Showing 49–64 of 154 results
-
£12.50
Cholera threatened Lincoln during the national epidemic of 1848-49. The book reproduces the street by street report by George Giles, an eminent engineer, on the insanitary condition of the city, as…
-
£5.99
Who was William Wilberforce and what was his background? Was he responsible for ending the slave trade or did others, including Africans themselves, play an equally important part? Did ending…
-
£15.00
This book enables you to record your own pilgrimage to all forty four of our magnificent Anglican Cathedrals, becoming your personal keepsake – journal, reference and souvenir. The twenty eight…
-
£10.95 – £19.95
Lincolnshire Archaeology and Heritage reports Series: No. 1 Promotional Price for the summer £10.95 – please select ‘clearance’ copy. A series of unexpected events led to the survey (during the…
-
£10.00
This is the third book in ‘Harry’ Young’s trilogy, following My Lincolnshire Long Ago and Where Did We Go From Here. He recalls events from the 50s and 60s that…
-
£12.99
Female Occupations: Women’s Employment 1850 – 1950 by Margaret Ward This is a carefully researched A-Z of women’s employment, covering over 100 years of change. The entries themselves are based…
-
£8.99
So many of our men fought overseas in the second World War and not all of them returned to tell the tale. This is a story through Harry’s childhood, how…
-
£14.99
From the villages and market towns of a quiet corner of England, men and women have, for centuries, set out on spiritual and geographical quests to change the world. This…
-
£6.50
Stickford, a parish of about 400 people, is situated on the A16 north of Boston, at the foot of the Lincolnshire Wolds. In this book, written to commemorate the centenary…
-
£19.99
George Basil Edwards (1899-1976) was born in Guernsey, Channel Islands but left the island toward the end of WW1 and attended Bristol University. During the 1920s, whilst teaching at Toynbee…
-
£10.00
GROW (Guernsey’s Rural Occupational Workshop) was founded by the Guernsey Society for the Mentally Handicapped and officially opened by the then Bailiff, Sir Charles Frossard on 14th July 1984. The…
-
£14.99
Guernsey As It Used to Be is a portrait of the island during the Victorian era. Its author George Hugo, was born in Guernsey in 1862, and describes the changes…
-
£14.99
In June 1940, 17,000 people fled Guernsey for England, including 5,000 schoolchildren with their teachers and 500 mothers as ‘helpers’. The Channel Islands were occupied on 30th June – the…
-
£14.99
The island of Guernsey is steeped in a rich and fascinating history that is clearly visible in the landscape; menhirs and dolmens, watch-towers and holy wells, castles and caves –…
-
£14.99
Guernsey is the most western of the Channel Islands, with a proud maritime history spanning many centuries. Only 25 square miles, the island nevertheless has a great variety of landscapes,…
-
£11.99
Cambridgeshire had been marked out in the 1930s as a county of importance for the RAF. At the outbreak of war there were airfields at Alconbury, Wyton, Waterbeach, Upwood, Oakington…
End of content
End of content