Old nottingham photos
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Not seen a shot like this before. The wonderful view of Blackburn meadows. Hadfields East Hecla works where Meadowhall now stands. I'll never forget those gas tanks though more cooling towers to the right of the viaduct than I remember.
Thurland Street Tunnel and Weekday Cross Junction
Carlton Street Nottingham 1900/2015
Clumber Street Crowd, Nottingham, 1981
Radford Parish Workhouse, St Peter’s Street, Radford, 1898
VE Day 1945 Nottingham
As gardeners prepare for the arrival of winter, Andy Smart looks at the city's rich history of tending the land
The railways of Nottingham have always been a favourite subject with our readers. Here Andy Smart tells the story of the important Weekday Cross Junction
This amazing video shows what Birmingham streets looked like over 50 years ago
This public House was built in 1661 and was located on Ilkeston Road in Radford. The original 17th century Coaching Inn was pulled down and replaced by the present building in 1912. In the front wa…
Long Row, Nottingham
In 1947 Nottingham City Corporation bought 932 acres of rural land and developed it into a large council housing estate. One of the last phases of building was the tower block of high-rise flats, Southchurch Court, built between 1968-9. Enjoy these great pictures featuring the land before any houses were built, Clifton market, the shops in Southchurch shopping precinct in the 1990s and the construction of Clifton Bridge.
Page 2 of 5 - Daybrook barber, Alf. - posted in General Chat about Nottingham: Heres a shot referring to and (just) picturing the filling station on the east side of Mans Rd. I also remember the three-wheeler place. http://www.pictureth...003406&prevUrl=
Long Row East, Nottingham, early 1960s.
Long gone Haymarket Pub
1930s Council housing design in Aspley, Nottingham: "variation in a formal setting". (Courtesy Picture the Past) In the early spring of 1939... we joined the exodus of families, most of them from the old slum areas, to the new estates west of the city. Nottingham had an admirable record of slum clearance and re-housing from 1919 until well into the 20th Century. Broxtowe Estate was an expression of that pioneering energy. It was built of ugly red brick, but designed with good intent, plotted…
Top of Malin Hill (The gate on the right is the top of Long Stairs.
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