Places to see in ( Lancaster - UK )
Places to see in ( Lancaster - UK )
Lancaster, or is a city and the county town of Lancashire, England. It is situated on the River Lune. Long existing as a commercial, cultural and educational centre, Lancaster is the settlement that gives Lancashire its name. Lancaster has several unique ties to the British monarchy; the House of Lancaster was a branch of the English royal family, whilst the Duchy of Lancaster holds large estates on behalf of Elizabeth II, who herself is also the Duke of Lancaster in her capacity as monarch.
Lancaster was granted city status in 1937 for its long association with the crown and because it was the county town of the King's Duchy of Lancaster. With its history based on its port and canal, Lancaster is an ancient settlement, dominated by Lancaster Castle, Lancaster Priory Church and the Ashton Memorial. It is also home to the campus-based Lancaster University and a campus of the University of Cumbria.
Lancaster is the most northerly city in Lancashire, located three miles 4.8 km inland from Morecambe Bay. The city is located on the River Lune (from which it derives its name), and the Lancaster Canal.
The M6 motorway passes to the east of Lancaster, with junctions 33 and 34 to the south and north respectively. Lancaster is served by the West Coast Main Line which runs through Lancaster railway station. This station was formerly named Lancaster Castle railway station in order to differentiate it from Lancaster Green Ayre railway station on the Leeds–Morecambe line, which closed in 1966. The main bus operator in Lancaster is Stagecoach, which operates over thirty services from Lancaster Bus Station to Lancaster and Morecambe as well as frequent services in Lancashire, Cumbria, Greater Manchester and services throughout the North West of England. The Lancaster Canal and River Lune also pass through the city. The nearest airports are Manchester Airport, Liverpool Airport and, until October 2014, Blackpool International Airport.
Alot to see in ( Lancaster - UK ) such as :
Lancaster Castle
Lancaster Priory
Lancaster City Museum
Lune Millennium Bridge
Williamson Park
Ashton Memorial and Butterfly House
Blades Street, LA1
The C.A.R.D. Corporation Worldwide HQ, LA1
Lancaster Cathedral
The Music Room, Sun Street
Storey Gallery
The Judges Lodgings
The Cottage Museum
Lancaster University's Ruskin Library
Penny's Hospital, 18th century almshouses on King Street
Quayside Maritime Museum
Lancaster Royal Grammar School
Duke's Playhouse
The Gregson Centre
Lancaster Grand Theatre
Dalton Square: Queen Victoria Memorial and the town hall
Westfield War Memorial Village
The Three Mariners public house – the oldest pub in Lancaster, dating back to the 15th century, and one of two pubs in the UK with original gravity-fed cellars
The Golden Lion, Moor Lane – the last drinking place of the Pendle Witches in 1612
( Lancaster - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Lancaster . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Lancaster - UK
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HM the Queen 'Duke of Lancaster' Visit to Lancaster Castle. 29/05/15
HM the Queen 'Duke of Lancaster' Visit to Lancaster Castle.
Filmed on 29th May 2015.
Her Majesty then drove the short distance to the castle for a ceremonial arrival, followed by a performance of Richard II from a local theatre company.
The Queen was visiting the castle in her official capacity as Duke of Lancaster and has made regular trips since taking the title more than 60 years ago.
One of two royal duchies, the other being Cornwall, the monarch has held the Lancaster title since the end of the Wars of the Roses at Bosworth Field in 1485.
The war, which was fought between the houses of Lancaster and York, ended in a Lancaster triumph and saw the York title become a subsidiary of the Crown.
Although the Wars of the Roses are long over, the monarch continues to use the title Duke of Lancaster continues to be used, even if they are female.
At gatherings of Lancastrians within the County Palatine and worldwide, the toast is: 'The Queen, Duke of Lancaster!'.
Royal Wedding: TV Media at Queen Victoria Memorial
Around 10 am on the day of the Royal Wedding, accredited world TV media are stationed at the Queen Victoria Memorial in front of Buckingham Palace, biding their time in the short time before the meat of their wedding coverage.
This video was shot by GRN correspondent Henry Nichols.
Places to see in ( Settle - UK )
Places to see in ( Settle - UK )
Settle is a small market town and civil parish in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England. Historically in the West Riding of Yorkshire, it is served by Settle railway station located near the town centre, and Giggleswick railway station which is a mile away. It is 29 miles (47 km) from Leeds Bradford Airport. The main road through Settle is the B6480, which links to the A65, connecting Settle to Skipton and Kendal.
Settle is thought to have 7th century Anglian origins, its name being the Angle word for settlement. Craven in the Domesday Book shows that until 1066 Bo was the lord of Settle but after the Harrying of the North (1069–1071) the land was granted to Roger de Poitou. In 1249 a market charter was granted to Henry de Percy, 7th feudal baron of Topcliffe by Henry III. A market square developed and the main route through the medieval town was aligned on an east-west direction, from Albert Hill, Victoria Street, High Street and Cheapside and on through Kirkgate. This road led to Giggleswick where the citizens attended the parish church. The first bridge over the River Ribble was mentioned in 1498. During the English Civil War, the Cliffords, the lords of the manor were Royalists, but their subjects were not. John Lambert of Calton in Malhamdale, was a general in Cromwell's army and his troops camped at Settle in August 1651 while on the road to an encounter in Lancaster.
The little North Western Railway reached Giggleswick in 1847 and in 1849 the railway company constructed Station Road from Giggleswick to Settle. In 1875, the Settle to Carlisle Railway was built, opening to goods traffic in 1875 and to passengers the following year when Settle railway station opened along with a goods warehouse, cattle pens, signal box and water cranes.
Settle was part of the West Riding of Yorkshire. It is located in Ribblesdale, at the southern edge of the Yorkshire Dales, within a few miles of the Three Peaks. Immediately overlooking the town is Castlebergh, a 300 feet (91 m) limestone crag, and to the east is Malham which was in the former Settle Rural District. The River Ribble provided power for Settle's former cotton mills, and is now being harnessed by Settle Hydro, a micro hydroelectric scheme, to provide 50 kW of power to the National Grid.
Settle's market is held weekly on Tuesdays in Victoria Hall in the town centre. Settle Town Hall was sold by Craven District Council to a developer. The Square is surrounded by local businesses, most of which are family-owned, with some offering items for sale unique to the Settle area. The Naked Man is believed to be the oldest cafe in the country. The Settle Stories Festival brings internationally known and award-winning artists to the town and boasts a range of paid for and free events suitable for all age ranges.
The district has several caves where prehistoric remains have been found, the most notable being Victoria Cave, so called because the inner chamber was discovered in 1837 on the day of Queen Victoria's accession. The cave is a geological SSSI and scheduled monument. Victoria Cave contained fossil remains. The earliest, at 130,000 years old, include mammoth, straight-tusked elephant, cave bear and hippopotamus, Bos primigenius, Rhinoceros leptorhinus and spotted hyenas (as a bed of hyena bones). They date to an Upper Pleistocene interglacial. After the last Ice Age the cave was used by hibernating brown bear and reindeer. Associated with the later deposits were a harpoon head carved from antler; flint implements and other ornaments. The discovery of flint is noteworthy as it is not found naturally in the area. Craven Museum & Gallery.
( Settle - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Settle . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Settle - UK
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Places to see in ( Settle - UK )
Places to see in ( Settle - UK )
Settle is a small market town and civil parish in the Craven district of North Yorkshire, England. Historically in the West Riding of Yorkshire, it is served by Settle railway station located near the town centre, and Giggleswick railway station which is a mile away. It is 29 miles (47 km) from Leeds Bradford Airport. The main road through Settle is the B6480, which links to the A65, connecting Settle to Skipton and Kendal.
Settle is thought to have 7th century Anglian origins, its name being the Angle word for settlement. Craven in the Domesday Book shows that until 1066 Bo was the lord of Settle but after the Harrying of the North (1069–1071) the land was granted to Roger de Poitou. In 1249 a market charter was granted to Henry de Percy, 7th feudal baron of Topcliffe by Henry III. A market square developed and the main route through the medieval town was aligned on an east-west direction, from Albert Hill, Victoria Street, High Street and Cheapside and on through Kirkgate. This road led to Giggleswick where the citizens attended the parish church. The first bridge over the River Ribble was mentioned in 1498. During the English Civil War, the Cliffords, the lords of the manor were Royalists, but their subjects were not. John Lambert of Calton in Malhamdale, was a general in Cromwell's army and his troops camped at Settle in August 1651 while on the road to an encounter in Lancaster.
The little North Western Railway reached Giggleswick in 1847 and in 1849 the railway company constructed Station Road from Giggleswick to Settle. In 1875, the Settle to Carlisle Railway was built, opening to goods traffic in 1875 and to passengers the following year when Settle railway station opened along with a goods warehouse, cattle pens, signal box and water cranes.
Settle was part of the West Riding of Yorkshire. It is located in Ribblesdale, at the southern edge of the Yorkshire Dales, within a few miles of the Three Peaks. Immediately overlooking the town is Castlebergh, a 300 feet (91 m) limestone crag, and to the east is Malham which was in the former Settle Rural District. The River Ribble provided power for Settle's former cotton mills, and is now being harnessed by Settle Hydro, a micro hydroelectric scheme, to provide 50 kW of power to the National Grid.
Settle's market is held weekly on Tuesdays in Victoria Hall in the town centre. Settle Town Hall was sold by Craven District Council to a developer. The Square is surrounded by local businesses, most of which are family-owned, with some offering items for sale unique to the Settle area. The Naked Man is believed to be the oldest cafe in the country. The Settle Stories Festival brings internationally known and award-winning artists to the town and boasts a range of paid for and free events suitable for all age ranges.
The district has several caves where prehistoric remains have been found, the most notable being Victoria Cave, so called because the inner chamber was discovered in 1837 on the day of Queen Victoria's accession. The cave is a geological SSSI and scheduled monument. Victoria Cave contained fossil remains. The earliest, at 130,000 years old, include mammoth, straight-tusked elephant, cave bear and hippopotamus, Bos primigenius, Rhinoceros leptorhinus and spotted hyenas (as a bed of hyena bones). They date to an Upper Pleistocene interglacial. After the last Ice Age the cave was used by hibernating brown bear and reindeer. Associated with the later deposits were a harpoon head carved from antler; flint implements and other ornaments. The discovery of flint is noteworthy as it is not found naturally in the area. Craven Museum & Gallery.
( Settle - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Settle . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Settle - UK
Join us for more :
London walk from Trafalgar Square to Buckingham Palace for the changing of the guard
London walk Trafalgar Square to Buckingham Palace for changing of the guard: London walking tour with Walking in London
They’re changing the guard at Buckingham Palace???? On this London walking tour, we walk from Trafalgar Square to Buckingham Palace to see the changing of the guard. It’s a cold January morning but the crowds are still out to watch the Queen’s Guard with musical accompaniment while they ride on horseback – they even play the theme tune from the film The Good, The Bad and The Ugly at one point!
London walking tour route: Starting on the Strand, we enter Trafalgar Square and walk towards Admiralty Arch. Admiralty Arch is currently closed for building work so the walk detours through Spring Gardens and then back onto the Mall. We dip into Horse Guards Road to see the National Police Memorial and onto Horse Guard’s Parade with the London Eye visible in the background. The walk then returns to the Mall with St James’s Park and the Royal Artillery Memorial to our left, and we then cross over to Waterloo Place and the Duke of York Column (but not his 10 thousand men!), where I take a bit of a nosey into the gardens. We then arrive on Pall Mall next to the Athenaeum Hotel where Trafalgar Square can be seen in the distance to the right and the road ahead of us leads to Piccadilly Circus. We turn left down Pall Mall taking in the Royal Automobile Club and Nell Gwynn’s house on the way. St James’s Palace greets us at the end of Pall Mall when we turn into Marlborough Road to find the Queen’s Guard getting ready to set off for the changing of the guard ceremony accompanied by a rendition of the theme tune to The Good, The Bad and The Ugly. I leave them to it as we return to the Mall and turn right towards Buckingham Palace with Clarence House and then Lancaster House visible on our right. As we approach Buckingham Palace it gets more crowded as people gather to wait for the changing of the guard ceremony around the Victoria Memorial in front of Canada Gate with Green Park behind and Constitution Hill ahead. I find a spot to film the changing of the guard and off we go; there is also an exciting bit where someone important comes through in a security entourage – I wonder who it was?! Prince Phillip had been in the news that week for crashing his car…. With all the excitement over, I dodge through the crowds to get a bit of a glimpse of Green Park and we then view Buckingham Palace from the Birdcage Walk side to end the walk. There is some bonus footage at the end of the previous day’s filming that did not end well when my equipment failed, but I did manage to get some nice video of the Queen’s Guard at Horse Guard’s Parade and then as they arrived in front of Buckingham Palace. I hope you enjoy joining the crowds!
Route timestamps:
0:05 Jubilee Gardens for opening piece to camera
00:18 The Strand entering Trafalgar Square
00:40 Trafalgar Square with Nelson's Column in the foreground, fountains and lions of Trafalgar Square in the middle distance and the National Gallery at the far end of the square.
00:55 Northumberland Avenue
01:25 Whitehall looking left towards Westminster
02:26 Trafalgar Square looking towards the Strand and St Martin in the Field's church
02:40 Admiralty Arch
02:55 Spring Gardens
04:05 Captain James Cook statue
04:40 The Strand
05:45 National Police Memorial
06:35 Horse Guard's Parade with the Coca Cola London Eye in the background
08:00 Royal Artillery Memorial
08:45 Institute of Contemporary Arts
09:10 Duke of York Column
09:35 Waterloo Place
11:15 Pall Mall next to the Athenaeum Hotel
13:40 The Royal Automobile Club
14:10 St James's Square seen from Pall Mall
14:55 Nell Gwynn's House, 79 Pall Mall
13:30 Marlborough Road
17:20 St James's Palace where the changing of the guard is just getting started with the Queen's Guard
17:22 The theme tune to The Good, The Bad and the Ugly by Ennio Morricone and played by the Queen's Guard musical support. further details of which guards are presenting plus the dates and times for changing of the guard can be found here:
19:00 The Mall with St James's Park ahead
20:55 Clarence House
21:12 Lancaster House
22:30 Buckingham Palace
23:50 The changing of the guard
25:33 Security cars with someone inside
26:30 Canada Gate with Green Park behind
27:22 Victoria Memorial
28:35 Spur Road with St James's Park to the left
30:35 Birdcage Walk
30:40 St James's Park for piece to camera
30:55 Horse Guard's Parade with the Queen's Guard
31:23 Buckingham Palace with the Queen's Guard
My equipment:
Gimbal - DJI Osmo 2 Mobile/Zhiyun Smooth 4.
Recorded on LG G5/Samsung S6 mobile phone - I do the immersive first-person walks with these.
For vlogging to camera, I use my Canon G7X Mark ii.
Royal wedding procession back to Buckingham Palace at Victoria memorial
After six and a half hours of waiting, finally both Kate and Wills pass by in an open top carriage back to Buckingham Palace down the Mall. There was a great deal of jostling and I was balancing one foot on a three legged stool, so please forgive the filming, it was the best I could do under the circumstances.
A walk around the Bomber Command Memorial, Green Park, London
This imposing Memorial commemmorates the 55.573 airmen and airwomen who lost their lives serving with Bomber Command, Royal Air Force, 1939-1945. Situated at the west end of Green Park, London (GPS 51.503302 / -0.148993) the nearest Underground Stations are Hyde Park Corner or Marble Arch.
Special For Ireland - Royal Tour Of N. Lancashire - Long Version (1951)
This is the long version of the story. Short version of the story can be found in the same Pathe Gazettes issue (51/31) on the same Pathe Master tape (PM1431) - Film ID 1431.19.
Lancaster and Preston, Lancashire.
LV. Royal cars driving through crowd en route for Lancaster Castle. SV. Crowd. Woman looking through mirror. LV. Cat walking between crowd in road. LV. Elevated, car driving between crowds to entrance of castle. SV. Royal car stops on road. Princess Margaret alights, followed by King George VI and Queen Elizabeth (later the Queen Mother). They are greeted by Lord Sefton, Constable of the Castle. GV. Crowd lining road outside castle. SV. Lord Sefton presents keys to King for him to touch. SV. King touching keys. SV. Crowd. SV. Pan, King and Queen accompanied by Lord Sefton walk towards castle gates. LV. Royal party entering castle gates. SV. Back view of dignitaries following King and Queen. SV. King and Queen and Lord Sefton walking through courtyard. SV. King and Queen entering castle. LV. King and Queen inside castle. SV. King looking at Coats of Arms on wall of castle. CU. Pan, Coats of Arms. SCU. Queen looking at visitor's book, last signed by King George V.
SV. Crowd. LV. Pan, royal car driving through crowd en route for Royal Lancaster Infirmary. LV. Crowd lining wall. SV. King and Queen inspecting nurses at infirmary. MV. King and Queen talking to seated patients. CU. Queen. SV. Queen talking to children. CU. King and Queen. Queen shakes hands. SV. Crowd.
SV. Towards, King inspecting cadets of the Royal Lancaster Grammar School. SV. Queen talking to head boy Ronald Britton, accompanied by Mayor of Lancaster. SV. Children waving. SV. Queen talking to boys of school. SV. King talking to the headmaster, Ronald Britton and Princess Margaret in background. LV. Towards, King, Queen and headmaster walking in school ground, Ronald Britton talking to Princess Margaret in background. SV. Children. LV. Ronald Britton calling for three cheers for King and Queen.
GV. Crowd around Queen Victoria's statue outside Town Hall. SV. Royal party walking up steps of Town Hall accompanied by Mayor. SV. King waving to crowd from steps of Town Hall. LV. King waving to crowd.
GV. Countryside. CU. Pan back to back view of royal car arriving at Corless Mill Farm. CU. Mrs Fox, pan to Mr Fox - the farmers. SV. King shaking hands with Mr and Mrs Fox, Queen also shakes hands. SV. Tenants looking on. SV. Queen accompanied by Princess Margaret talking to Mr Fox. V. King talking to tenant. CU. Princess Margaret talking to tenant. CU. Queen talking to tenant. CU. King talking to tenant, pan to Queen. LV. Royal party talking to tenants. SV. Mr Fox opening incubator showing King and Queen hatched-out chicks. CU. Chicken in incubator drawer. CU. King, Queen and Mr Fox. SV. Queen touching chicks.
LV. Royal party looking through doorway of cowshed at Kiln Trees Farm. CU. Queen looking through doorway of cowshed at Kiln Trees Farm. SV. King and Queen with farmer Hodgkinson looking at young heifers at Myers Cough Lodge Farm, pan to heifers. Farmer Hodgkinson and the King walking away from stalls. LV. Elevated, King looking at agricultural machinery. SV. Tenants waving.
LV. Towards, royal cars moving down country lane. GV. Countryside. SV. King and Queen at front door of Wards House Farm with Mr and Mrs Garlick, who are 85 years old. SV. King and Queen chatting to Mrs Garlick. LV. King, Queen and Princess Margaret posing with the old couple. SCU. King, Queen and Mrs Garlick, pan to Mr Garlick with Princess Margaret.
LV. King shaking hands with police chiefs. CU. Queen talking to police inspector. LV. King shakes hands with Chief Inspector. CU. King and Queen with police chiefs. SV. Pan of King, Queen and Princess Margaret walking past tenants waving farewell.
GV. Decorated Preston Town Hall. Angle shot, pan down building. LV. Pan, royal car arriving in front of Town Hall. CU. Crowd watching. LV. People being presented to royal family on balcony of Town Hall, & SV. Side view, people being presented to King and Queen on balcony of Town Hall. LV. Mass crowd, pan up to Town Hall. SV. King and Queen on balcony waving to crowd. SV. King and Queen waving from balcony. LV. King and Queen waving from balcony. People in foreground giving three cheers.
(Special Orig. Lav.H) (Orig. of Issue Story 51/31C)
FILM ID:1431.23
A VIDEO FROM BRITISH PATHÉ. EXPLORE OUR ONLINE CHANNEL, BRITISH PATHÉ TV. IT'S FULL OF GREAT DOCUMENTARIES, FASCINATING INTERVIEWS, AND CLASSIC MOVIES.
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England 2017: Day 7 Pt. 1 Trafalgar Square/The Queen's Gallery/Kensington Palace/Hyde Pk/Selfridges
This is Day 7 Part 1 of our vacation in England. In this video, we walk to Trafalgar Square, Buckingham Palace, The Queen's Gallery, Kensington Palace, Hyde Park and Selfridges.
Music Credit: Carefree Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
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Dunn Family Bloopers
Dunn Family Bloopers Part II
Dunn Family Bloopers Part III
RAF 100 Baton Relay at the CWGC's Runnymede Memorial
As part of the RAF 100 commemorations the Baton Relay Team stopped to undertake a memorial service at the CWGC's Runnymede Memorial.
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The Queen arriving at Romsey Abbey: 25 June 2016
The Queen arriving at Romsey Abbey for the marriage of Thomas Hooper and Hon Alexandra Knatchbull. Hon Alexandra Knatchbull is the daughter of Norton Knatchbull, 8th Baron Brabourne and his wife, Penelope Meredith, known at the time of her birth as Lord and Lady Romsey. She is the third cousin twice removed of the Queen, and the third cousin of Prince William.
London walk: Green Park to Westminster via Buckingham Palace
It was a wet, windy winter's day in London when I headed out from the warmth of the Google Academy to film this walk from Green Park Tube Station, with Piccadilly and the Ritz behind me, through Green Park - super-blustery alert - to Buckingham Palace and from there to Westminster the long way around, ie through a bit of St James's Park to Horse Guards and onto Whitehall, grabbing a few glances along Downing Street and from there to Westminster, where the Houses of Parliament, Big Ben and Westminster Abbey greeted me under a steely sky, and yet more wind and rain.
The lens on my phone kept getting all misted up in the rain and the wind was whistling across the microphone, especially for the Green Park section, hence the music and sped-up footage for that bit of the walk. You may therefore notice more than the usual reductions in image and sound quality.... ahem....
Route timestamps:
00:25 Green Park Tube Station
00:50 The Ritz Hotel, Piccadilly
00:55 Statue of Goddess Diana
01:06 Green Park - note, due to strong winds interfering with the audio quality, I have put this part to music and sped it up slightly.
02:15 Constitution Hill leading to Hyde Park Corner
02:25 Buckingham Palace, in the rain
04:10 Victoria Memorial
05:36 View of The Mall leading to Trafalgar Square
06:10 The Queen's Life Guard on their way to Horse Guards for the Changing of the Guard
07:52 Canada Gate
08:35 View of Lancaster House and Clarence House
09:18 View of St James's Park Lake
10:15 Birdcage Walk towards Westminster
11:57 The Guards Museum with Wellington Barracks to the rear
12:20 Flanders Fields Memorial Garden and the Guards Chapel
13:28 View towards St James's Park Underground Station
13:45 St James's Park
16:26 Duck Island Cottage
17:05 Churchill War Rooms, Imperial War Museums and Robert Clive Memorial
17:15 Bali Terror Attack Memorial
18:32 Rear entrance to Downing Street
19:20 Horse Guards Parade for the Changing of the Guard
22:25 Whitehall
23:29 Women of World War II Memorial
24:00 Downing Street
24:45 View of Coca Cola London Eye
25:12 The Cenotaph
26:05 Westminster Red Telephone Boxes
26:55 Westminster Underground Station
27:50 Big Ben covered in scaffolding
28:15 The Houses of Parliament and House of Commons
28:35 Parliament Square Gardens
29:20 Lady Chapel and Westminster Abbey
29:35 Brexit protestors
My equipment:
Gimbal - Zhiyun Smooth.
Recorded on Samsung S6 mobile phone - I do the immersive first-person walks with these.
For vlogging to camera, I use my Canon G7X Mark ii.
EAST GRINSTEAD HOSPITAL - BATTLE OF BRITAIN SPECIAL
Battle of Britain sequence (library material). GV Queen Victoria Hospital. SC name on wall Queen Victoria Hospital. GV McIndoe Burns Centre. SV signpost ditto. GV ditto. SV names on wall McIndoe Burns Centre. GV Plastic Surgery Centre. SC interior man walks through hall, picture of Sir Archibald McIndoe on wall. CU picture. SV looking through window of operating theatre. SV Sister Ray - staff nurse during war - talks to Mr Jones - anaesthetist in operating theatre wing. SV ditto. CU Sister Ray. Angle shot Ray and Jones. GV main street East Grinstead. GV zoom in Classic cinema showing The Battle of Britain. Various displays of model aircraft around the cinema. SV zoom into model bomb. SV model fighter plane. SV another one. GV German one. SC exterior entrance people entering. CU poster Battle of Britain. SV people through doors. GTV aircraft hanging. SV ditto. CU model of pilot wearing oxygen mask. STV people entering cinema.
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Shot At Dawn: Pardoned Soldiers Remembered | Forces TV
A century ago they were shot for mutiny, one of the most serious crimes in the British Army, but now their honour has been restored.
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Henry Nichols @Buckingham Palace (Royal Wedding Procession)
Global Radio News (GRNLive) correspondent Henry Nichols takes you behind the scenes of the Royal Wedding Procession at Buckingham Palace, shot around 10:20 am on day of the event, on site at the Queen Victoria Memorial across from Green Park.
For more of Henry's videos of the Royal Wedding Procession at Buckingham Palace, please visit:
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Carlisle United 1-4 Southampton - After the game
BBC
Southampton lift the trophy after a 4-1 victory over Carlisle United.
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The Queen visits Lancaster - 29th May 2015 - coverage from The Bay Radio
The Queen visits Lancaster - Friday 29th May 2015 - coverage from The Bay Radio station.
thebay.co.uk
QUEEN VICTORIA - WikiVidi Documentary
Victoria was Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland from 20 June 1837 until her death. On 1 May 1876, she adopted the additional title of Empress of India. Victoria was the daughter of Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn, the fourth son of King George III. Both the Duke and the King died in 1820, and Victoria was raised under close supervision by her mother, Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. She inherited the throne at the age of 18, after her father's three elder brothers had all died, leaving no surviving legitimate children. The United Kingdom was already an established constitutional monarchy, in which the sovereign held relatively little direct political power. Privately, Victoria attempted to influence government policy and ministerial appointments; publicly, she became a national icon who was identified with strict standards of personal morality. Victoria married her first cousin Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha in 1840. Their nine chil...
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Shortcuts to chapters:
00:02:16 Birth and family
00:05:01 Heir presumptive
00:09:19 Early reign
00:13:20 Marriage
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Queen pays tribute to fallen soldiers
(17 May 2016) Britain's Queen Elizabeth II paid tribute to soldiers of the Duke of Lancaster's Regiment on Tuesday, joining relatives of the fallen and wounded soldiers at a service at the National Memorial Arboretum in Alrewas, Staffordshire.
During the service the Queen, who is Colonel-in-Chief of the infantry regiment, unveiled a statue of the Lion of England featured on the regiment's royal badge.
After the service, who looked visibly moved at times, she spoke to injured servicemen and women, including Invictus Games gold medallist Corporal Luke Reeson.
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