Lightwater (1 High View Road) ; I passed 11 plus and was sent to Frimley And Camberley County Grammar School, starting in Sept. 1959. One of the first things we had to do was to get the uniform. We went ...Read more
A memory of Camberley by
Our Cottage In Carisbrooke
Lived there for just one year. Linda Crossley
A memory of Carisbrooke in 1984
The Chequers Inn
Annette and I (Annette Schofield and George Allen) became landlords of the Chequers (no longer a pub) on 23 January 1967. It was a BYB pub and James Hubert Dibb was the landlord before us. We ran the pub for about 18 months and ...Read more
A memory of Monk Fryston in 1967 by
Those Were The Days 2
It didn't change until the sixties when the station was rebuilt and opened by Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth 11 in 1961. I watched the whole building project from start to finish from the comfort of my bedroom window. When it ...Read more
A memory of Barking in 1950 by
History Of Netherthong
I am currently researching and writing a history of Netherthong and I have well over 200 photos and other ephemera. I have started numerous chapters relating to such subjects as schools, parish council, churches, sport, ...Read more
A memory of Netherthong in 2010 by
Great Memories Of This Area
Really it was 1961-66. I worked as a Geologist for the United Steel Companies based in Rotherham. I visited Haile Moor and Beckermet Mines every two or three weeks for 5 years and came to love the area and its people ...Read more
A memory of Thornhill in 1961 by
Captions
31 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
The Cross Keys pub stands behind the parked vehicles.
The Cross Keys Hotel was known as the Cross Keys and Unicorn from 1768.
When considerably enlarged, this photograph shows a pub sign on the right depicting two crossed keys - the Keys.
On the left is the facade of the 16th-century Cross Keys pub, one of Pangbourne's oldest buildings.
Given a decade of fresh ideas (see L211008 on the previous pages), the area around Leighton Buzzard's 15th-century Market Cross is once again a focal point and meeting place.
The Cross Keys Hotel (left) overlooked the market up to the 1980s, when major development was undertaken; whilst the facade has been retained, the hotel is now a shopping mall.
To the right is the Cross Keys Hotel, but the most famous of all is Ye Old White Harte Inn, where the Governor and other leading citizens of Hull took the decision not to let King Charles I enter the city
To the right is the Cross Keys Hotel, but the most famous of all is Ye Old White Harte Inn, where the Governor and other leading citizens of Hull took the decision not to let King Charles I enter the city
The river has always been a key focal point here, and is noted for its Pulborough eel.
The Cross Keys (left) dates from the 17th century, though it replaced an earlier structure.
This photograph looks southwards along South Street from the Cross Keys (left) next to butcher Arthur Lewis and cycle agent Charles Frederick Fooks.
This photograph looks southwards along South Street from the Cross Keys (left) next to butcher Arthur Lewis and cycle agent Charles Frederick Fooks.
The villa, demolished in August 1973, had been home to key figures in the community.
The Barnsley Brewery is once again thriving, thanks to the resurgence of real ale, but the Cross Keys is now a John Smith's pub.
Over to the right, the Cross Keys had been superseded by the Regent Theatre.
The climax of the High Street is the 1892 Cross Keys pub building in the centre of the photograph.
The Cross Keys remains, but the two houses in the distance on either side of the High Street junction are now estate agents.
A popular stop-off for cyclists and walkers from the local towns long ago, this small settlement included the well known Cross Keys Inn, now derelict - as are most of the other buildings we see here.
The Barnsley Brewery is once again thriving, thanks to the resurgence of real ale, but the Cross Keys is now a John Smith's pub.
Built in 1856, the church has the crossed keys of St Peter below the east window.
Farmers Wesley Haskell and George Hatchard lived at Mannington, and David Cutler was the innkeeper at the Cross Keys, Lower Mannington, beside Holt Heath.
Street cleaners stand back from their wheelbarrows and a drayman delivers to the Ship Inn (right), with the Cross Keys and a striped barber`s pole being glimpsed behind.
Street cleaners stand back from their wheelbarrows and a drayman delivers to the Ship Inn (right), with the Cross Keys and a striped barber`s pole being glimpsed behind.
The Cross Keys and the Crown stand to the left, and further around the corner is the George, one of the coaching inns.
Places (5)
Photos (48)
Memories (86)
Books (0)
Maps (28)