Local history Books
Manchester University Press Stories from Small Museums
Book SynopsisDuring the late twentieth century, the number of museums in the UK dramatically increased. Typically small and independent, the new museums concentrated on local history, war and transport. This book asks who founded them, how and why.In order to find out more, Fiona Candlin, a professor in museology, and Toby Butler, an expert oral historian, travelled around the UK to meet the individuals, families, community groups and special interest societies who established the museums. The rich oral histories they collected provide a new account of recent museum history – one that weaves together personal experience and social change while putting ordinary people at the heart of cultural production.Combining academic rigour with a lively writing style, Stories from small museums is essential reading for students and museum enthusiasts alike.Trade Review'In the depth of its observations and via beautiful writing, Stories from small museums does an incredible job... The results are a book that will make you feel as if you have found new friends, learned new things, and above all, been reminded of the richness of human existence.'Oral History Society -- .Table of ContentsIntroduction: founding stories, finding stories 1 Transport museums: loving objects and each other 2 War and conflict museums: muttering in the corridors of power 3 Local history museums: at the centre of the universe4 The museum founders: getting on the footplate Conclusions: the micromuseums boomIndex
£76.50
Pen & Sword Books Ltd A History of Women's Lives in Oxford
Book SynopsisUnderneath the dreaming spires of Oxford's world-famous university, generations of women have lived their lives, fighting for the right to study there, and for a role within the city's educational, political and social spheres. Although a few of these women's names have been recorded for posterity, they have been largely because of their association with worthy or famous men; in this book, though, their own lives are detailed, along with those who have been largely omitted from history. Women's lives have always been less recorded than those of men; where a woman helped her husband with his business, this help may not have been formally recorded in the census returns, and the details of jobs recorded there might not reflect the full scale of women's work and responsibilities. So here, learn about the variety of work women undertook; their education, their social lives, and their attempts to carve out a valuable role for themselves. Learn too of the problems they faced in living their lives: poverty, prison, suicide, or even murder. This is no pretty picture of Oxford life designed for tourist brochures; instead, it aims to take a snapshot of the varied experiences of the city's female population over the course of a century.
£13.49
Surrey Books,U.S. Beacons in the Darkness: Hope and Transformation
Book SynopsisCommunity journalism has long been a part of the lifeblood of America, but never have the stakes been so high for the people behind it. In Beacons in the Darkness, award-winning journalist Dave Hoekstra interviews the people trying to keep the lights on at community newspapers across the country amid buyouts, declining revenues, fake news, and a pandemic. This book is not another account of the death of local journalism—but rather a celebration of the community ties, perseverance, and empathy that’s demonstrated in community newsrooms from Hillsboro, Illinois, to Charleston, South Carolina, to Marfa, Texas. Hoekstra recounts the sometimes-scandalous but always-industrious stories of the families who built these newspapers and passed them down through generations. Modern publishers and owners describe in their own words their struggles and experiments to stay alive in the digital age, not just for their businesses and their families but also for the communities they serve and the neighbors whose stories they tell in their reporting. Beacons in the Darkness provides an intimate view inside the organizations that still publish photos of the local bowling league and the outlandishly large mushrooms on the edge of town, leaving you with a rekindled fondness for your own community paper—and a renewed appreciation of what we all stand to lose without one.Table of ContentsList of newspapers featured in Beacons in the Darkness, by state:Arkansas Arkansas Democrat-Gazette Eureka Springs Independent California Bakersfield Californian FloridaMiami Times Illinois Champaign News-Gazette Chicago Reader Evanston RoundTable Hillsboro Journal-News Paddock Publications Pana News-Palladium Shaw Media IndianaMadison Courier Iowa Carroll Times Herald Missouri Eldon Advertiser South Carolina Post and Courier Tennessee Tri-State Defender Texas Big Bend Sentinel
£11.89
Haymarket Books People Wasn't Made to Burn: A True Story of
Book SynopsisIn 1947, James Hickman shot and killed the landlord he believed was responsible for a tragic fire that took the lives of four of his children on Chicago 's West Side. But a vibrant defense campaign, exposing the working poverty and racism that led to his crime, helped win Hickman 's freedom. With a true-crime writer 's eye for suspense and a historian 's depth of knowledge, Joe Allen unearths the compelling story of a campaign that stood up to Jim Crow well before the modern civil rights movement had even begun. As deteriorating housing conditions and an accelerating foreclosure crisis combine to form a hauntingly similar set of circumstances to those that led to the Hickman case, Allen 's book restores to prominence a previously unknown story with profound relevance today.Trade Review"What I appreciate about Joe Allen's work is that he demonstrates as a historian the power of informationmeticulous, distilled, coherent, principled.” John Pilger, author of Freedom Next Time "In a remarkable feat of historical excavation and taut storytelling, Joe Allen tells the incredible story of James Hickman, an African-American man who struck back after a black Chicago slumlord and arsonist decimated his family and nearly destroyed his life. A stark look into a past of big city racism and poverty that we shouldn't forgetand an important contribution to the history of social justice in America.” Alex Heard, author of The Eyes of Willie McGee "James Hickman was one of the hundreds of thousands of black Mississippians to move to Chicago in the 1940s. The nightmarish tragedy that befell the Hickman family there, as well as the actions of the dedicated activists who fought to save Hickman's life by revealing the institutional foundations of that tragedy, are vividly depicted in Joe Allen's important and moving history. Hickman's story illustrates the toxic nature of racial segregation and economic exploitation. The outraged community that united to support Hickman is a refreshing reminder of people's power to organize for change.” Beryl Satter, author of Family Properties: Race, Real Estate, and the Exploitation of Black Urban America "[A] remarkable book... Allen tells the story in admirably straightforward fashion...[painting] a horrific portrait of the inhumane conditions in which blacks were forced to live in the post WWII Chicago." Rick Kogan, Chicago Tribune "People Wasn't Made to Burn presents the 1947 Hickman trial in Chicago and its revelations as a metaphor for racial prejudice and its effects on the lives of ordinary people. The book's story tells of James Hickman's frustration over his inability to get justice in the arson death of his four children, his subsequent killing of the landlord who was deliberately responsible for the fire, and the efforts of the heroic and conscience-arousing Hickman Defense Committee that enabled him to walk out of court a free man.” Kenan Heise, author of Chicago Afternoons With Leon
£16.49
Birlinn General Mingulay: An Island and its People
Book SynopsisA remote, barren and ruggedly beautiful island lies at the southern end of the Outer Hebrides. Its people, loyal for centuries, have abandoned it but the beauty and history of Mingulay remain. The story of St Kilda, whose inhabitants were also forced to leave, is well known, but that of Mingulay is no less poignant, and is told in this acclaimed book for the first time. Ben Buxton documents the story of a people and of an island. In the nineteenth century Mingulay was home to up to 160 islanders who lived by crofting, fishing and by catching seabirds from cliffs which are among the highest in Britain. Looking back through the annals of history, he uncovers the traditions of a hospitable, close community which thrived under clan rule. But set in lonely isolation in the stormy Atlantic, with no proper landing place, absentee landlords and insufficient fertile land, life for Mingulay's inhabitants was hard, and By 1912, the 'voluntary' evacuation of the island was complete.
£999.99
Birlinn General The Forth Bridge: A Picture History
Book SynopsisAt the time of its construction, the Forth Bridge was the largest bridge in the world, and to this day it remains a breathtaking monument to the vision and confidence of the Victorian age which created it. For seven years, thousands of men from all over Europe worked beneath the waters of the Forth and hundreds of feet in the sky on what was widely regarded as the eighth wonder of the modern world. Sheila Mackay vividly recounts the story of the bridge from its inception to the opening ceremony in 1890. Featuring more than a hundred archive photographs which detail every stage of the project, this book is a magnificent celebration of one of humankind’s most impressive engineering achievements.Trade Review'Dramatic photographs of the Bridge under construction ... masterpieces of clarity and precision from the early days of photography' * The Scotsman *'A book to stir wonder and pride' * The Herald *
£13.49
Birlinn General Central Scotland: Landscapes in Stone
Book SynopsisThe written history and archaeological records of Central Scotland takes us back to Pictish times some 5,000 years ago. The geology of the area stretches back a further 400 million years. The oldest rocks are found near Lesmahagow and in the Pentland Hills. Known geologically as ‘inliers’– small areas of rocks from an older age, surrounded by younger strata – these strata have yielded some of the oldest fish on earth and are highly prized for what they tell us about early life on the planet. Rocks of the Old Red Sandstone and the succeeding Carboniferous era underlie the rest of Central Scotland in almost equal measure. Explosive volcanic rocks, thick layers of lava, desert sandstones, limestones and productive coal measures make up this bedrock patchwork. Then, sometime later, a covering of ice, some two kilometres thick, blanketed the landscape. It sandpapered and burnished the bedrock into the familiar scenes we see today – our matchless Scottish landscape. The coal and iron ore which lay beneath the ground between Edinburgh and Glasgow provided the raw materials that drove the Industrial Revolution in Scotland, and the early focus on understanding the rocks beneath our feet was unsurprisingly initially concentrated on the most useful minerals resources.Trade Review'Alan McKirdy’s insights are valuable because he is the author of a string of accessible and informative short illustrated books on the geological history of Scotland' * West Highland Free Press *'Not only are they a wealth of information on Scotland's past, they offer valuable insight as Scotland’s future becomes increasingly uncertain due to climate change' * Dundee Courier *
£7.99
DB Publishing The Building of Southampton Docks
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£13.49
DB Publishing Leeds in the Fifties, Sixties and Seventies
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£13.49
DB Publishing The Story of the World's Greatest Fishing Port
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£13.49
DB Publishing Haunted Derbyshire: Myths, Magic & Folklore
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£11.69
DB Publishing Rolls-Royce at Derby
Book SynopsisMalcolm Bobbitt''s illustrated history of the company''s Derby factories offers a fascinating behind-the-scenes insight into the extraordinary engineering achievements that have earned for Rolls-Royce a worldwide reputation for innovation and excellence. His book gives a revealing account of the varying fortunes of the company and a detailed view of the production techniques and processes that have evolved over the years. He also presents an intimate portrait of the local people who have worked at Rolls-Royce, and depended on it for their livelihood, for generations.
£13.49
JMD Media Blood and Coal
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£10.79
Poetry Wales Press Real Oxford
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£9.49
Pen & Sword Books Ltd Isle of Wight in the Great War
Book SynopsisThe Isle of Wight went to war in August 1914 along with the rest of Britain. German waiters were arrested. The tourist trade slumped. Foreigners were denounced and lads from all walks of life flocked to the Colours. Then came privations, losses, hospitals full of the sick and crippled. After conscription was brought in tribunals were set up to catch draft-dodgers. Thousands of pounds were raised for the war effort and lectures, rallies and the local press all did their bit to keep morale high. There are no official figures for the Island's war dead, but 300 of the Isle of Wight Rifles fell on one day at Gallipoli in August 1915. The original plan to commemorate the dead was to erect a cross in Winchester but that changed so that every Island parish had a memorial of its own. Ex-Islanders from as far away as Australia and Canada volunteered to fight for king and country in this war to end all wars.
£9.49
Alan Godfrey Maps Glasgow (Hillhead) 1894: Lanarkshire Sheet 6.06a
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£6.11
Alan Godfrey Maps Holborn, the City & the Strand 1873: London Sheet
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£6.11
O'Brien Press Ltd The Granite Coast: Dún Laoghaire, Sandycove,
Book SynopsisExplore Dún Laoghaire and its coastal surroundings with local painter, historian and writer Peter Pearson as he reveals the story behind its transformation from rocky granite shoreline to grand Victorian ‘watering place’. Peter Pearson is a Dún Laoghaire man, familiar with every brick and stone of the harbour and town. Here he traces the social, historical and architectural development of Dún Laoghaire, Sandycove and Dalkey, from a stretch of granite coastline with a small fishing village up to the present day. Pearson tells the story of a harbour designed to be a refuge from storms. Begun in 1816, and built in Dalkey granite, it is one of the most attractive artificial harbours in the world. It witnessed one of the world’s first lifeboat services, the fastest mail and passenger boats of the day, and the arrival of the first railway line in Ireland. Pearson also examines the social dimension, from the early settlement and development of houses and villas, with evocative names like Sorrento and Vico, to the slum alleys of Kingstown and the first council housing. With over 250 illustrations, including early maps and many previously unseen photographs and images, this is a fascinating journey through the history and heritage of Dún Laoghaire, Sandycove and Dalkey. Praise for Peter Pearson’s Decorative Dublin: ‘Beautifully illustrated … contains endless riches.’ The Sunday Tribune ‘[Pearson] writes with enthusiasm and knowledge about his subject.’ Frank McDonald, The Irish Times ‘Pearson’s is an infectious passion.’ Books IrelandTrade ReviewOur gift of choice ... it should be on every Christmas list -- Councillor Mary Hanafinhandsome and multifaceted -- RTE Radio 1's Bowman on SundayOn the southern side of Dublin Bay, Peter Pearson in The Granite Coast turns his perceptive focus on a narrative sweep of life in Dun Laoghaire, Sandycove and Dalkey, marshalling a formidable array of information. He examines social change from the settlement and development of villas, with names such as Sorrento and Vico, to the slum alleys of Kingstown and the first council housing. The book is enhanced with more than 250 illustrations, including early maps, rare photographs, watercolours and sketches, a superb accompaniment to the prose -- Irish TimesTable of ContentsAcknowledgments v Maps viii Introduction 1 Chapter 1: Dublin Bay’s Granite Coast 7 From Dún to Dunleary 14 Martello Towers and the Napoleonic Threat 18 Chapter 2: The Victorian Harbour – A Masterpiece in Stone 24 From Dunleary to Kingstown 24 The Kingstown Harbour Master 41 The Lifeboat Service 43 Harbour Architecture 46 Lost Activities of Dún Laoghaire Harbour 51 The Irish Lights 52 The Harbour Company 55 Chapter 3: Kingstown: Infant City of the Steam Age 56 Royal Visit 57 Mail and Passenger Services 59 The Dublin-to-Kingstown Railway 66 Chapter 4: Birth of a Seaport Town 70 Housebuilding and the Victorian Style 70 Development of the New Town 80 Churches 85 Chapter 5: An Elegant Victorian Watering Place 94 Yachting and Sailing 94 Chapter 6: Seafront Houses and Terraces: 1840–1860 109 Residential Kingstown – The Victorian Taste 114 Chapter 7: Sandycove and Bullock 123 Sandycove’s Rocky Shoreline 123 Residential Sandycove 125 The Forty Foot 129 Bullock Harbour 130 Bullock Castle 132 Castle Park and Other Houses 136 Chapter 8: Dalkey – A Sense of the Picturesque 139 Dalkey Island 143 The King of Dalkey 146 Medieval Dalkey 146 Dalkey Quarry 151 Eighteenth-century Dalkey 153 Chapter 9: Nineteenth-century Dalkey – the Coastline 156 Sorrento Terrace 164 The Vico Road 167 Dalkey Hill 169 The Railway 172 Chapter 10: Society and Social Change 174 Terraces and Squares: Dún Laoghaire in the 1860s 174 The Royal Marine Hotel 177 Red-brick Decades 180 Charity and Social Change 186 Chapter 11: Civic Dún Laoghaire 192 Township Administration 192 Public Buildings: 1870–1900 196 Chapter 12: Culture and Amenity in Dún Laoghaire 209 Sport in Dún Laoghaire 217 Transport 218 The Coal Trade 222 Gas, Light and Telephone 225 Chapter 13: Modern Times 227 Mid-Twentieth Century 227 The Shopping Environment 229 Recent Times 232 Select Bibliography and Further Reading 240 Index 242
£28.04
Y Lolfa Ar Drywydd Cymry Lerpwl
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£28.50
Four Courts Press Ltd Nathaniel Colgan, 1851-1919: The life, times and
Book Synopsis
£11.95
Royal Irish Academy Pious and promiscious
a huge range and FREE tracked UK delivery on ALL orders.
£19.00
Graffeg Limited Lost Tramways of England: Bolton, SLT, Wigan and
Book SynopsisAt the peak of Britain''s first generation tramways, it was possible to travel by tram all the way from Pier Head at Liverpool to the Pennines in Rochdale. Amongst the chain of tramways that formed these links were the services that operated in Bolton, St Helens, Wigan and the company lines controlled by South Lancashire Tramways.
£8.99
Graffeg Limited Castles of Wales
Book SynopsisA compact, accessible guide to 37 of Wales''s celebrated castles detailing their construction, ownership and uses. Each entry is accompanied by superb photography of the castle, key points of interest and character and their position in the landscape.
£9.99
The History Press Ltd The Western Kingdom: The Birth of Cornwall
Book SynopsisIn the fifth century, the Roman Empire collapsed and Western Europe began remaking itself in the turmoil that followed. In south-west Britain, old tribal authorities and identities reasserted themselves and a ruling elite led a vibrant and outward-looking kingdom with trade networks that stretched around the Atlantic coast of Europe and abroad into the Mediterranean. They and their descendants would forge their new kingdom into an identity and a culture that lasts into the modern age.The Western Kingdom is the story of Cornwall, and of how its unique language, culture and heritage survived even after politically merging with England in the tenth century. It’s a tale of warfare, trade and survival – and defiance in the face of defeat.Trade Review"With 'The Western Kingdom', Fletcher reviews the known sources which provide evidence for early mediaeval Cornwall and challenges the usual assumption that it's primary focus was on events on its eastern border. Instead he presents a case for Cornwall emerging from the post-Roman period as a westward and Mediterranean facing dynamic polity that maintained its centuries - old connections to the wider world. An interesting and useful addition to the field of early mediaeval studies." -- Matt Bunker * The Sword in Anglo Saxon England: From the 5th to 7th Century *
£13.49
The History Press Ltd I Love Me County
Book SynopsisWaterford, the Gentle County, can boast a proud sporting tradition that is as long as it is unusual. Ireland's oldest city has witnessed many trends, from blood sports like bull-baiting in Ballybricken to roller hockey at the Olympia Ballroom. But the towns and villages of County Waterford were not to be overshadowed, producing notable sports people such as basketballers and boxers.In I Love Me County', learn about everyone from camogie pioneers to World Champions, as this collection of stories records the lives, loves and losses of some of Waterford's forgotten sporting heroes, demonstrating the importance of sport and leisure in the history of the county.
£17.00
The History Press Ltd The AZ of Curious Kent
Book SynopsisAn alphabetical compendium of Kentish lore and localities, eccentrics and events, crimes and curiosities.
£12.34
Signal Books Ltd Coast of Teeth: Travels to English Seaside Towns
Book SynopsisThe English seaside has long been seductive. For 200 years, punters have sought out its quirky thrills from bingo to Wurlitzer organ dances, glamorous granny parades to child-jockeyed donkey races, lewdly shaped rock candy to harrowingly bad karaoke. But recently, many seaside towns have been pummelled by poverty, unemployment, underinvestment, addiction, Brexit, Covid-19 and the climate emergency. Writer Tom Sykes and illustrator Louis Netter take you on a Gonzo tour of 21 English coastal communities in an age of anxiety and absurdity. Their encounters are comical, sad, weird and beguiling - sometimes all at once. A post-lockdown beach party turns violent in Bournemouth. The Hampshire shores pile up with plastic waste and sewage dumped by a water company. St Osyth and Jaywick's trailer parks and makeshift homes have come to resemble a Global Southern shanty town. Covid disinformation is daubed on walls and benches across the Dorset coast. A pub in Scarborough celebrates Ulster paramilitarism. Portsmouthians come to terms with the imperial past. A Blackpudlian musician confesses an intimate connection to the serial killer Harold Shipman. But there's good news too. Combers and mudlarkers are cleaning our beaches. Art projects are drawing attention to coastal erosion and other ecological menaces. In an increasingly uniform England of red-brick estates and retail parks, seaside towns might just be our last outposts of eccentricity and individuality.Trade Review'An enjoyable read. The illustrations have a mutant Donald McGill vibe.'-- Will Self; ‘This is a unique book . . . [with] a rigorous sense of the reasons for economic and cultural decline. . . This is a very radical book, but it is never propagandist or dull. It made me laugh aloud several times: the plight of the observers is very well drawn. It left me wanting more: more piers, more takeaways, more grubby stopovers.’—The London Magazine; ‘Immersively gonzo, febrile and slapstick, written with the gusto of a gourmand relishing a (beggars’) banquet.’—Panorama: The Journal of Travel, Place and Nature; ‘The mix of forensic observation of people by Sykes and the sketches by the very talented Louis Netter makes for a very unusual book indeed. . . If you want to read a very different travelogue of Britain then this is a brilliant place to start.’—Half Man, Half Book
£13.49
Birlinn General Villages of Fife
Book SynopsisThis book is an account of the people of Fife and their villages and hamlets, from medieval times to the present day. At one time or another, these habitations were the core of the country's community life, and their individual stories provide a rich source of Scotland's local and national history. Fife has seen many of the major events in Scottish history, and this book covers the places, parishes and people; their leaders, labour and leisure, and the part all strata of village society played in the vibrant country with the pretentions of a kingdom. From Kingsbarns to Saline and from Wormit to Dysart, Raymont Lamont-Brown reveals the myriad of villages, showing how they are as alive today as they ever were, still contributing to the ongoing story of Fife. In addition, he also seeks out the lost villages, the almost vanished prehistoric settlements, and shows what village names can tell us about locations, historical events and personages, and the life and industry of the people who lived in them. He also reviews the village heart of such larger places as St Andrews, Cupar, Dunfermline and Kirkcaldy.
£10.99
Birlinn General Villages of Glasgow: South of the Clyde
Book SynopsisThis revised and updated edition of Aileen Smart's best-selling book paints a fascinating picture of those villages north of the Clyde that helped forge Glasgow into one of Britain's most energetic and vibrant cities. Although now subsumed within Glasgow proper, these places nevertheless maintain a tremendous sense of pride and identity. Each has its own story to tell, its own heroes and villains, its own myths and traditions. Packed with intriguing detail and enhanced with numerous maps and photographs, Villages of Glasgow is a stimulating introduction to Glasgow and those communities that have formed its lifeblood over the centuries.
£12.34
Birlinn General Beacon in the West: A Hundred Years of the
Book SynopsisIn 1918 Lord Leverhulme bought the island of Lewis with ambitious plans to massively expand its fishing industry and increase its population. In 1923, when his plans had failed, he offered it free of charge to the islanders in two parts. One part, which included impoverished rural areas, was economically unviable. But the other, based around the busy fishing port and administrative centre of Stornoway, was a different matter. In accepting Leverhulme’s offer, the hardheaded, churchgoing business class of Stornoway took on the responsibility of making the radical slogan ‘Land for the People’ a reality. It was an unlikely coupling, but it worked to perfection. The 20th century was a tumultuous time for Lewis. Migration and depopulation were exacerbated by two world wars. Such problems could not be addressed in the lottery of private landownership, but in the stable, democratic government of the Stornoway Trust, town and country alike would weather the storms. Roger Hutchinson tells the story of those storms, and of the people who guided their pioneering estate into the relative security and prosperity of the 21st century. In doing so he paints a vivid portrait of a unique landholding experiment, of Highland land struggle and of the island of Lewis itself.
£15.19
Stenlake Publishing Old Wishaw
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£999.99
Stenlake Publishing Old Forfar
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£11.35
Stenlake Publishing Old North Berwick
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£11.35
Stenlake Publishing Old Currie, Balerno and Juniper Green
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£11.35
Stenlake Publishing Old Portrush, Bushmills and the Giant's Causeway
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£11.35
Stenlake Publishing Bygone Fraserburgh
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£11.35
Stenlake Publishing Old Bangor
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£11.35
Stenlake Publishing Old Port Glasgow
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£11.35
Stenlake Publishing Bygone Clydebank
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£11.35
Stenlake Publishing Old South Uist: with Eriskay and Benbecula
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£11.35
Stenlake Publishing Ayr Remembered
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£20.11
Stenlake Publishing Old Omeath, Carlingford and Greenore
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£11.35
Stenlake Publishing Easter Ross and the Black Isle
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£999.99
Stenlake Publishing Old Inverkip, Skelmorlie and Wemyss Bay
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£12.41
Stenlake Publishing Old Dalbeattie and Palnackie
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£12.41
Stenlake Publishing The Old Outer Hebrides: From Barra Head to the
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£20.85
Stenlake Publishing Old Mardale
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£11.35
Stenlake Publishing Old Culross, Valleyfield, New Mills and Torryburn
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£9.00