Places
30 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Trerice Manor, Cornwall
- Iford Manor, Wiltshire
- Manor Royal, Sussex
- Manor, The, Sussex
- Manor Estate, Yorkshire
- Cliton Manor, Bedfordshire
- Owton Manor, Cleveland
- Manor Bourne, Devon
- Manor Park, Berkshire
- Manor Park, Sussex
- Manor Parsley, Cornwall
- Sutton Manor, Merseyside
- Burton Manor, Staffordshire
- Manor Park, Nottinghamshire
- Reen Manor, Cornwall
- Uphill Manor, Avon
- Manor Park, Buckinghamshire
- Walton Manor, Oxfordshire
- Hood Manor, Cheshire
- Weston Manor, Isle of Wight
- Landguard Manor, Isle of Wight
- Ruislip Manor, Greater London
- Wightwick Manor, West Midlands
- Manor House, West Midlands
- Manor Powis, Central Scotland
- Manor Park, Greater London
- Manor Hill Corner, Lincolnshire
- Manor Park, Yorkshire (near Sheffield)
- Manor Park, Cheshire (near Middlewich)
- Manor Park, Yorkshire (near Ilkley)
Photos
1,162 photos found. Showing results 1 to 20.
Maps
175 maps found.
Memories
725 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
The Oak Tree
The Oak Tree was amazing, and big enough to hide behind as a small child. It was a key feature throughout childhood. It was a shame when it was cut down. It is near the Berristead, the Elizabethan manor house, and was allegedly planted by a Tudor, though not sure who.
A memory of Wilburton by
Names Of People And Buildings.
Here we are looking down West Street with the village school visible at the end. On the left is Tetts Farm with the milk churns, while next is Manor Farm, farmed by Reg Newick. The thatched building before the ...Read more
A memory of Hinton St George
The Great Linford
I had heard of The Great Linford and can trace genealogy back to the one subjects that lived on the Great Linford although it is not named after any of my ancestors. In 2000, I had the opportunity to vist London and rented a car ...Read more
A memory of Great Linford in 2000 by
My Early Years
On the 2nd September 1952 I was born at Manor Farm. I lived there with my parents, my maternal grandfather and two older brothers. I know my grandmother was alive when I was born but, unfortunately died soon after. My grandfather ...Read more
A memory of Yealand Conyers in 1952 by
Sunny Hill Georgian Manor House
When my father got a job in Bristol after the war we moved to Bristol from Leeds but there was very little housing available. After a year of living with a family ‘in digs’ as it was called then, we were allocated a ...Read more
A memory of Shirehampton by
My Childhood Home And Its Spelling
I do remember that the signpost on the main road pointing towards Bratton had it as 'Bratton Seamore". My first home was Bratton Hill Cottage, since demolished and the land developed. My Father worked for ...Read more
A memory of Bratton Seymour by
Mitcham
I lived in Manor Road in the late fifties and then Lymington Close until the end of the sixties, it was a great place to live then. We played on Mitcham common going to the seven island ponds on our bicycles and the old gun site. Mr ...Read more
A memory of Norbury
Lancing In The Fifties And Sixties
My family moved to Lancing when I was six months old, living first in Orchard Avenue and then Tower Road, which had a bad reputation - totally undeserved! I liked the fact that there were always children to play with, ...Read more
A memory of Lancing by
Hawley, My Earlier Memories
I lived at Briar cottage just up from Mrs Stencil's pig farm and went to Hawley county primary school during 1959 1960 I think. We then moved up Fernhill road to Manor lodge which at that time I believe belonged to the RAF and ...Read more
A memory of Hawley by
Ymca 1967
Myself and a few others from N. Wales stayed at the YMCA for a couple of years 1966 onwards. Some of us attended the Technical college just up the road. We were young apprentices working for Etchells forgin and fasteners in Darlaston. Mr ...Read more
A memory of West Bromwich by
Captions
690 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
We are looking west over the village pond into Manor Road; the house on the left is The Beeches.
Mells Manor, largely Elizabethan, was built on the site of a medieval monastic manor.
Temple Sowerby commemorates the Knights Templar who afforded protection to pilgrims journeying to Jerusalem and held the manor here for over a century and a half.
Manor Hall was built shortly after 1935 as a dance hall at a time when a number of residential estates were being built south of Manor Road.
Chambercombe is an ancient manor, named after the de Cambernon family, one of whom fought alongside William the Conqueror at Hastings.
Looking across the River Deben , with a distant Bawdsey Manor on the far shore.
We are looking eastwards along Manor Street.
The Havering manor was a crown manor from the time of Harold, of Hastings fame, until 1828.
Nestled in a fold of the Cotswolds, the neat village of Cornwell is one of a piece with the beautiful stone manor house just to the west, providing a unified design rare in Oxfordshire.
The canal at Drayton Manor, with its unique Gothic-style footbridge, complete with battlements.
Melcombe Bingham's manor house dates back to the time of the Plantagenet kings, though much of the present building is Tudor.
The grounds of Cobtree Manor, at Sandling, close to Maidstone, now house the Museum of Kent Life, Cobtree Manor Golf Course and a 250 acre park.
The boundary wall of Manor Park lies to the right, with the manor house and vicarage, out of view behind the trees, on the opposite side of the road.
The Manor House (left), formerly Ditcheat House, was built for Robert Hopton early in the 17th century.
Thomas Hardy used the Manor at Wool as the setting for the disastrous honeymoon of Tess and Angel Clare in his novel 'Tess of the D'Urbervilles'.
The canal at Drayton Manor, with its unique Gothic-style footbridge, complete with battlements.
Cottages are grouped around the church and the manor (right), an early 19th-century building with bargeboards carved like lace.
The Manor House, built in the late 17th century, was the home of Lancelot 'Capability' Brown, the great landscape gardener.
The Manor House C1960 The 16th-century half-timbered Manor House in Vyne Road fronts directly onto the road, so that its striking architecture, including carved bargeboards on the gables, can
Opposite is Manor House, perhaps the Manor House of the former Deanshold.
The Old Hall, or Manor House, at Whitwell bears the mullioned and transomed windows and steep gables typical of its Tudor ancestry.
Further royal charters were also granted to Hemel Hempstead, but these mainly related to matters concerning the manor.
The Manor of Stone was not mentioned in the Domesday Book, though it was given by William the Conqueror to one Erasmus de Walton.
Buckland Manor, seen beyond the church, has also been called Duke's Manor, as the Dukes of Suffolk once owned it.
Places (30)
Photos (1162)
Memories (725)
Books (1)
Maps (175)