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  • A holiday couple sleep on portable beds in a particularly shabby corner of Bournemouth, a seaside resort in southern England. Above them are posters for this seedy part of the seaside resort on the south coast. Stars appearing in the summer season are an Elvis impersonator and the comedians Joe Longthorne and Les Dawson, who is appearing in Ray Cooney’s show called “Run For Your Wife!” The couple lie on their fold-up chairs, stretched out in a quiet corner below peeling plaster walls and beside a chained-up stack of deck chairs. The scene is a quintessentially English resort town that many from the 60s and 70s recall, when the Spanish package holiday suddenly became more attractive options, than the domestic week at home.
    seaside_posters01-20-10-1990.jpg
  • Pensioners on holiday - or on a daytrip - at the Nofilk seaside town of Great Yarmouth wait for a friend beneath a wide banner advertising a Karaoke event at the venue behind them that night. There are four old ladies and one man in the group, all dressed in summer clothes for their day at the beach. Only the gentleman is looking our way as the women are otherwise occupied. There is litter at their feet and garish posters are behind them. The man is outnumbered, a gender ratio of 4 to 1.
    seaside_pensioners01-27-05-1992.jpg
  • A beach family walk below fish shadows at the Suffolk seaside town of Southwold, Suffolk, known for its lack of branded commercialism. A father and girl make their way beneath the images of the fish known in these east coast English waters as the dad carries a wind screen and paraphenalia for the late afternoon on the sea front. Southwold is a small town on the North Sea coast, in the Waveney district of the English county of Suffolk. It is located on the North Sea coast at the mouth of the River Blyth within the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The town is around 11 miles (18 km) south of Lowestoft and 29 miles (47 km) north-east of Ipswich.
    seaside_family02-25-07-2012.jpg
  • On a crowded spring day at the seaside, when families and holidaymakers, daytrippers and locals gather at England's coastal regions, a woman here is seen biting into a very soft cream cake. Covered with a chocolate topping, she sinks her mouth into its pastry and somehow manages not to let the cream ooze out over her clothes. Holding a serviette to catch drips, she looks elsewhere as behind, others stand or lean against the solid concrete sea defence wall at Scarborough, North Yorskhire.
    seaside_cake-25-05-1992.jpg
  • Ducking under the falling spray from a giant wave, a passer-by experience the force of nature from a storm off the coasts of southern England - here at the Port of Dover, Kent. As the water hits the sea defence wall, the seaside town is battered by southerly winds that bring with them huge breakers across the promenade. Adventurous and foolhardy people brave these conditions and stay for as long as possible at the railings then jump out at the last moment before getting doused in salt spray. This man carries on walking and thinks that by bending down, the sea will pass overhead.
    seaside_storm-21-10-1989.jpg
  • Two boys carry large inflatable rings at a watersport ride called the River Run, at the north-eastern seaside resort of Scarborough, on 21st August 1992, in Scarborough, England.
    seaside_people-21-08-1992_2.jpg
  • A father rests his head on tattooed arms while minding his baby, asleep in its buggy on the promenade at the north-eastern seaside resort of Scarborough, on 21st August 1992, in Scarborough, England.
    seaside_people-21-08-1992_1.jpg
  • A lady peers down into the viewfinder of a vintage film camera whilst holidaying on the pier at Bournemouth seaside resort, on 20th October 1990, in Bournemouth, England.
    seaside_people-20-10-1990_1.jpg
  • As an older daughter plays in the surf, a young girl hugs her mother while on holiday in the southern English seaside resort of Paignton, on 19th July 1993, in Paignton, England.
    seaside_people-19-07-1993_1.jpg
  • An elderly couple sit in peace on a quiet beach in the seaside resort of Great Yarmouth, Norfolk. In a classic English beach holiday scene, the husband and wife relax, reclining in a pair of deckchairs at a kiosk that dispenses these quaintly British beach chairs. A sign telling other holidaymakers to collect and pay for their time in them appears on the freshly-painted clap-board wall. As the lazy completes word puzzles in her magazine, the gentleman reads his regular copy of the Daily Mirror tabloid newspaper. He is tanned, perhaps spent his summer tending his garden back home but here on holiday, they both have the chance to spend some time together away from home, in a resort known for its beaches and coastal adventures.
    seaside_pensioners02-27-05-1992.jpg
  • A rather eccentric-looking man is seated on a bench on Blackpool's North Pier. This northern seaside resort in the north-west of England is diverse in its transient holiday population whose behaviour can be routinely odd. The pier has intricate cast ironwork seat backs dating from 1863 and the man sits with ankles crossed, wearing a suit and trilby hat on a warm summer's day. In the background we see families - parents and children - playing and walking on the beach at low-tide - the golden sands a much-visited aspect of Blackpool, the largest resort in the north of England and visited traditionally by working people from industrial towns and cities during the industrial revolution.
    seaside_pensioner-30-07-1993.jpg
  • A detail of a rock and holiday souvenir seller in the Lancashire seaside town of Blackpool. Standing in his shop, we see the owner of this seaside shop on the northwest England resort where buying seaside gifts and souvenirs is ever popular by visitors and daytrippers. In 1887, sugar-boiling factory owner Ben Bullock bought some plain stick candy band had the idea of putting ‘Blackpool Rock’ through the centre of the rock. Now a major industry in the holiday season in Britain and many seaside towns have their versions with their own names running through the rock. Modern seaside rock is thicker, about 1 inch, and more solid than the original form. Its sugar content is nowadays a reason not to buy as much, the adverse effects on teeth from sugar and colouring by the confectionary industry being a main reason for its decline.
    blackpool_rock-19-07-1993_1.jpg
  • A young boy looks carefully at the many saucy postcards on sale outside a seaside shop, on 19th July 1993, in Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England. Telling jokes to send back to friends and family, they using cartoon characters of buxom women, hen-pecked husbands or sexually-frustrated young men, the humour is bawdy and cheeky - the epitome of seaside holiday kitsch. The best-known saucy seaside postcards were created by Bamforths founded 1870 and despite the decline in popularity of postcards that are overtly tacky, postcards continue to be a significant economic and cultural aspect of British seaside tourism. In the 1950s, Bamforth postcards were among the most popular of the 18 million items purchased at British resorts.
    saucy_postcards-21-08-1993.jpg
  • A rack of quintessentially English ‘saucy postcards’ are on display in Scarborough, the northern seaside town. Telling jokes to send back to friends and family, they using cartoon characters of buxom women, hen-pecked husbands or sexually-frustrated young men, the humour is bawdy and cheeky - the epitome of seaside holiday kitsch. The best-known saucy seaside postcards were created by Bamforths (founded 1870) and despite the decline in popularity of postcards that are overtly tacky, postcards continue to be a significant economic and cultural aspect of British seaside tourism. In the 1950s, Bamforth postcards were among the most popular of the 18 million items purchased at British resorts.
    scarborough_saucy_postcards-19-07-19...jpg
  • Three laughing ladies hold up their sticks of rock beneath a seaside character on the seafront at Blackpool, on 18th July 1993, Blackpool, Lancashire, England. In 1887, sugar-boiling factory owner Ben Bullock bought some plain stick candy band had the idea of putting ‘Blackpool Rock’ through the centre of the rock. Now a major industry in the holiday season in Britain and many seaside towns have their versions with their own names running through the rock. Modern seaside rock is thicker, about 1 inch, and more solid than the original form. Its sugar content is nowadays a reason not to buy as much, the adverse effects on teeth from sugar and colouring by the confectionary industry being a main reason for its decline.
    blackpool_rock_ladies-18-07-1993.jpg
  • Looking up from beach level, we see the steps and slightly rusting railings as seaside girls use the stairs to descend from the upper Kings Road level near the West Pier. The neglected iron-work is showing the rust from exposure to numerous  salt air and water storms over the years and is need of fresh paint to brighten this seaside resort. The two ladies chat as they come down and one licks an ice-cream cone, both happy on this warm spring day. Way above them, two other women are seated on chairs, overlooking the steps and the seaside beyond and an anonymous man stands with his back to us at the very top.
    brighton_seafront01-01-05-2010_1.jpg
  • Amusement arcades along the front at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaN.jpg
  • Elderly ladies in wheelchairs are pushed along the front by their carers at Southend-on-sea, Essex. Thier are an extraordinary number of disabled people in Southend. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaB.jpg
  • Shops in the town centre at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaH.jpg
  • Digging work on the front at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaE.jpg
  • Park Inn Palace Hotel and seafront overview at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaA.jpg
  • People on the beach at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend beachF.jpg
  • People on the beach at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend beachH.jpg
  • People on the beach at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend beachE.jpg
  • People on the beach at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend beachC.jpg
  • People enjoying the various rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkF.jpg
  • People enjoying the various rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkL.jpg
  • People enjoying the various rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkJ.jpg
  • People enjoying the various rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkG.jpg
  • Overview of Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkA.jpg
  • Young girls enjoying the rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkC.jpg
  • People enjoying the various rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkB.jpg
  • Whilst many English seaside piers are in decline, Southwold Pier is enjoying renewed popularity. The pier sign is at the Suffolk seaside town's seafront. Southwold Pier was built in 1900, and, at 247 metres (about 810 feet) was long enough to accommodate the Belle steamers which carried trippers along the coast. In World War 2, it was weakened by having two breaches blown in it: one by the Royal Engineers to hinder a possible German invasion, and the other by a loose sea-mine. Southwold is a small town on the North Sea coast, in the Waveney district of the English county of Suffolk. It is located on the North Sea coast at the mouth of the River Blyth within the Suffolk Coast and Heaths Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The town is around 11 miles (18 km) south of Lowestoft and 29 miles (47 km) north-east of Ipswich.
    southwold_pier03-25-07-2012_1_1.jpg
  • A pet poodle looks towards us in the same way that an RSPCA charity box model spaniel does outside a seaside shop tourist. The shop is selling seaside resort holiday tourist trinkets – a postcard rack has been carefully placed in the middle of the pavement (sidewalk) as holidaymakers pass-by to browse the cheap mementoes. The owner of the poodle has stopped to choose some cards for those at home and allows his dog a little slack on the lead. The dog cranes its neck towards the viewer, matching the posture and stance of the model charity spaniel whose cast sits, posing in a sorrowful and empathy-making show of need, suffering and want – enough perhaps to encourage people to give to this charity, the RSPCA (the Royal Society for the Protection of Animals).
    poodle_spaniel00-21-08-1992.jpg
  • As if separated by many decades, we see an older generation beach guard from a bygone era and a much younger lifeguard, both resting on the seafront of the posh Essex seaside town of Frinton-on-Sea, England. If simply comparing the colour schemes of the past, to the modern day, we might guess that in the gentleman on the right’s day, people wore more formal blues, with collar and tie and polished shoes on the hottest day - reminiscent of Victorian times when pomp and tradition rather than practicalities were important . Nowadays, complimentary reds and yellows adorn the uniform of the lad trained in water injuries and life-saving. He is barefoot and sits comfortably against the sea defence wall in peak cap and t-shirt. This is a scene describing the generation gap, of youth versus experience - the classic English seaside holiday.
    frinton_lifeguards-26-06-1992_1.jpg
  • A portrait of a lady fishmonger and her shellfish in the Norfolk seaside town of Great Yarmouth. Holding up a tray of fish and shellfish, the lady proudly stands outside her kiosk in the centre of this eastern England seaside resort. A pot of shrimps, some crabs, salmon steaks and traditional kippers are shown to us. In the background are cod fillets, prawns and other smoked fish.
    fishmonger_portair-27-05-1992_1.jpg
  • It is night-time on Blackpool's Golden Mile, the seaside resort in Lancashire, England. Like an English Las Vegas the neon lights glow to entice the holidaymaker inside where slot machines, games and rides await visitors to lose their vacation money. The Golden Mile is the name given to the stretch of Promenade between the North and South piers. It emerged in the late 19th Century, when small-time fairground operators, fortune-tellers, phrenologists and oyster bars set up in the front gardens of boarding houses, This northern seaside resort in the north-west of England is diverse in its transient holiday population whose behaviour can be routinely odd. Blackpool is the largest resort in the north of England and visited traditionally by working people from industrial towns and cities during the industrial revolution.
    blackpool01-30-07-1993_1.jpg
  • A lady sits outside in morning sunshine on the terrace of her B+B guesthouse in the Devon seaside town of Paignton. It is late morning and a lady has emerged from her bead and breakfast. Sunlight is quite high in the sky and the shadows of a vine that is growing across the roof of the building's terrace, is seen on the wall behind the woman. She is seated reading a magazine in a garden chair and is surrounded by colourful flowers in their prime. Well-painted original victorian railings that act as a sort of ballustrade are in front of the female. In the window is a scene of typical seaside Englishness. Serviettes are splayed out on a table along with breakfast or dinner items awaiting guests at the next meal.
    b+b_woman-21-07-1992_1.jpg
  • Amusement arcades along the front at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaM.jpg
  • Amusement arcades along the front at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaP.jpg
  • Shops in the town centre at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaG.jpg
  • Amusement arcades along the front at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaL.jpg
  • Shops in the town centre at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaK.jpg
  • Shops in the town centre at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaJ.jpg
  • Joke bumper stickers for sale at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaC.jpg
  • Shops in the town centre at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaI.jpg
  • Shops in the town centre at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaF.jpg
  • Brightly coloured beach balls for sale at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend on seaD.jpg
  • People on the beach at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend beachI.jpg
  • People on the beach at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend beachD.jpg
  • Deck chairs on the beach at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend beachJ.jpg
  • People on the beach at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend beachG.jpg
  • People enjoying the various rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkM.jpg
  • People enjoying the various rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkN.jpg
  • People enjoying the various rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkK.jpg
  • People enjoying the various rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkI.jpg
  • Boys race the go karts at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkH.jpg
  • People enjoying the various rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkE.jpg
  • Young girls enjoying the rides at Adventure Island Funfair at Southend-on-sea, Essex. The town could be described as run down as while there are some signs of affluence, these are few and far between. The predominant atmosphere is quite rough feeling and quite poor. Southend is a seaside resort that is very popular with people from the East side of London due to it's close proximity, just an hour away by train along the Thames Gateway. With the decline of seaside resorts, from the 1960s much of the centre was developed for commerce and many of the original features were destroyed through redevelopment or neglect.
    20100709southend amusement parkD.jpg
  • Visitors to Weston-super-Mare walk over the causeway on the seaside resort's seafront. Two people below dip their feet in the warm water on the pool side of the walkway while others make their way along the long diagonal of the path that takes them across the beach towards hotels on the other side. Weston-super-Mare is a seaside resort, town and civil parish in Somerset, England located on the Bristol Channel coast, 18 miles (29 km) south west of Bristol.
    weston_seafront04-08-08-2015_1.jpg
  • Visitors to Weston-super-Mare walk over the causeway on the seaside resort's seafront. Two people below dip their feet in the warm water on the pool side of the walkway while others make their way along the long diagonal of the path that takes them across the beach towards hotels on the other side. Weston-super-Mare is a seaside resort, town and civil parish in Somerset, England located on the Bristol Channel coast, 18 miles (29 km) south west of Bristol.
    weston_seafront04-08-08-2015_1 1.jpg
  • A young boy has his photo taken at the fairground on Southend pier in the early nineteen sixties. Looking somewhat unsure about having his picture taken while rather getting into a dodgem car. Other older boys are in the background and the younger child here may be nervous about being with older kids. It is a summer's day here at the seaside of Southend, a resort town frequented by Londoners who come out to this Thames estuary seaside town.
    sixties_archive11-20-08-1962_1.jpg
  • Lifeguards in the seaside resort of Lowestoft practise the recovery position and resuscitation to a volunteer seaside victim. Lying on the smooth sand near the water's edge, a young man wearing a wetsuit lies pretending to be unconscious, having ingested sea water and requiring immediate treatment by the staff, well-versed in saving lives. As one starts chest compressions, the other holds on the mouth before continuing mouth-to-mouth. Passing time is vital if they are to start a heart and get air into the brain.
    lifeguard_exercise-19-07-1993.jpg
  • A grinning portrait of a fishmonger from the Princess Cafe on Foreshore Road in the North Yorkshire seaside town of Scarborough. Smiling with bad teeth but with a generous and kind face, the elderly man stands on the corner, outside his traditional seaside business in the centre of town where passing trade from locals and tourists guarantee him an income  - a secure future towards his retirement in the coming years. In the background are signs advertising his produce: Haddock, Cod, and Lemon Sole - all locally caught and served with chips.
    fishmonger_portrait02-19-07-1993_1.jpg
  • A grinning portrait of a fishmonger from the Princess Cafe on Foreshore Road in the North Yorkshire seaside town of Scarborough. Smiling with bad teeth but with a generous and kind face, the elderly man stands on the corner, outside his traditional seaside business in the centre of town where passing trade from locals and tourists guarantee him an income  - a secure future towards his retirement in the coming years. In the background are signs advertising his produce: Haddock, Cod, and Lemon Sole - all locally caught and served with chips.
    fishmonger_portrait01-19-07-1993_1.jpg
  • Sitting on garden seats, a seaside couple enjoy ice creams near broken building materials in the resort of Sandown. A decaying pile of rubble and building bricks have been left on the ground where visitors and tourists sit on their holiday making for a grim and depressing experience and dystopic landscape. This is the seaside resort of Sandown on the Isle of Wight, twinned (jumelée in French) with the town of Tonnay-Charente, in the western French département of Charente-Maritime. Its American twin town is St. Pete Beach, Florida.
    derelict_beach-18-06-1989_1.jpg
  • An abandoned Crazy Golf course lies broken and sad in a field at the northwestern seaside resort of Southport. It is a dark winter’s day and off-season when no tourists, let alone locals have ventured out to this otherwise popular summer resort for those away from the towns and cities such as nearby Liverpool. The word Golf is peeling and fading on a broken green fence and the course that was once freshly painted woodwork attracted families for an hour’s fun. The rapid growth of Southport largely coincided with the Industrial Revolution and the Victorian era. Town attractions include Southport Pier, the second longest seaside pleasure pier in the British Isles. Now it is a sad indictment of the decline of many English towns and only the green grass looks fresh and healthy.
    crazy_golf_landscape01-19-12-1997_1.jpg
  • Looking south out to sea, we see the stony shingle of the seaside town  of Brighton whose blue and red stripe beach deck chairs and ruined West Pier stand like statues. It is mid-afternoon yet there are no people seen on this East Sussex beach in England. The West Pier has seen a series of tragic accidents and fires that have left this Victorian iron structure to almost fall into the sea. Several restoration projects have promised to safeguard its future but finance has always been an issue. It therefore stands like a monument to a bygone era of seaside amusement. The sea is relatively calm but the canvass of the deck-chairs billow slightly in a slight breeze.
    brighton_beach02-01-05-2010_1.jpg
  • Seagulls by the seaside with Blackpool Piers Big Wheel in the background as temperatures in the country soar on 7th September, 2021 in Blackpool, United Kingdom. Temperatures in the UK are predicted to soar to highs of 29 degrees celsius, coinciding with a rise in daycation and staycation domestic tourism in the country as a result of Covid-19 precautions that make foreign travel increasingly costly and difficult.
    001_blackpool_staycation_070921.jpg
  • An empty Blackpool Pleasure Beach, closed during the pandemic, on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8421.jpg
  • Whitby is a seaside town, port in the county of North Yorkshire, originally the North Riding. Situated on the east coast at the mouth of the River Esk. Tourism started in Whitby during the Georgian period and developed. Its attraction as a tourist destination is enhanced by its proximity to the high ground of the North York Moors, its famous abbey, and by its association with the horror novel Dracula. Yorkshire, England, UK.
    20150916_whitby various_A.jpg
  • Quayside at the harbour in Whitby, a seaside town, port in the county of North Yorkshire, originally the North Riding. Situated on the east coast at the mouth of the River Esk. Tourism started in Whitby during the Georgian period and developed. Its attraction as a tourist destination is enhanced by its proximity to the high ground of the North York Moors, its famous abbey, and by its association with the horror novel Dracula. Yorkshire, England, UK.
    20150916_whitby quayside_R.jpg
  • Quayside at the harbour in Whitby, a seaside town, port in the county of North Yorkshire, originally the North Riding. Situated on the east coast at the mouth of the River Esk. Tourism started in Whitby during the Georgian period and developed. Its attraction as a tourist destination is enhanced by its proximity to the high ground of the North York Moors, its famous abbey, and by its association with the horror novel Dracula. Yorkshire, England, UK.
    20150916_whitby quayside_P.jpg
  • Fishing boats moored at the quayside in the harbour in Whitby, a seaside town, port in the county of North Yorkshire, originally the North Riding. Situated on the east coast at the mouth of the River Esk. Tourism started in Whitby during the Georgian period and developed. Its attraction as a tourist destination is enhanced by its proximity to the high ground of the North York Moors, its famous abbey, and by its association with the horror novel Dracula. Yorkshire, England, UK.
    20150916_whitby quayside fishing boa...jpg
  • 199 steps up to the East Cliff. Once these stairs used to be wooden and were constructed to help pallbearers carrying coffins on the climb up to St Mary's Churchyard. Whitby is a seaside town, port in the county of North Yorkshire, originally the North Riding. Situated on the east coast at the mouth of the River Esk. Tourism started in Whitby during the Georgian period and developed. Its attraction as a tourist destination is enhanced by its proximity to the high ground of the North York Moors, its famous abbey, and by its association with the horror novel Dracula. Yorkshire, England, UK.
    20150916_whitby 199 steps_C.jpg
  • Attentive of their owner, Golden Retrievers balance on the wall of a seaside property on 14th August 2020, in Aldeburgh, Norfolk, England.
    adleburgh08-14-08-2020.jpg
  • Climate change Red Rebels activists from the seaside town of St Ives in Cornwall gathered to protest at the lack of activity by the British Government on climate change on 31st August 2019, in St Ives, United Kingdom. The group, including the spectacularly costumed Red Rebels lead a procession of Extinction Rebellion activists through the town of St Ives, United Kingdom. The group protested about rising sea levels caused by climate breakdown. The Red Rebells performance artivist troupe dedicated to illuminating the global environmental crisis and supporting groups and organisations fighting to save humanity and all species from mass extinction. Extinction Rebellion is a climate change group started in 2018 and has gained a huge following of people committed to peaceful protests. These protests are highlighting that the government is not doing enough to avoid catastrophic climate change and to demand the government take radical action to save the planet.
    XR-StIves-RedRebels-13.jpg
  • Bin for horse manure on the sea front on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. About 100 horses which pull taxi carriages along Blackpool promenade. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7484.jpg
  • Fun Palace amusements closed during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7476.jpg
  • Fun Palace amusements closed during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7469.jpg
  • Fun Palace amusements closed during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7457.jpg
  • Closed gift shop due to the pandemic on the Golden Mile on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7454.jpg
  • Hotels closed on the sea front during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7451.jpg
  • Greesy Joes burger bar on the promenade, 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Family-run since 1966. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7435.jpg
  • Hotels closed during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7432.jpg
  • Joke shop closed during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7430.jpg
  • Joke shop closed during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7431.jpg
  • Casino and resturant closed for repair during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7408.jpg
  • Empty back streets of Blackpool on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _E6A7396.jpg
  • B&B closed for a repaint during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8887.jpg
  • Pink headache pill on a hotel plate with the ironic statement bit on the side printed on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8878.jpg
  • Empty speculative retail stores for rent on 21st April 2021 ib Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8868.jpg
  • Fish and Chip shop closed for repair on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8856.jpg
  • Shop selling framed 3D posters on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8849.jpg
  • Empty beach with lone donkey in front of the pier during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8815.jpg
  • Empty beach with lone donkey in front of the pier during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8802.jpg
  • Coral Island amusements in front of the tower during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8787.jpg
  • Lone woman walking in front of a closed hotel complex on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8772.jpg
  • Closed chamber of Horrors at the foot of the Blackpool Tower closed during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 ib Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8768.jpg
  • Many shops closed on the main street during the pandemic on 21st April 2021 in Blackpool, Lancashire, United Kingdom. Blackpool is a large town and seaside resort in the county of Lancashire on the north west coast of England. Blackpool was once a booming resort with it’s famous promenade which now, despite having a somewhat shabby appearance, still continues to attract millions of visitors each year. During the coronavirus pandemic however, Blackpool has struggled, with empty streets and closed down businesses creating an atmosphere more like a ghost town.
    _51A8752.jpg
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