Places
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Photos
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Maps
37 maps found.
Books
1 books found. Showing results 25 to 1.
Memories
122 memories found. Showing results 11 to 20.
Happy Childhood
I lived with my grandma Elizabeth (Lizzie) Bignell at No 10 Ten Cottages from 1943 to around 1948. The houses were Estate owned (and still are) and my grandad Robert Bignell worked at the manor house first as a shepherd and ...Read more
A memory of Wormleighton in 1946 by
Happy Days In Heswall (Rlch)
I guess I was on the same bus as Gina and her life long friends who I also remember. The Liverpool girls would meet up on a Sunday night to catch the ferry to Birkenhead and the bus to Heswall. If the girls from the Isle ...Read more
A memory of Heswall in 1969 by
Everret's Corner (2)
This is Everret's Corner approached from the West. The road is the A4 and it is a good distance North of the real Cippenham Village. The main bus-stop for buses coming from Slough was right diagonally opposite the ...Read more
A memory of Cippenham in 1965 by
Correction To Title
Another bloomer! This is actually Bootham Bar, which is to the north of the City. There is no such place as "West Gate" in York.
A memory of York by
Schooldays
I was born in Hayfield Cottages, Auldgirth in April 1931. My first year at school Mrs Garthwaite was my teacher. She lived in the house just north of the school. In the mid 30s my brother Bob and I saw an airship fly over Barbra Mill. ...Read more
A memory of Auldgirth in 1930 by
1959 To 1964
In the bottom left corner of the photo is a row of four white bungalows. My father --Ron Bartlett built these and several others on the estate from about 1959 onwards. We lived in the top one. The house immediately to the right of ...Read more
A memory of Mochdre by
Spaldwick Windmill The Belton Family
The Belton family has a long association with Spaldwick as millers, witnessed by a hill being in the family name, (O.S. map 153), just north of the village. My mother's sister Violet Bass, from nearby ...Read more
A memory of Spaldwick in 1955 by
Ice Hockey And Olympic Swimming
During WW2 I went to this venue to watch ice hockey. The teams playing were mainly, if not entirely, teams of Canadian servicemen from various UK stations. The team whose name I remember the best was from Down ...Read more
A memory of Wembley in 1940 by
The Slate Islands Easdale
THE SLATE ISLANDS By Walter Deas Some 24k (15 miles) south and west of Oban lies an area with interesting old ...Read more
A memory of Easdale in 2005 by
The Whitewater Hotel At Backbarrow, Near Newby Bridge
I stayed in Backbarrow for several days at the Whitewater Hotel which has been converted from a former mill building by the river. The lobby of this lovely "spa hotel" has display cabinets of ...Read more
A memory of Backbarrow in 2008 by
Captions
434 captions found. Showing results 25 to 48.
North of Leyburn is the manorial village of Bellerby.
The cloister lies to the north of the church, with the master's hall to its west.
The newly-completed North or Victoria Pier is on the left, with the South Pier with its lighthouse at the back.
The stone-mullioned windows and sturdy, stone-built construction mark the Bay Horse Inn in the tiny North Yorkshire village of Gayles, north of Richmond, as a building of some antiquity.
Norfolk's own California is just north of Caister.
This small village (pronounced 'Swan'ick') lies on the A38, midway between Ripley and Alfreton, to the north of Derby.
After 1856, a residence north of the border of not less than three weeks was required before a marriage could take place.
We are on the Downs, just north of Seaford.
Also situated north of the town and at one time also called the Lions' Den, these sandstone caves were once a feature of The Plot, an area of common grazing land.
It retains its rural seclusion in spite of recent threats: plans for a major housing development, just north of here at Tillingham Hall, were challenged and overturned in 1987.
North of Main Street, the dignified 1950s council housing was built on The Leys field.
A small village to the north of Cuckfield, Whiteman's Green was once on several bus routes - a single-decker bus is just visible at the bottom of the hill.
Queen's College, named after Philippa, wife of Edward III, was originally founded to educate 'Poor Boys' from the north of England.
Set in woods two miles north of Midhurst, the King Edward Sanatorium (1903-6, by Charles Holden) is vast but built in a humane Tudorish style.
Originally a Tudor house, to the north of the village, the building was remodelled in 1806 by Jeffry Wyatville and given its classical frontage in a manner which was strongly influenced by the work of
Just north of the village is Brewery House, home of Sir William Hooker and his son Joseph.
Loaded narrow boats head north on the Grand Union Canal, their cargo concealed from both weather and prying eyes by careful sheeting.
The village school in Old Newton, just north of Stowmarket.
Glen Helen is situated about two miles north of St John's, and was developed from 1850 onwards by a Mr Marsden who named the glen after his daughter.
Alfington is a tiny village alongside the river Otter, north of Ottery St Mary.
It retains its rural seclusion in spite of recent threats: plans for a major housing development, just north of here at Tillingham Hall, were challenged and overturned in 1987.
Island and Mount Edgecumbe, known as The Bridges, is only navigable via one narrow channel, which is why ships always appear to take 'the long way round', following Drake Passage to the east and north of
The hillside town of Yeadon lies to the north of Bradford, and is today perhaps most famous as the site of the Leeds-Bradford Airport.
Here we see the North or Marine Lake about ten years after it opened.
Places (2)
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Memories (122)
Books (1)
Maps (37)