Places
4 places found.
Those places high-lighted have photos. All locations may have maps, books and memories.
Photos
6 photos found. Showing results 1 to 6.
Maps
65 maps found.
Memories
4,571 memories found. Showing results 1 to 10.
“New” Bus Station
I'm thinking this photo is from around 1968. The new bus station is to the right. That was built beneath the M1 motorway bridge and it and is clearly finished in the shot (the final southern extention of the M1 was finished late ...Read more
A memory of Mill Hill in 1968
‘Bert, The Picture Man’ – He Took The Silent Movies To West Norfolk – Looks Back On A Golden Age
I found this cutting from the Lynn News & Advertiser, Friday, January 12, 1968 and thought it might be of interest to others. IF ANYONE COULD BE CALLED ...Read more
A memory of Hunstanton by
‘Barnsley Beauty’ – The Re Discovered Ancestry Of A Violin!
‘BARNSLEY BEAUTY’ – THE RE-DISCOVERED ANCESTRY OF A VIOLIN! from KEN SILVER Since my early years as a music teacher in the district of Hunslet Carr, South Leeds in about 1970 I have been - ...Read more
A memory of Barnsley by
Yorktown Camberley
i went to work at s-n stationery in must been 1974-5 further down from Yorktown was the industrial estate worked in Riviln factory -Arthur and Freds factory we did clothes for early marks and spencer then worked for factory ...Read more
A memory of York Town by
Yesterday
Hi, Grandad, Alf Bainbridge, had Rogers Farm, by the Tarpots. He had been transferred from Laindon, now called Basildon, by compulsory purchase and enjoyed the smallholding up the lane behind the C W S factory, about the time a ...Read more
A memory of Hadleigh in 1953 by
Worlaby As A Boy
Hi, I lived in the village when I was a boy. I went to the junior school. My dad worked on a farm, we lived next door to the farm. My friends were Pat Jennings and Gordon Petch, we did everything together, lots ...Read more
A memory of Worlaby in 1958 by
Working In Clyffe Pypard
I came down from Scotland when I was 16 & was a nanny in Broad Hinton for a year for Mr & Mrs Huddy (can't remember the name of the house), & then I decided that I wanted to work with horses, so I got a ...Read more
A memory of Clyffe Pypard in 1969 by
Withernsea
my first girlfriend came from roos lillian smith wonder what happened to her memories
A memory of Easington in 1961 by
Winkups Camp Towyn
When I was 18 in 1955 my Mum booked us a Chalet at Winkups Camp, Towyn. There was Mum, stepfather, myself and 3 sisters aged 5yrs, 3yrs and3 months. Off we went from Huddersfield in Yorkshire in our little Austin 7 (I think), I can ...Read more
A memory of Towyn in 1955 by
Winchmore Hill School
I was born in Middlesex hospital in 1937. We lived in Carpenter Gardens. I went to Winchmore Sec Mod from 1942 to 1952. My dad was a policeman in Winchmmore Hill, we moved to Great Yarmouth when my dad retired in ...Read more
A memory of Winchmore Hill in 1942 by
Captions
926 captions found. Showing results 1 to 24.
The rural poet William Barnes achieved national fame through the endeavours of Mrs Caroline Norton, who stayed here while the Dorset bard was living nearby at Winterbourne Came.
Pure water produced by artesian wells from the chalk aquifer, inspired the Silva Springs re-branding of the crop that came to fame for Victorian high tea in the Midlands and the North.
Next to Boots came the old-established drapers Lee & Clarke, then came the Public Benefit Boot & Shoe Co, Gaskell's the butchers, Hallett the jewellers (goldsmiths and silversmiths), Carter's Cafe and
When the bridge was built, people came from all over the world to see it.
It benefited from the visitors who came to see the nearby ruins of Strata Florida, particularly after the railway arrived in 1866, and more recently from those who came to the enormous hall in the village
Aberystwyth became a popular resort for the well-to-do, who came here to bathe and socialise from the late 18th century.
The Odeon cinema is typical of the super cinema style of architecture that came into vogue during the 1930s.
On 10 September 1819, the Prince Regent came to stay at the recently opened William's Royal Hotel.
Batley's prosperity came from the process of breaking down and reweaving woollen cloth from waste rags.
They came to see the Holy House, a miraculous re-creation of the house in Nazareth where Jesus was brought up, together with other wonders.
years prior to the building of the new Town Hall, Leicester was in a dreadful sanitary condition, with privies literally over-flowing into the streets, and it was not until the mid 1850s that piped water came
Grassington's boom time was in the 18th century, when a Klondike rush of workers from Derbyshire and Cornwall came to work the lead mines.
Church House (down to the left) dates from 1694, but Grassington's boom time was in the 18th century, when a Klondike rush of workers from Derbyshire and Cornwall came to work the lead mines - and the
The power for the lifts was provided by a hydraulic water-power system that came directly from the pump house situated on Quay Street, by the River Irwell, where the water came from.
Fortunately these plans came to nothing and the gallery began to be used as a hostel where off-duty service women, posted to this area, could spend their leisure time.
The spa trade declined in the 1920s - although more visitors came, they spent less money.
Captain Cuthbert Bradkirk came from Wray, near Carnforth.
The early 19th century saw Leicester in an appalling sanitary condition, until piped water came to the town in the mid 1850s, along with its first sewers.
Aberystwyth became a popular resort for the well-off, who came here to bathe and socialise from the late 18th century.
Batley was the north's shoddy town: its prosperity came from the process of breaking down and reweaving woollen cloth from waste rags.
Holidaymakers came to stay in Redcar after the Second World War, before cheap foreign holidays were developed; many of them came from Scotland and the West Riding.
Victorian visitors came to look at old rural England - so different to their world in the overcrowded working cities of the West Riding.
Brecon Castle and town are Norman in origin, but the castle came first.
Some came to stay as they journeyed around the country, but many more came as friends, to relax, or to take in a few days shooting.
Places (4)
Photos (6)
Memories (4571)
Books (1)
Maps (65)