Toggle navigation
Menu
Lewisham Borough Photos
Images from Lewisham
Home
Places
Dates
Themes
Prints
Checkout
In page-searchResults.php
Search Results Page
Search for images:
Search for phrase:
Select Date
All Dates
1700s
1800s
1900s
1910s
1920s
1930s
1940s
1950s
1960s
1970s
1980s
1990s
unknown
Select Area
All Areas
Beckenham
Bellingham
Bermondsey
Blackheath
Brockley
Catford
Crystal Palace
Deptford
Downham
Dulwich
Forest Hill
France
Greenwich
Grove Park
Hants
Herne Hill
Hither Green
Honor Oak
Ladywell
Lee
Lewisham
New Cross
Nuhead
Parham Park
Peckham
Southend
St John's
Sussex
Sydenham
Westminster
Woolwich
Select Theme
All Themes
Animals
Archaeology
Beaulieu
Bridges
Businesses
Canals Ponds and Rivers
Celebrations
Cemeteries
Charities
Charity
Churches
Education
Emergency Services
Entertainment
Event
Farms
General Views
Health
HealthPublic Buildings
Heath
Houses
Houses(Large)
Housing
Industry
Markets
Military
Mills
Music
Parks and Open Spaces
People
Public Art
Public Buildings
Pubs
PulicBuildings
Rivers
Roads and Streets
Royalty
Shops
Sport
Sports
Stations
Theatres and Cinemas
Transport
Winter Scenes
Work
World War One
World War Two
Youth
Search for:
Showing results for pictures from , in , of , with the phrase ''
Page 1 of 234
1
2
3
4
5
...
10
20
30
...
»
Last »
"52Y" Personnel in uniform.
"52Y" Personnel in uniform.
"52Y" Personnel in uniform.
"52Y" Personnel in uniform.
Officers in uniform and Cars. Part of "The Canoog Staff Company chinbrook Billet'
"Maresfield", Baring Road, owned by Lord Northbrook and loaned by him as an institute for the soldiers of the Army Service Corps. In 1919, the house was loaned to St. Augustine's Church for use as a Sunday School etc.)
Black and White photo of 'H.W. Ford' grocers (left) and 'G. Hind' coal merchant and post office (right), c.1904
Paragon Mews was the original and appropriate name for this service road behind Montpelier Row, which developed in the 1790's to give access to the stables of the larges house facing the Heath. Some cottages, for coachmen and gardeners, were also built together with livery stables and the premises of jobmasters. These two attractive houses were classified as slums and demolished in 1939.
Black and White photo of the rear of these houses (off Hindsley's Place), c.1937-8
Black and White photo of the front of these properties, c.1937-8
Black and White photo showing shop exteriors of Eastman Bros and The Forest Hill Meat Market, c.1914
Queen's Bench, four cottages in two right-angled pairs, was one of several curious pieces of back development squeezed into odd corners of the common land known as Rushey Green shortly after it was enclosed by an act of parliament in 1810. The nine or ten acres made available for building then provided sites for nearly all the working class housing and shops the slowly growing Catford needed until the 1880s. Queen's Bench was demolished as part of a slum clearance programme shortly after this photograph was taken.
Page 1 of 234
1
2
3
4
5
...
10
20
30
...
»
Last »