Here is another series of photos from all-seeing former Dorset Evening Echo photographer Harry Green.

Talented Harry was here, there and everywhere in the 1950s, 60s and 70s capturing life in Dorset for the newspaper.

We've been bringing you regular collections of his work focusing on Weymouth, Dorchester and surrounding areas.

We hope it brings back memories for you and makes for an enjoyable trip down memory lane.

Scroll down to see more incredible Harry Green photos.

Ceasarea moored at the pier in Weymouth Harbour

Dorset Echo:

Chesil Beach from Priory Corner, Portland


READ MORE: Weymouth pictures of 60s and 70s by Harry Green


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Fred Darrington working on a sand sculpture, Weymouth Beach

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Royal Navy diving bell, Portland Harbour

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READ MORE: Old photos of Weymouth includes cliff erosion


Speed-sailing catamaran during speed-sailing week in Portland Harbour

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The old lower lighthouse (bird observatory), Portland

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One of three lighthouses on Portland, and formerly a private residence, in 1961 the Lower Lighthouse on the Bill Road became the island's Bird Observatory.

The higher lighthouse also became a private residence and among its various owners was birth control pioneer Doctor Marie Stopes, who made it her home for some time.


READ: Old Dorset Evening Echo photos taken by Harry Green


The Park Hotel, Weymouth

Dorset Echo:

This pub has endured and remains in Grange Road, Weymouth, to this very day.

During the Second World War it was used as the HQ of the local Home Guard and was a popular haunt for college students at lunchtime.

Mike Rowland recalls: "I remember going into the Park for a game of darts with Colin and his dad Jim Hodgson in the late 50s when a bloke used to bring a fox on a lead into the bar.

"A pint of bitter used to cost 10d in those days!"

Another reader remembers the bubble and squeak sandwich which was served at the pub. 

Graham Ryan remembers: "I used to go in there cause the nurses who worked at the hospital across the road used to go in there and the men went there to see if they would be able to have a date with them - brilliant times."

United States Navy submarine E571 ‘Nautilus’ leaving berth at Portland Dockyard

Dorset Echo:

Here's a picture of US Navy submarine E571 'Nautilus' leaving a berth at Portland Dockyard.

The Nautilus completed the first dive under the polar ice cap and, after docking at Portland, received a special Unit Citation for this remarkable achievement.

It's believed this picture was taken in 1959. Back then Portland Dockyard would have been a hive of industry.

For D-Day preparations in the spring of 1944 it became a sombre mortuary following the Slapton Sands disaster in Devon when 749 soldiers and seamen were killed.

The dead were stacked in piles on Castletown pier in Portland Naval Dockyard and teams of divers worked for days to recover the identity discs from the other bodies.

Upwey from the air

Dorset Echo:

This image was taken above the Upwey Wishing Well looking towards Friar Waddon.

You can see St Lawrence's Church very clearly in the middle of the picture.

The church is built so close to the wishing well for the simple reason that in pagan times the whole adjoining area would have been thought holy and with the coming of Christianity to Dorset a chapel would have been built upon it. At first there would have been a wooden structure and this would have been replaced some time after the Norman conquest of AD 1066 by a stone structure.

Weymouth Bay as seen from Greenhill Gardens

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Weymouth beach at Greenhill

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