Places
36 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
- Hutton Rudby, Yorkshire
- Hutton-le-Hole, Yorkshire
- Hutton, Yorkshire
- Sheriff Hutton, Yorkshire
- Sand Hutton, Yorkshire
- Low Hutton, Yorkshire (near Malton)
- Hutton, Avon
- Hutton Gate, Cleveland
- Hutton Cranswick, Yorkshire
- High Hutton, Yorkshire
- Hutton, Cumbria (near Penruddock)
- Hutton, Borders
- Hutton, Lancashire
- Hutton, Essex
- Hutton Conyers, Yorkshire
- Hutton End, Cumbria
- New Hutton, Cumbria
- Hutton Bonville, Yorkshire
- Hutton Village, Cleveland
- Hutton Wandesley, Yorkshire
- Priest Hutton, Lancashire
- Hutton Roof, Cumbria (near Kirkby Lonsdale)
- Hutton Hang, Yorkshire
- Hutton Magna, Durham
- Hutton Mount, Essex
- Huttons Ambo, Yorkshire
- Hutton Buscel, Yorkshire
- Hutton Henry, Durham
- Hutton John, Cumbria
- Hutton Sessay, Yorkshire
- Old Hutton, Cumbria
- Bottom of Hutton, Lancashire
- Hutton Roof, Cumbria (near Newlands)
- Claxton, Yorkshire (near Sand Hutton)
- Moor End, Yorkshire (near Sand Hutton)
- Morton, Cumbria (near Hutton End)
Photos
178 photos found. Showing results 21 to 40.
Maps
270 maps found.
Books
2 books found. Showing results 25 to 2.
Memories
235 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
Life As A Young Boy In Saltdean
THE LIFE & TIMES OF DONALD CHARLES WILLIAMS Personal recollections from Don Williams from Hailsham who lived in Saltdean from 1937 to 1952 - Many thanks for these wonderful stories & photo's of Saltdean in ...Read more
A memory of Saltdean in 1940 by
Telephoning
The public telephone in this picture of Tredegar Street was outside my father's butcher shop. There were only two buttons to press: button A and button B, but people were terrified of pressing the wrong one. My father, Gomer Mumford, used ...Read more
A memory of Risca in 1955 by
I Was A Pupil At çedar House
I was then Sandra Niven so remember very well Hazel Tomlins Fiona Patterson and Tokumba Audifferen. Mrs Hutton was the Head and her son Graham ran the office he had a stand offish wife and a quiet son that was terrifieď of us girls 👧 🙄
A memory of St Neots by
David Christie
I lived at 5 belsyde ave from 1953 till 1972 with mum and dad and my sister Helen and two brothers Colin and Kenny. My dad ran the local scout troop - the 107th Glasgow. I had lots of friends including Ian Mcneil Kenny Hutton and ...Read more
A memory of Drumchapel by
Early Career Memories At Piccadilly Circus.
I started my career in January 1959 as a young bobby at West End Central Police Station Savile Row. The trestles positioned to the east of 'Eros' which cordon off the road suggest the photograph was taken ...Read more
A memory of London in 1959 by
Childhood Days
Mitcham a lovely little place, here you used to catch the buses to Sutton and beyond, the picture house and opposite the pictures used to be a sweet shop where I can remember Mars bars used to cost 2/6 in old money, gobstobbers that ...Read more
A memory of Mitcham in 1963 by
Croydon Thornton Heath And Norbury
I was born and brought up in Croydon and although I now live in the Channel Islands I still regard it as my home. I remember living in Northborough Road, Norbury and attending Norbury Manor Infants School only ...Read more
A memory of Croydon in 1963 by
Dysart In The 60s
I was brought up in Dysart, first in Howard Place then the High Street, where my mum and dad still live. I remember all the shops that were there in the 1960s when I was a little girl, the little wool shop where you could buy odd ...Read more
A memory of Dysart by
Growing Up In Greenford 1957 1970s
Wow! Thanks for those memories. A million miles away in rural East Anglia, remembering growing up in Greenford. Stanhope Infants and Juniors, Mr Bishop, Mrs Avery, anybody went there remember them? ...Read more
A memory of Greenford by
I Remeber Hutton Residential School
I was a 'student' at the institution from about 1948 to 1953. I remember some of the staff. Head master was Mr Higdon, Teacher of wood work and house master was Mr McFadon. there was Gov Reily, Mr & ...Read more
A memory of Shenfield in 1953 by
Captions
51 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
Here we see Hutton Hall from the north, showing the main entrance and driveway, the view that house party guests would first see upon arriving by carriage, having been brought up from the Pease's
The Chairman of the Board of Governors was Sir Joseph Whitwell Pease; twenty years earlier, he had used Alfred Waterhouse to design his mansion, Hutton Hall, and one assumes this connection influenced
The window was glazed by the Pease family in memory of Lady Pease of the nearby Hutton and Pinchinthorpe estate.
Waterhouse favoured the use of contrasting red brick and terracotta; as well as using it at Hutton Hall, he used it on his other two buildings in Guisborough, the Grammar School and Overbeck, a private
Number 20 Hutton Village, the house on the left-hand end of the terrace, was extended during the early years of the 20th century and almost doubled in size.
There is some activity around the base of the statue - are the two ladies selling flowers and button-holes?
The view looking north from the King's Head shows the National Provincial Bank on the left (now NatWest) and, opposite, the Button Shop (now the Wimborne Pottery).
Lower Bridge Street in the days when those short of a few shillings could pay a visit to Edwin Henry Dutton, pawnbroker and jeweller, and those who did have a few shillings could go along to
Recently restored to its former 17th-century glory, the lodge was designed as a grandstand for Sir John Dutton, a friend of Oliver Cromwell, for viewing deer coursing in the extensive parkland.
Dutton post office, on the left, has gone, and been replaced by a new housing estate.
The Borough Hotel is on the right of our photograph; this was a Dutton House.Woolworth's is a little further up the street.
The Borough Hotel is on the right of our picture; this was a Dutton House.
By the church stands a statue of Robert Peel, notable because his waistcoat is buttoned the wrong way.
It was famous for the production of button moulding, although, as in so many towns in the area, cotton was also produced here.
The signs leave no doubt that in 1960 the inn was owned by Dutton's Brewery (of Blackburn), and that John Kirkby was the licensee.
Inside is a memorial to John Dutton, lord of the manor, who died in 1656; it reads 'Master of a large fortune and owner of a mind equal to it.'
The lad outside the shop is wearing a sleeveless jumper, very characteristic of the period, and a more informal version of the buttoned waistcoat worn by the elderly man on the left.
A lone policeman in his high-buttoned tunic directs traffic emerging from the Ewell Road to cross the junction with Station Way, The Broadway and the High Street.
The Button Bros fascia sign on the left marks the location of the official supplier for uniforms and haircuts for the boys from Luton Grammar School.
Each boy would be required to climb the 150ft high mast from HMS 'Cordelia', and every year, cadets at the passing-out ceremony had to climb the rigging, the pride of place going to the 'button
line one side, and telegraph poles the other side of this section of the A2 from Rainham to Gillingham, where Mrs Hall had her hairdresser's shop, E H Chatfield was the confectioner and Len Button
Stockings, corsets and buttons from the old shop are on display in the museum.
Two men's outfitters existed side by side; Dunn & Co were part of a national chain selling 'gentlemanly' clothes: tweed jackets, caps and hats and sturdy gloves which fastened at the wrist with buttons
Two men's outfitters existed side by side; Dunn & Co were part of a national chain selling 'gentlemanly' clothes: tweed jackets, caps and hats and sturdy gloves which fastened at the wrist with buttons
Places (36)
Photos (178)
Memories (235)
Books (2)
Maps (270)