Theme Explorer

More than 2000 results were returned, we've just shown the first 2000. Use the sub themes, where available, to refine your results.
Page 32 of 112 2000 Records Found

Conduit Street, Lichfield

This postcard view looks northwest along Conduit street to the Market Square. On the left is the Corn Exchange, also on the left is a glimpse of a covered stall in the Market Square, the spires of the ...

Congleton Edge, From Cloud End. Photographed by William Blake.

Landscape with a view of Congleton Edge taken from Cloud End, Cheshire.

Congregational Church, Martin Street, Stafford

The entrance to the Congregational Church also known as Zion Chapel on Martin Street. This building's origins are thought to date from 1811 according to a 1964 local-newspaper article. It stated that ...

Congreve House, Walton-on-the Hill, Stafford

Congreve House, Walton-on-the Hill, Stafford. This Grade II Listed 17th century timber framed building was clad in brick around the 18th century. It is the birthplace of Lieutenant-General Sir William ...

Conservatory, Alton Towers

A postcard view of the House Conservatory which linked the Drawing Room with the Octagon. Alton Towers was the home of the Talbot family, Earls of Shrewsbury. It was built between about 1810 and 1852. ...

Conservatory, Alton Towers

This postcard view was published by The Alton Towers Café, Alton, Staffs. Alton Towers was the home of the Talbot family, Earls of Shrewsbury. It was built between about 1810 and 1852. The 15th ...

Convalescing soldiers at Ravenhill House, Brereton

The house had been briefly unoccupied when, in March 1915, the War Office intimated that Lady Zouche had offered the house as a V.A.D (Voluntary Aid Detached) Hospital to be operated by the Red Cross ...

Convent of the Holy Rosary, Cannock

Opened in 1898 by the Sisters of the Christian Retreat, the Convent later became Lyncroft School in the 1970s and then Chase Academy in 1998, since renamed Chase Grammar School.. The Convent building ...

Cookshill Corner, Caverswall. Photographed by William Blake.

View of Cookshill Corner, Caverswall, Nr. Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire. The photograph includes a group of people standing outside the Auctioneer's Arms public house. The picture was taken looking ...

Cookshill Mill, Caverswall

A view of the River Blithe and Cookshill Mill at Caverswall. The fields at the rear of the mill were known as 'The Honesty Fields' as they were full of the the plant Lunaria Annua. The chimneys of the ...

Coppenhall Hall, near Stafford

This view of Coppenhall Hall, which at the time was a farmhouse, was taken from the nearby farm buildings. In later years the Hall, barns and outbuildings were extensively modernised and the development ...

Coppice Mill, Stone,

At one time there were ten mills in the Moddershall Valley which provided material for the pottery industry. This is Coppice Mill on Longton Road, also known as Shardlow's Mill. In the eighteenth ...

Coppice Mill, Stone,

At one time there were ten mills in the Moddershall Valley which provided material for the pottery industry. This is Coppice Mill on Longton Road, also known as Shardlow's Mill. In the eighteenth ...

Coppice Mill, Stone,

At one time there were ten mills in the Moddershall Valley which provided material for the pottery industry. This is Coppice Mill on Longton Road, also known as Shardlow's Mill. In the eighteenth ...

Corn Mill, Burton-upon-Trent

The Corn Mill, Newton Road, Burton-upon-Trent.

Corner Farmhouse, Upper Mayfield

A postcard view of Corner Farmhouse, a Grade II listed building, which stands on the crossroads of Hollow Lane, Gallowstree Lane and Piccadilly Lane in Upper Mayfield. Note the Venetian window above the ...

Corner of Mill Street and Greengate Street, Stafford,

On the left is Chetwynd House, built around 1712-1715 by William Chetwynd, 3rd Viscount Chetwynd (1683?-1770), Member of Parliament for Stafford 1715-1722 and 1734-1770. Chetwynd House was Stafford's ...

Cornerstone at Leek Municipal School

The design carved on the stone of young Hercules and the bees was the idea of the architect L. Sugden and the work of sculptor, A. Broadbent. The stone was laid by Millicent, Duchess of Sutherland. Despite ...