The churchyard at St Mary's, Ewell
Our churchyard manager David Slattery explains some of the history of our churchyard. This is a shorter version of a film made for St Mary’s by Epsom Moviemakers.
OCTOGENARIANS WEDDING - NO SOUND
Wedding of Mrs Barker 80 years old and Mr. Sweeney 83 years old, at Chessington, after which they toasted each other in a lions cage., at Chessington Zoo where Mrs. Barker used to work. Arrival of Bridegroom. CU. Name of church. Mr. Sweeney sons arrives to officiate. Mrs, Barker arrives. CU of car mascot made by bride. GU. St. Mary's church. Bride and groom leave church. Bride and groom with camel from Zoo. Bride and groom with Rev. Sarrey after ceremony. GU. Of couple entering lions cage. Toasting each other in cage. Crowds outside lions cage. Inside cage. Couple leave cage. Tigers watching. Lions go back into cage very annoyed.
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Marisa with Adam Showreel
Marisa Johnson and Adam Parrish are coming to a city near you. Featuring classics from musicals, pop, opera, folk, and original music.
Special guests and guest choirs will be announced for each venue. Stay tuned....
Tour dates:
September 24, 2017
St. Cosmas & Damian Church
Abcoude, Holland
October 6, 2017
Acomb Methodist Church
York, North Yorkshire
November 12, 2017
St. Vituskerk
Blaricum, The Netherlands
November 25, 2017
St. John Of Jerusalem Church
London (Hackney), UK
December 1, 2017
St Mary's Church
Tadcaster, North Yorkshire
December 8, 2017
Trinity Methodist Church
South Elmsall, South Yorkshire
December 9, 2017
Kasteel Sterkenburg
Driebergen-Rijsenburg, The Netherlands
January 13, 2018
Chessington Methodist Church
Chessington, UK
Tickets: £ 10
Purchase at: marisa-johnson.com/tour
The Sacrifice - 26.03.2017
Promise Fulfilled | The Sacrifice
Read the passage (Genesis 22) online at
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Rhiann Dennis Singing Lords Prayer
At St.Marys Indian Orthodox Church Bristol.
Chessington Dragons Fury
A little more frantic than I was expecting...
Church Picnic-1
St. Mary's Indian Orthodox Church, Virginia. Annual picnic at the Bullrun Park. June 2010.
Did you start going to church?
You can check out the page that I referenced here facebook.com/ezfreedomlifestyle
Hughes family history 2 - Francis Wedding / Bonner Street
Converted cine film - Hughes family
The Fox Goes Free
Nestled in a lovely village,The fox goes free public house is a truly English pub with accommodation and great food. Meet some of the staff.
Matthew from Ealing asks how London can stay a great city
Question for the London Mayor candidates. View more questions at
England Diary 7
The UT Chamber Singers wrapped up their twelve-day tour of England with an Evensong performance in Westminster Abbey and visited Buckingham Palace. The singers and Professor Angela Batey reflected on their trip.
Shirley High Street Southampton 14 09 18
Shirley High Street Southampton 14 09 18
Outwood Common & Horne ~ Autumn 2015
Scenic Autumn Tour taking in Outwood Common & it's Windmill. Outwood is a village in the Surrey weald. It is home to Outwood Post Mill which was once the oldest working windmill in England. It was damaged in gales in January 2012 and in October 2013. The mill and grounds have been closed to the public ever since, with an application for withdrawal of rights of access applied for.
The Mill has stood on the Common at Outwood for over 340 years. This incredible Mill was built just one year before the great fire of London. Built in 1665 by Thomas Budgen, the windmill was a working mill right up until 1996. She can still mill corn if required. The windmill is currently closed:
There are several miles of public, National Trust footpaths and bridleways as well as Outwood Common. The paths cross open common, woodland and fields, which change through the seasons: much of the countryside in and around Outwood is part of the Harewoods estate, which is owned and managed by the National Trust. There are two main National Trust parking areas. One is opposite the windmill and the other is on the track leading to the cricket pitch on Outwood Common.
1542 Earliest known reference to Outwood; the Court Roll refers to the restrictions concerning the felling of timber in Outwood mostly in the parish of Burstow. Then onwards down the hill to the rural village of Horne passing the lovely 7 bedroom Victorian House Horne Grange which was on the market for £1,650,000 although the estate agents website now says: This property has been removed by the agent. It may be sold or temporarily removed from the market. Horne Grange is situated on the edge of the rural hamlet of Horne in Surrey close to the county boundary with West Sussex. The Grange stands in a secluded position surrounded by lawns scattered with mature trees and shrubs with views across its own land. Close to the house there are outbuildings and stables, a kitchen garden and cottage with coach house. Then on a little further for a quick stop at the Grade 2* Listed, St Mary's Church, Horne. I wanted to revisit the medieval graffiti on the external jambs of the south door, the churches oldest feature.
Parish Deanery Godstone. A parish within the united benefice of Burstow with Horne. The heavily restored church in the heart of the village, dedicated to St Mary the Virgin, has 14th- and 15th-century windows. The south door dates from 1250, and there is a 14th-century oak screen and 15th-century chancel beams. Considerable restoration was undertaken in 1880., which robbed the building of almost all its archaeological interest and completely destroyed its early history. The oldest feature now remaining is the south doorway, which dates from the middle of the 13th century, but this may possibly have been inserted in the walls of a 12th-century nave. A slight inclination of the chancel to the north shows rebuilding of the east end of the church, but here again the absence of any original detail earlier than a 15th-century rood stair in the west end of the south wall makes the dating of this rebuilding, if indeed it ever took place, a matter of conjecture.
Church of England website details: Built: 13th century - restored 1880 Architect: restored by Gordon M Hills Listing: grade 2*
St Mary's church dates from the thirteenth century but was restored and extended by Gordon M Hills in 1880.
A set of drawings by Haswell from 1825 show a large timber belfry at the west end (similar to the one at Burstow) and in the interior view box pews, a pulpit and no arch to the chancel. In 1880 the west end was reconstructed and the belfry structure considerably reduced in size, and a north aisle, organ chamber, vestry and chancel arch were added to the original nave and chancel. The south porch was moved westwards and a fifteenth century window was re-fixed in the new north aisle. The roofs are tiled, the spire shingled and the walls constructed of a mixture of Reigate (or Merstham) stone, Wealden sandstone and Bath stone.
A Rood Stair in British Church Architecture, is a stair leading too the gallery or loft of a rood screen. The rood was a large crucifixion, usually carved and painted, generally with flanking figures of the Virgin Mary and St Peter. It stood on a loft, or gallery above a screen across the chancel arch. To access the gallery a curving stair was often set into the wall beside the chancel arch. The stair would lead through the thickness of the wall behind the arch and emerge at rood loft level. Many rood screens were destroyed during the Reformation, so you frequently see the upper exit of the stair as an orphaned doorway opening beside the chancel arch, seemingly leading nowhere.
Westquay Southampton - Digital Light Mapping
Westquay - Digital Light Mapping. Southampton through the ages on the city walls. #WQLuminate
14 December 2016
ghost hunting at witching hour at Guy's Cliff House Warwick ENGLAND
Guy's cliff house is situated in Warwick in the west midlands of England!
Guy's Cliffe has been occupied since Saxon times and derives its name from the legendary Guy of Warwick. Guy is supposed to have retired to a hermitage on this site, this legend led to the founding of a chantry. The chantry was established in 1423 as the Chapel of St Mary Magdelene and the rock-carved stables and storehouses still remain. After the Dissolution of the Monasteries by Henry VIII the site passed into private hands.
The current, ruined house dates from 1751 and was started by Samuel Greatheed, a West India merchant and Member of Parliament for Coventry 1747-1761. Samuel Greatheed was one of the most prominent slave traders in the Caribbean and later received the large sum of £25,000 in compensation from the government following the abolition of the slave trade The estate also comprised a mill, stables, kitchen garden and land as far as Blacklow Hill.
Blacklow Hill is north-west of the house. It is the site of an ancient settlement and the location of Piers Gaveston, 1st Earl of Cornwall's murder.
In 1308 Edward II travelled to Boulogne to marry Isabella, leaving Piers Gaveston, a Gascon knight to act as regent. Resentment against Edward's rule and Gaveston's position of power grew, some barons began to insist Gaveston be banished. Edward could do little to prevent Gaveston being captured in 1312 under the orders of the Earl of Lancaster and his allies. He was captured first by the Earl of Warwick, whom he was seen to have offended, and handed over to two Welshmen. They took him to Blacklow Hill and murdered him; one ran him through the heart with his sword and the other beheaded him.[
In 1821 Bertie Greatheed erected a stone cross to mark the execution of Piers Gaveston, Gaveston's Cross and later commented in his diary that he could read the inscription on the cross with his telescope from the house.
1900's ONWARDS!
The house was used as a hospital during World War I and in World War II became a school for evacuated children.
Guy's Cliffe estate was broken up and sold in 1947. In 1952 the mill became a pub and restaurant and was named The Saxon Mill, the stables became a riding school, the kitchen garden became a nursery, all of which still exist today. A toll house also stood by the road to the north of the Saxon Mill, but this was demolished in the mid 20th century.
The new owner of the house intended to convert it into a hotel, but these plans came to nothing and the house fell into disrepair. In 1955 the house was purchased by Aldwyn Porter and the chapel leased to the Freemasons, establishing a connection with the Masons that remains today. The roof had fallen in by 1966. In 1992 during the filming of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (The Last Vampyre) a fire scene got out of control and seriously damaged the building, leading to an insurance claim. English Heritage has given the building grade II listed status.
One new house was built within the grounds, Guy's Cliffe House (note: the ruined house and by the 1980s, when the parishes merged, the population of the Parish of Guy's Cliffe was no more than 4 people. The new boundary split the original estate: the stables and nursery are not within the current Parish of Leek Wootton & Guy's Cliffe, but the house, mill and modern homes are.
Freedom of the City Parade
East Midlands Universities Air Squadron Officer Cadets, led by the Pipes & Drums of RAF Waddington, march into the city.
News About Cricket (1956)
This is a duplicate of item 593.18 - check for best quality.
Hastings, Buckingham Palace & Sudbury.
Hastings. SV. Reverend David Sheppard, 27 year old Curate of St. Mary's Parish Church, Islington, who has been selected for the next test match, putting on his gloves to go out and bat for Sussex. LV. David Sheppard walking out from the pavilion onto the field to bat.
GV. Buckingham Palace (library). SV. Australian cricketers Keith Miller and Ian Johnson being photographed in the forecourt of Buckingham Palace after being awarded the O.B.E. CU. O.B.E. in case, pan up to Johnson and then over to Miller.
Sudbury. SCU. Norman Wisdom and Harry Secombe doing a little dance together before the start of the cricket match between the Jesters and the Thespians in aid of the National Spastics Society. SV. Towards, comedian magician Tommy Cooper coming out hand in hand with Norman Wisdom to try out the wicket before the game. SV. Towards, Harry Secombe, radio and TV comedian and singer, who is in the same team. The other team come out onto the field and dodges round the camera.
SV. Wisdom coming out carrying small bat (which he had forgotten) and wearing pads. SV. Crowd looking on. SV. Norman Wisdom at the wicket surrounded by team mates trying things out before the game. Near Norman is Tommy Cooper. The ball is bowled, Norman lashes it and it goes out of picture, while everybody ducks and holds up their hands. Tommy Cooper gives Wisdom a push as if to get the ball, and he runs out of frame, while everybody stands there laughing. LV. The serious game now in progress with the Thespians batting. SV. Tommy Cooper running up to bowl. He bowls and film star Trevor Howard gives it a really good hit. SV. Pan, Norman Wisdom tearing after ball, he picks it up and throws it back. SCU. Stanley Baker waiting his turn to go in and back. SV. Norman doing one of his little runs round the field, and does a little trip as if to fall over. SV. Autograph signing, and Eric Robinson at table. SCU. Barbara Kelly, music conductor Eric Robinson and Vera Lynn signing autographs. SV. The Jesters are batting. Tommy Cooper coming out onto the field, met by Harry Secombe who tells him the state of the wicket. LV. Crowd watching. LV. Film star Stanley Baker bowls under arm to Larry Cross, who hits the ball which is a golf ball, with a golf club, and starts to run down the wicket. He turns to come back, and Tommy Cooper start to run down the other way.
FILM ID:3428.07
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Little Britain Live - Lou and Andy in an amusement park
Woodville's Haunted Halloween Forest Slideshow
Halloween 2010