Place to Visit in England: Quick Tour in Hartlepool & Durham
#visitHartlepool #visitDurham
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Travel Guide Hartlepool County Durham UK Pros And Con's Review
Travel Guide Hartlepool County Durham UK Pros And Con's Review
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Pro's
* Some attractions to visit in the daytime
* Lot's of enteriment at night with a range of pubs and night clubs
* A range shops to choose from
* Lot's of different public transport
* A range of hotel's to choose from
* The Promanard is fairly flat to walk on
Con's
* It can get busy
Things To Do
* Mueams
* Hartlepool Quay Historic Site
* Tweddle Children's Animal Farm
* Summerhill Country Park and Outdoor Activities Centre
* Ward Jackson Park
* Saint Hilda's Church
* Teesmouth national nature reserve
* Camerons Brewery Visitors Centre
* Bars And Clubs
* Hartlepool Tourist Information And Art Gallery
* Golf
* Bowling Alleys
* Cinema
Best Places To Eat Cheap Eats
* The Almighty Cod
* Fish Face
* Stephanie's Cafe-Bar-Shoppe
Moderate Priced Eatings
* Casa Del Mar
* Sambuca
* Mumbai Majestic Indian Dining
Best Hotels
* Travelodge Hartlepool Marina Hotel
* Premier Inn Hartlepool Marina Hotel
* The Ship Inn
Hotel Booking Sites
* LateRooms.com
* Expedia.co.uk
* Booking.com
* Hotels.com
* TripAdvisor
* Opodo
* ebookers.com
Weather
The weather in the UK can vary from day to day. Warmer and hotter months are between April to September. Colder months with snow,sleet and rain are between October and March. You can get some humidity and pollen is highest, between June and August for hayfever suffers. You can also get rain in between, April and September.
Currency
Britain’s currency is the pound sterling (£), which is divided into 100 pence (p).
Scotland has its own pound sterling notes. These represent the same value as an English note and can be used elsewhere in Britain. The Scottish £1 note is not accepted outside Scotland.
There are lots of bureaux de change in Britain – often located inside:
• banks
• travel agents
• Post Offices
• airports
• major train stations.
It's worth shopping around to get the best deal and remember to ask how much commission is charged.
Britain’s currency is the pound sterling (£), which is divided into 100 pence (p).
Scotland has its own pound sterling notes. These represent the same value as an English note and can be used elsewhere in Britain. The Scottish £1 note is not accepted outside Scotland.
There are lots of bureaux de change in Britain – often located inside:
• banks
• travel agents
• Post Offices
• airports
• major train stations.
It's worth shopping around to get the best deal and remember to ask how much commission is charged.
Time Difference
During the winter months, Britain is on Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), which is 5 hours ahead of Eastern Standard Time and 10 hours behind Sydney. Western standard time is five hours behind.
From late March until late October, the clocks go forward one hour to British Summer Time (BST).
To check the correct time, contact the Speaking Clock service by dialling 123.
Weight And Measurements
Britain is officially metric, in line with the rest of Europe. However, imperial measures are still in use, especially for road distances, which are measured in miles. Imperial pints and gallons are 20 per cent larger than US measures.
Imperial to Metric
1 inch = 2.5 centimetres
1 foot = 30 centimetres
1 mile = 1.6 kilometres
1 ounce = 28 grams
1 pound = 454 grams
1 pint = 0.6 litres
1 gallon = 4.6 litres
Metric to Imperial
1 millimetre = 0.04 inch
1 centimetre = 0.4 inch
1 metre = 3 feet 3 inches
1 kilometre = 0.6 mile
1 gram = 0.04 ounce
1 kilogram = 2.2 pounds
Passport And Visas Requirements To Enter The UK
Please note: Following the recent referendum vote for the UK to leave the European Union (EU), there are currently no changes in the way people travel to Britain. The following guidelines still apply:
If you're planning an adventure to the UK, depending on your nationality and your reason for visiting, you may need to organise a visa.
If you're an American, Canadian or Australian tourist, you'll be able to travel visa-free throughout the UK, providing you have a valid passport and your reason for visiting meets the immigration rules (link is external).
Citizens from some South American and Caribbean countries as well as Japan are also able to travel visa-free around the UK.
European Union citizens, non-EU member states of the EEA (Norway, Liechtenstein and Iceland), Switzerland, and members of the Overseas Countries and Territories (OCT) do not need a visa to enter the UK.
If you have any further visa questions visit the official UK government website.
Anyone that has any questions, please feel free the comment below and I will answer them for you.
You can dial 999 to reach either the police, fire and ambulance departments.
Hartlepool response to Ch4
Bygones Car show Hartlepool 23rd April 2017
Northern Bygones Car Show, Car show, Hartlepool, Bygones,
Uncompromising Study, Hartlepool City Art Gallery
A major exhibition of ten of the most exciting painters in Britain today. Works by Lucian Freud, Frank Auerbach, Robert Lenkiewicz, Nahem Shoa, Desmond Haughton and the rest of the New British Realists.
Captured And Sunk
Photographs of some of the ships sunk by the German submarine UC-21 during the early years of the First World War.
The Heroism and Heartbreak” Project aims to rediscover and retell the stories of more than 260 Hartlepool sailors who lost their lives during the First World War – but we need your help. If you have a photograph, letter or diary from a Hartlepool family member who served in the Merchant Navy, Royal Navy or local Fishing Fleets during WW1 please contact us by e-mail: (infodesk@hartlepool.gov.uk), telephone: 01429 242909, or by calling in to Hartlepool Central Library.
All of these stories, together with more than 9,000 photographs and a great deal of other fascinating facts and information relating to the port town of Hartlepool, can be viewed free of charge on our website hhtandn.org
Installing Artwork In A Gallery | Art Exhibition Installation At Hartlepool Art Gallery
In today's video I take you along to Hartlepool art gallery to show me installing artwork in a gallery space. Art exhibition installation can be quite exciting but also a little bit intimidating so hopefully following me while installing artwork in a gallery can show you how it's done and how rewarding it can be. Hartlepool art gallery has various art exhibition spaces where you can install your artwork. It was quite a small sculptural installation but I think it worked really well in the space. Are you planning on installing artwork in a gallery? Or need any tips on art exhibition installation? Then leave your comments down below, and if you're ever in Hartlepool then definitely check out their art gallery and see what artwork is on offer.
#Hartlepool #ArtExhibition #Gallery
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My names Anthony Crammen, an artist based in the UK, and my Youtube channel focuses on arts and crafts, DIY projects, various attempts at Pinterest projects, creative product testing and reviews and even crafting drag queens. All created with the idea of fun and entertainment however some serious videos from time to time. Anyway hopefully you enjoy the videos I make, if you do make sure to comment below, give the video a like, and subscribe to my channel to keep up with the latest videos.
Hartlepool Historic Quay
Hartlepool's Maritime Experience is a visitor attraction in Hartlepool, Cleveland, in the northeast of England. The concept of the attraction is the thematic re-creation of an 18th-century seaport, in the time of Lord Nelson, Napoleon and the Battle of Trafalgar. HMS Trincomalee, a Royal Navy frigate and Britain's oldest warship afloat is at the centre of the quay. She was built in Bombay, India in 1817. The 190th anniversary of the ship's official launch was on Friday 12 October 2007.
Stedman Doubles at The Art Gallery, Hartlepool
Excerpts from a peal of Stedman Doubles on this pleasant but deafening ring of six! (You will note most of the band are wearing earplugs or earphones; more fool me for not!). The audio recording is used with kind permission of John Pladdys. Both recordings have brought the bells out extremely well; in reality, all I heard for the duration of the peal was white noise, like I was standing in the belfry itself!
This was formerly Christ Church, which closed in 1973 (the Art Gallery opening in 1996), and was designed by E.B. Lamb, who was also responsible for Gospel Oak in London; it is a fine building and nicely restored.
The church was provided with one bell (the current treble) in 1853, and five more just two years later, all cast by Taylors. Whilst intended as a ring, despite the comparatively heavy trebles, they were only ever hung as a chime. In 1994, the bells were finally hung for full circle ringing by Taylors, at which point they were also tuned. They are hung on two levels – it looks like the front three are atop the back three.
There is a curious wooden staircase that wends its way round the tower walls, replacing an old one as part of the restoration work. The ringing room looks more akin to a stage, like an additional level halfway up the tower! The open staircase does mean there is very little to shut the noise of the bells in, and they are excruciatingly loud! Earplugs are advisable!
The clock was provided by William Potts & Sons of Leeds in 1919, and is the largest type made by the company. It strikes the Cambridge (Westminster) quarters, and has been converted to automatic winding.
Tenor 9-2-24 in G
Victorian Christ Church - Hartlepool
Walking to the top of the Victorian Christ Church in Hartlepool. A total of 164 steps to the reach the viewing platform at the top, But what an incredible view.
Egbert and Nelson
West Hartlepool's successful 1918 War Savings Drive and the 'prize' of the tank Egbert.
The “Heroism and Heartbreak” Project aims to rediscover and retell the stories of more than 260 Hartlepool sailors who lost their lives during the First World War – but we need your help. If you have a photograph, letter or diary from a Hartlepool family member who served in the Merchant Navy, Royal Navy or local Fishing Fleets during WW1 please contact us by e-mail: (infodesk@hartlepool.gov.uk), telephone: 01429 242909, or by calling in to Hartlepool Central Library.
All of these stories, together with more than 9,000 photographs and a great deal of other fascinating facts and information relating to the port town of Hartlepool, can be viewed free of charge on our website hhtandn.org
Benefits Hartlepool - Documentary
Updated in 2019: We made this when we were 16 - we just wanted to join the bandwagon of the evermore common sensationalist TV programmes that exploit poor people from less privileged backgrounds to try and cement the naive perception that most poor people are lazy, don't work, take all of our taxes, etc. .... We thought that it would be clear that it's a joke. Either Pete is a good actor, or we overestimated the intelligence of a fair proportion of our audience (or maybe both). Doesn't this go to show how easy it is to embed and enhance unfounded, negative feelings? Something to think about.
Anyway, isn't Britain in such a good state?
Music:
Land of the Dead by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution licence (
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Hartlepool looks forward to Armed Forces Day 2019
Councillor Lee Cartwright, Hartlepool Borough Council's Armed Forces Champion, explains why it's so important to mark Armed Forces Day.
Stedman Caters at St Oswald, Hartlepool
The second tower of the weekend took us to the only Warner 10 in the world, at St Oswald’s church for a very enjoyable peal of Stedman Caters.
The church is a magnificent building, located in the slightly hillier northern end of the town, and was opened in 1904. The bells are slightly earlier, having been cast and hung in 1902. Until recently, they were in near-original condition, and showing their age; however, a couple of years ago, the local ringers undertook a massive overhaul project, renewing fittings, and refurbishing the tower and ringing room. The bells are now very pleasant to ring, fairly clear inside, and rung from a smart looking ringing chamber.
The bells themselves are pretty decent tonally, and work well as a ring (even if individually the bells aren't great and the trebles a bit shrill!). I certainly tuned into and enjoyed ringing them! There is also a 7#, hung for chiming at the back of the tower (see if you can spot it in the photos!).
Once again, the audio recording is used with kind permission of John Pladdys. Thanks must also go to Jack Hanlon for showing such enthusiasm for these bells, letting me look upstairs, and allowing the use of the exterior video footage he took
Tenor 21-2-12 in Eflat
£1m improvements to Hartlepool's Stockton Street
Places to see in ( Barnard Castle - UK )
Places to see in ( Barnard Castle - UK )
Barnard Castle is a market town in Teesdale, County Durham, England. Barnard Castle is named after the castle around which it grew up. It is the main settlement in the Teesdale area, and is a popular tourist destination.
The Bowes Museum has the best collection of European fine and decorative arts in the North of England, housed in a magnificent 19th-century French-style chateau. Its most famous exhibit is the 18th-century Silver Swan automaton, though art includes work by Goya and El Greco.
Barnard Castle sits on the north bank of the River Tees, opposite Startforth and 21 miles (34 km) south-west of the county town of Durham. Nearby towns include Bishop Auckland to the north-east, Darlington to the east and Richmond in North Yorkshire to the south-east. Barnard Castle's largest single employer is GlaxoSmithKline which has a manufacturing facility on the outskirts of town.
Barnard Castle is located in a picturesque area of Teesdale and tourism is important to the local economy. Several holiday parks are located nearby including a Camping and Caravanning Club site. Barnard Castle has a number of antique shops and an antique centre which attracts antique buyers from all around the world. The High Street has many independent shops.
Barnard Castle has road connections to Bishop Auckland, Spennymoor and central County Durham via the A688 and Darlington, Stockton-on-Tees, and Middlesbrough by the A67. Barnard Castle is also located 4 miles (6.4 km) from the A66 with access to both the M6 to the west and the A1(M) to the east. The B6278 also connects Barnard Castle with Middleton-in-Teesdale.
Barnard Castle railway station was closed for passenger trains in 1964.
( Barnard Castle - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Barnard Castle . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Barnard Castle - UK
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Portsmouth Royal Marine Museum. Inside Warrior Ship and Submarines
Portsmouth Marine Museum Ships and Submarines
The new Royal Marines Museum, at the very heart of Portsmouth Historic Dockyard, will place the 355-year history of the Royal Marines firmly within the story of the Royal Navy.
For the first time the story of the Royal Marines – a national story, but also a story with impact across the globe – will be told in a building appropriate to its scale. The National Museum’s vision for the museum has developed following extensive audience research, consultation and activity planning and will transform access to this story, developing exciting new programmes and activities, and increasing visitors four-fold.
The museum will be at the heart of sharing the on-going story of the Royal Marines.
#RoyalMarineMuseum #portmouth #Submarines
Beautiful Marina at Sunderland Tyne and Wear North East England
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Sunderland Marina Situated on the North East Coast at the Mouth of the River Wear,Sunderland (/ˈsʌndərlənd/ (About this sound listen), locally /ˈsʊndlənd/) is a city at the centre of the City of Sunderland metropolitan borough, in Tyne and Wear, North East England, 10 miles southeast of Newcastle upon Tyne, 12 miles northeast of Durham, 101 miles southeast of Edinburgh and 240 miles north of London. It is a coastal city at the mouth of the River Wear with beaches at Roker and Seaburn. The etymology of Sunderland is derived from sundered land, meaning land sundered, or set aside for a special purpose, from those belonging to the monastery at Monkwearmouth.[4]
Historically in County Durham, there were three original settlements on the site of modern-day Sunderland. On the north side of the river, Monkwearmouth was settled in 674 when Benedict Biscop founded the Monkwearmouth–Jarrow Abbey. Opposite the monastery on the south bank, Bishopwearmouth was founded in 930. A small fishing village called Sunderland, located toward the mouth of the river (modern day East End) was granted a charter in 1179.
Over the centuries, Sunderland grew as a port, trading coal and salt. Ships began to be built on the river in the 14th century. By the 19th century, the port of Sunderland had grown to absorb Bishopwearmouth and Monkwearmouth. More recently, Sunderland has seen growth as a commercial centre for the automotive industry, science & technology and the service sector.
A person who is born or lives around the Sunderland area is sometimes colloquially known as a Mackem. This word is a late 20th century coining, and was initially an exonym, not used by the people of Sunderland until the 1980s.Redevelopment of the Monkwearmouth Colliery site, which sits of the north bank of the river Wear opposite the Vaux site, began in the mid-1990s with the creation of the Stadium of Light. In 2008, it was joined by the Sunderland aquatic centre. The Sheepfolds industrial estate occupies a large area of land between the Stadium and the Wearmouth Bridge. Sunderland arc are in the process of purchasing land in the Sheepfolds, with a view to relocate the businesses and redevelop the site. The emphasis of development plans include further sporting facilities, in order to create a Sports Village. Other plans include a hotel, residential accommodation, and a footbridge linking the site with the Vaux development.Each year on the last weekend in July, the city hosts the Sunderland International Airshow. It takes place primarily along the sea front at Roker and Seaburn,
Sunderland also hosts the free International Festival of Kites, Music and Dance, which attracts kite-makers from around the world to Northumbria Playing Fields, Washington.
Every year the city hosts a large Remembrance Day memorial service, the largest in the UK outside London in 2006.[125]
Sunderland's inaugural film festival took place in December 2003 at the Bonded Warehouse on Sunderland riverside, in spite of the lack of any cinema facilities in the city at that time, featuring the films of local and aspiring directors as well as reshowings of acclaimed works, such as Alan Bleasdale's The Monocled Mutineer, accompanied by analysis.[126] By the time of the second festival commencing on 21 January 2005, a new cinema multiplex had opened in Sunderland to provide a venue which allowed the festival to showcase over twenty films.
Attractions[edit]
Notable attractions for visitors to Sunderland include the 14th century Hylton Castle and the beaches of Roker and Seaburn. The National Glass Centre opened in 1998, reflecting Sunderland's distinguished history of glass-making. Despite sustained support from the Arts Council the centre has struggled to meet visitor targets since it opened.
Sunderland Museum and Winter Gardens, on Borough Road, was the first municipally funded museum in the country outside London.It houses a comprehensive collection of the locally produced Sunderland Lustreware pottery. The City Library Arts Centre, on Fawcett Street, housed the Northern Gallery for Contemporary Art until the library was closed in January 2017. The library service was relocated to the Museum and Winter Gardens and the Gallery for Contemporary Art,
The City of Sunderland has been commended several times on its commitment to preserving its natural facilities. As such, Sunderland has been awarded prestigious titles by the Britain in Bloom collective in 1993, 1997 and 2000Each year on the last weekend in July, the city hosts the Sunderland International Airshow. It takes place primarily along the sea front at Roker .
Hartlepool Union Jacks 1995
England v Wales 1995
HMS Trincomalee Hartlepool's Maritime Experience Museum of Hartlepool
HMS Trincomalee is a Royal Navy Leda-class sailing frigate built shortly following the end of the Napoleonic Wars. She is now restored as a museum ship in Hartlepool, England.
HMS Trincomalee – brytyjska fregata typu Leda, zbudowana w 1817. Brała udział w wojnie krymskiej. W latach 90. XX w. przeprowadzono gruntowny remont i rekonstrukcję jednostki, która obecnie służy jako okręt muzeum i jest najstarszym brytyjskim okrętem wojennym utrzymującym się na wodzie.
The Trincomalee is one of two surviving British frigates of her era — her near-sister HMS Unicorn (of the modified Leda class) is now a museum ship in Dundee. After being ordered on 30 October 1812, the Trincomalee was built in Bombay, India by the Wadia family of shipwrights in teak, due to oak shortages in Britain as a result of shipbuilding drives for the Napoleonic Wars. The ship was named Trincomalee after the 1782 Battle of Trincomalee off the Ceylon (Sri Lanka) port of that name.
With a construction cost of £23,000, Trincomalee was launched on 12 October 1817. Soon after completion she was sailed to Portsmouth Dockyard where she arrived on 30 April 1819, with a journey costing £6,600.
After being fitted out at a further cost of £2,400, Trincomalee was placed in reserve until 1845, when she was re-armed with fewer guns giving greater firepower, had her stern reshaped and was reclassified as a sixth-rate spar-decked corvette.
Trincomalee departed from Portsmouth in 1847 and remained in service for ten years, serving on the North American and West Indies station. During her time, she was to help quell riots in Haiti and stop a threatened invasion of Cuba, and serve on anti-slavery patrol. In 1849, she was despatched to Newfoundland and Labrador before being recalled to Britain in 1850. In 1852 she sailed to join the Pacific Squadron on the west coast of America.
TS Foudroyant
Trincomalee finished her Royal Navy service as a training ship, but was placed in reserve again in 1895 and sold for scrap two years later on 19 May 1897. She was then purchased by entrepreneur George Wheatley Cobb, restored, and renamed Foudroyant in honour of HMS Foudroyant, his earlier ship that had been wrecked in 1897.
She was used in conjunction with HMS Implacable as an accommodation ship, a training ship, and a holiday ship based in Falmouth then Portsmouth. She remained in service until 1986, after which she was again restored and renamed back to Trincomalee in 1992.
Now listed as part of the National Historic Fleet, following her recent restoration the Trincomalee has become the centrepiece of the historic dockyard museum in Hartlepool.
The Trincomalee holds the distinction of being the oldest British warship still afloat as HMS Victory, although 52 years her senior, is in dry dock.
Until his death in 1929, the Falmouth-based painter Henry Scott Tuke used the ship and its trainees as subject matter.
W 1812 brytyjska Admiralicja złożyła w stoczni w Bombaju zamówienie na kolejną fregatę udanego typu Leda. Projekt okrętów powstał przez skopiowanie zdobytej francuskiej fregaty Hebe. Łącznie Brytyjczycy zbudowali 47 takich jednostek. Z uwagi na braki drewna dębowego budowę HMS Trincomalee zlecono stoczni w Bombaju, która dysponowała odpowiednim surowcem, jakim było drewno tekowe. Plany wysłano do stoczni na pokładzie okrętu HMS Java, który w drodze do Bombaju został zatopiony przez amerykańską fregatę USS Constitution i z tego powodu budowa została opóźniona o 3 lata. Okręt zwodowano w 1817 i przetransportowano do Wielkiej Brytanii, gdzie został przeniesiony do rezerwy.
W 1847 zmodernizowany okręt ponownie wszedł do służby. Działał w rejonie Indii Zachodnich i Kanady. W 1852 wszedł w skład Dywizjonu Pacyfiku i stacjonował w Vancouver. Wziął wtedy udział w wojnie krymskiej toczącej się także na wodach dalekowschodnich. W 1857 powrócił do Wielkiej Brytanii, gdzie został odstawiony do rezerwy. W 1861 został stacjonarnym okrętem szkolnym Royal Navy. W 1897 fregatę przeznaczoną do rozbiórki uratował przed zniszczeniem Wheatly Cobb prowadzący na starym okręcie liniowym prywatną szkołę morską. Przejął on kadłub Trincomalee i zmienił jego nazwę na Foudroyanta. W charakterze jednostki szkolnej był użytkowany do 1986. W 1989 na okręcie rozpoczął się remont i przebudowa. W 1992 przywrócono pierwotną nazwę okrętu HMS Trincomalee.