UK - Gunman Kills Children In Massacre
T/I: 11:07:49
The small Scottish town of Dunblane in Perthshire was in a state of shock on Wednesday (13/3) after the morning's tragedy, in which a lone gunman burst into a local primary school and massacred 16 young children and their teacher.
Outside the school, frantic parents waited for news of their children. Tears were mixed with relief as some were reunited.
SHOWS:
DUNBLANE, SCOTLAND UK - 13/3
town church and pull out town
street outside school and police car passing
cu dunbale primary school sign
distressed woman passing by accompanied by other
parents with children let through by police
woman comforting father
father sot: very very shocked, i couldn't believe it had happened...
woman sot: i'm just in a state of shock, it seems unreal, i can'tunderstand anyone doing this...
woman and child in push-chair
vs people outside school
ls group of people outside school
pan school and town
boys walking on bridge
boy sot: we hear there was a shooting, and twelve or more kids were shot and killed. It's pretty bad,...my friend's mother was involved, she is a teacher there, it's just awful what's happened..
woman sot: we just heard it was a local man but nobody seems to know, it doesn't matter who did it, whoever did it must have been deranged or something ..i mean, wee (little) children..
ext police standing outside Sterling Royal Infirmary hospital sign
3.23 ends.
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Oxford, United Kingdom
A short trip through Oxford. You can see Christ Church where the Hall Staircase and sorrounding ateas were used in Harry Potter films. Year: 2002.
Brunito in St. Mary's Church tower. Oxford - United Kingdom
Brunito having fun while walking down stairs at the University of Oxford's church. The tower is open to the public and offers views across the city.
Farleigh Hungerford Castle
Farleigh Hungerford Castle, sometimes called Farleigh Castle or Farley Castle, is a medieval castle in Farleigh Hungerford, Somerset, England. The castle was built in two phases: the inner court was constructed between 1377 and 1383 by Sir Thomas Hungerford, who made his fortune as steward to John of Gaunt. The castle was built to a quadrangular design, already slightly old-fashioned, on the site of an existing manor house overlooking the River Frome. A deer park was attached to the castle, requiring the destruction of the nearby village. Sir Thomas’s son, Sir Walter Hungerford, a knight and leading courtier to Henry V, became rich during the Hundred Years War with France and extended the castle with an additional, outer court, enclosing the parish church in the process. By Walter's death in 1449, the substantial castle was richly appointed, and its chapel decorated with murals.
The castle largely remained in the hands of the Hungerford family over the next two centuries, despite periods during the War of the Roses in which it was held by the Crown following the attainder and execution of members of the family. At the outbreak of the English Civil War in 1642, the castle, modernized to the latest Tudor and Stuart fashions, was held by Sir Edward Hungerford. Edward declared his support for Parliament, becoming a leader of the Roundheads in Wiltshire. Farleigh Hungerford was seized by Royalist forces in 1643, but recaptured by Parliament without a fight near the end of the conflict in 1645. As a result, it escaped slighting following the war, unlike many other castles in the south-west of England.
The last member of the Hungerford family to hold the castle, Sir Edward Hungerford, inherited it in 1657, but his gambling and extravagance forced him to sell the property in 1686. By the 18th century, the castle was no longer lived in by its owners and fell into disrepair; in 1730 it was bought by the Houlton family, Trowbridge clothiers, when much of it was broken up for salvage. Antiquarian and tourist interest in the now ruined castle increased through the 18th and 19th centuries. The castle chapel was repaired in 1779 and became a museum of curiosities, complete with the murals rediscovered on its walls in 1844 and a number of rare lead anthropomorphic coffins from the mid-17th century. In 1915 Farleigh Hungerford Castle was sold to the Office of Works and a controversial restoration programme began. It is now owned by English Heritage, who operate it as a tourist attraction, and the castle is a Grade I listed building and a Scheduled Ancient Monument.
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Music: All Instrumentals:
1. Heize ~ No Reason
2. Eun Jiwan ~ I'm On Fire
3. Ailee ~ Room Shaker
4. IZ*One ~ Up
5. Bol4 ~ When I Fall In Love
Instrumentals done by kyungsoᄉo . YouTube :
Interview with John Amis
John Preston Amis (17 June 1922 – 1 August 2013) was a British broadcaster, classical music critic, music administrator, and writer. He was a frequent contributor for The Guardian and to BBC radio and television music programming. Born in Dulwich, London to a banking family, and a cousin of the novelist Kingsley Amis, Amis was educated at Dulwich College, where he began a lifelong friendship with his contemporary, Donald Swann. A serious bout of mastoiditis as a child left him deaf in his left ear. He began his career working in a bank for five and a half weeks before leaving to earn a living in music. Amis had a number of roles, including gramophone record salesman, and orchestra manager (at one point turning pages for Dame Myra Hess during the wartime concerts at the National Gallery.), before becoming a music critic, initially with The Scotsman in 1946. He was for several years manager for Sir Thomas Beecham, and also worked for the London Philharmonic Orchestra. In 1948, William Glock invited Amis to run a summer school for musicians at Bryanston School, Dorset. The summer school moved to Dartington in 1953. Amis remained administrative director until 1981, during which time he brought to the school a long line of international musicians, amongst them Paul Hindemith, Igor Stravinsky, and Sir Michael Tippett. Amis' short career as a tenor began with a minor role in the 1967 recording of Bernard Herrmann's cantata Moby-Dick. He made his operatic debut in 1990 as the Emperor in Turandot. Amis had started singing in earnest after 1959: in that year he attended Professor Frederick Husler's singing class at Dartington 'just for fun', and was told not only that he had the makings of a Heldentenor, but that he ought to go to Germany to study. From the 1950s onwards, Amis became a regular contributor to BBC Radio's music output, and worked on BBC Television from 1961, producing and presenting documentaries, and introducing the BBC2 magazine programme Music Now. As a broadcaster, he is probably best known for his appearances as a team member, from 1974 to 1994, on the BBC Radio 4 panel show, My Music, replacing David Franklin. It was on this show that he disclosed an unexpected talent as a skilled siffleur. His own radio show on Radio 3 interviewed musicians and contemporary witnesses such as Sir Isaiah Berlin. For many years he wrote a column on music in The Tablet, England's best-known Catholic magazine. His friends in the music industry included Noel Mewton-Wood and Felix Aprahamian, for whom he wrote a tribute following Aprahamian's death in January 2005. He was also closely associated with Gerard Hoffnung and organized many of Hoffnung's concerts until the latter's death in 1959; he performed a comic duet from The Barber of Darmstadt with Owen Brannigan at the 1961 Hoffnung Festival. Amis wrote a number of books, on his own Amiscellany imprint, with titles including My Music in London: 1945-2000. Amis spent much of his time giving talks and one-man shows, after dinner speeches and concert works. Amis was a patron of the Music Libraries Trust and the Tait Memorial Trust, and a vice-president of the Putney Music society. In June 1948 [England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1916-2005], Amis married the violinist Olive Zorian, founder of the Zorian String Quartet. The marriage was dissolved in 1955 and Zorian died in 1965.] He was survived by his partner for his last six years, Isla Baring OAM, Chairman of the Tait Memorial Trust of which he was a Patron. He once said that she gave him his Indian summer. His funeral was held on 20 August 2013 at the Musicians' Church, St Sepulchre-without-Newgate in London. I recorded this Interview with John Amis during a visit to Melbourne by him and Isla in March 2008. They were a delightful couple!
Farleigh Hungerford Castle Somerset
Farleigh Hungerford Castle, sometimes called Farleigh Castle or Farley Castle, is a medieval castle in Farleigh Hungerford, Somerset, England. The castle was built in two phases: the inner court was constructed between 1377 and 1383 by Sir Thomas Hungerford, who made his fortune working as a steward to John of Gaunt. The castle was built to a quadrangular design, already slightly old-fashioned, on the site of an existing manor house overlooking the River Frome. A park was attached to the castle, requiring the destruction of a local village. His son, Sir Walter Hungerford, a successful knight and courtier to Henry V, became rich during the Hundred Years War with France and extended the castle with an additional, outer court, enclosing the parish church in the process. By Walter's death in 1449, the substantial castle was richly appointed and its chapel decorated with murals.
The castle largely remained in the hands of the Hungerford family over the next two centuries, despite periods during the War of the Roses in which it was held by the Crown following the attainder and execution of members of the family. At the outbreak of the English Civil War in 1642, the castle, modernized to the latest Tudor and Stuart fashions, was held by Sir Edward Hungerford. Edward declared his support for Parliament, becoming a leader of the Roundheads in Wiltshire. Farleigh Hungerford was seized by Royalist forces in 1643, but recaptured by Parliament without a fight near the end of the conflict in 1645. As a result, it escaped slighting following the war, unlike many other castles in the south-west of England.
The last member of the Hungerford family to hold the castle, Sir Edward Hungerford, inherited it in 1657, but his gambling and expensive living forced him to sell the property in 1686. By the 18th century the castle was no longer lived in by its owners and fell into disrepair; in 1730 it was bought by the Houlton family, when much of it was broken up for salvage. Antiquarian and tourist interest in the now ruined castle increased through the 18th and 19th centuries. The castle chapel was repaired in 1779 and became a museum of curiosities, complete with the murals rediscovered on its walls in 1844 and a number of rare lead anthropomorphic coffins from the mid-17th century. In the 1915 Farleigh Hungerford Castle was sold to the Office of Works and a controversial restoration programme began. It is now owned by English Heritage, who operate it as a tourist attraction, and the castle is a Grade I listed building and a Scheduled Ancient Monument.
Music.
Brandenburg Concerto No4-1 BWV1049 - Classical Whimsical by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
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Artist:
St Andrew's Parish Church, Bradfield, Berks
A very interesting Church of England church in Berkshire, next to Bradfield School. It is an absolutely huge Victorian church with seating for hundreds. A very nice choir and organ.
Places to see in ( Wantage - UK )
Places to see in ( Wantage - UK )
Wantage is a market town and civil parish in the Vale of the White Horse, Oxfordshire, England. The town is on Letcombe Brook, about 8 miles south-west of Abingdon, 10 miles west of Didcot, 15 miles (24 km) south-west of Oxford and 14 miles (23 km) north north-west of Newbury.
Historically part of Berkshire, it is notable as the birthplace of King Alfred the Great in 849. In 1974 the area administered by Berkshire County Council was greatly reduced, and Wantage, in common with other territories South of the River Thames, became part of a considerably enlarged Oxfordshire.
Wantage was a small Roman settlement but the origin of the toponym is somewhat uncertain. It is generally thought to be from an Old English phrase meaning decreasing river. King Alfred the Great was born at the royal palace there in the 9th century. Wantage appears in the Domesday Book of 1086. Its value was £61 and it was in the king's ownership until Richard I passed it to the Earl of Albemarle in 1190.
In 1877 he paid for a marble statue of King Alfred by Count Gleichen to be erected in Wantage market place, where it still stands today. He also donated the Victoria Cross Gallery to the town. This contained paintings by Louis William Desanges depicting deeds which led to the award of a number of VCs, including his own gained during the Crimean War. It is now a shopping arcade. Since 1848, Wantage has been home to the Community of Saint Mary the Virgin, one of the largest communities of Anglican nuns in the world. Wantage once had two breweries which were taken over by Morlands of Abingdon.
Wantage is at the foot of the Berkshire Downs escarpment in the Vale of the White Horse. There are gallops at Black Bushes and nearby villages with racing stables at East Hendred, Letcombe Bassett, Lockinge and Uffington. Wantage includes the suburbs of Belmont to the west and Charlton to the east. Grove to the north is still just about detached and is a separate parish. Wantage parish stretches from the northern edge of its housing up onto the Downs in the south, covering Chain Hill, Edge Hill, Wantage Down, Furzewick Down and Lattin Down. The Edgehill Springs rise between Manor Road and Spike Lodge Farms and the Letcombe Brook flows through the town. Wantage is home to the Vale and Downland Museum. There is a large market square containing a statue of King Alfred, surrounded by shops some with 18th-century facades. Quieter streets radiate from it, including one towards the large Church of England parish church. Wantage is the Alfredston of Thomas Hardy's Jude the Obscure.
Wantage is at the crossing of the B4507 valley road, the A417 road between Reading and Cirencester and the A338 road between Hungerford (and junction 14 of the M4 motorway) and Oxford. Bus services link Wantage with Oxford as well as other towns and villages including Abingdon, Didcot, Faringdon and Grove. Stagecoach in Oxfordshire provide the main services between Wantage and Oxford with up to three buses per hour Monday to Saturday and up to two buses per hour on Sunday's and bank holidays, operated under Stagecoach's luxury Stagecoach Gold brand. Stagecoach provides a late-night service on Friday and Saturday evenings with buses running to Oxford until 2am and buses from Oxford to Wantage until 3am.
Wantage does not have a railway station; Didcot Parkway, 8 miles to the east, is the nearest station, with services towards London, Bristol and Cardiff. The Great Western Mainline is just north of Grove (2 miles North of Wantage) where the former Wantage Road railway station used to be. It was closed during the Beeching cuts in 1964. The Wantage Tramway used to link Wantage with Wantage Road station. The tramway's Wantage terminus was in Mill Street and its building survives, but little trace remains of the route. Wantage has been the site of a church since at least the 10th century and the present Church of England parish church of Saints Peter and Paul dates from the 13th century, with many additions since. SS Peter and Paul also contains seventeen 15th-century misericords.
( Wantage - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Wantage . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Wantage - UK
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Places to see in ( Wantage - UK )
Places to see in ( Wantage - UK )
Wantage is a market town and civil parish in the Vale of the White Horse, Oxfordshire, England. The town is on Letcombe Brook, about 8 miles south-west of Abingdon, 10 miles west of Didcot, 15 miles (24 km) south-west of Oxford and 14 miles (23 km) north north-west of Newbury.
Historically part of Berkshire, it is notable as the birthplace of King Alfred the Great in 849. In 1974 the area administered by Berkshire County Council was greatly reduced, and Wantage, in common with other territories South of the River Thames, became part of a considerably enlarged Oxfordshire.
Wantage was a small Roman settlement but the origin of the toponym is somewhat uncertain. It is generally thought to be from an Old English phrase meaning decreasing river. King Alfred the Great was born at the royal palace there in the 9th century. Wantage appears in the Domesday Book of 1086. Its value was £61 and it was in the king's ownership until Richard I passed it to the Earl of Albemarle in 1190.
In 1877 he paid for a marble statue of King Alfred by Count Gleichen to be erected in Wantage market place, where it still stands today. He also donated the Victoria Cross Gallery to the town. This contained paintings by Louis William Desanges depicting deeds which led to the award of a number of VCs, including his own gained during the Crimean War. It is now a shopping arcade. Since 1848, Wantage has been home to the Community of Saint Mary the Virgin, one of the largest communities of Anglican nuns in the world. Wantage once had two breweries which were taken over by Morlands of Abingdon.
Wantage is at the foot of the Berkshire Downs escarpment in the Vale of the White Horse. There are gallops at Black Bushes and nearby villages with racing stables at East Hendred, Letcombe Bassett, Lockinge and Uffington. Wantage includes the suburbs of Belmont to the west and Charlton to the east. Grove to the north is still just about detached and is a separate parish. Wantage parish stretches from the northern edge of its housing up onto the Downs in the south, covering Chain Hill, Edge Hill, Wantage Down, Furzewick Down and Lattin Down. The Edgehill Springs rise between Manor Road and Spike Lodge Farms and the Letcombe Brook flows through the town. Wantage is home to the Vale and Downland Museum. There is a large market square containing a statue of King Alfred, surrounded by shops some with 18th-century facades. Quieter streets radiate from it, including one towards the large Church of England parish church. Wantage is the Alfredston of Thomas Hardy's Jude the Obscure.
Wantage is at the crossing of the B4507 valley road, the A417 road between Reading and Cirencester and the A338 road between Hungerford (and junction 14 of the M4 motorway) and Oxford. Bus services link Wantage with Oxford as well as other towns and villages including Abingdon, Didcot, Faringdon and Grove. Stagecoach in Oxfordshire provide the main services between Wantage and Oxford with up to three buses per hour Monday to Saturday and up to two buses per hour on Sunday's and bank holidays, operated under Stagecoach's luxury Stagecoach Gold brand. Stagecoach provides a late-night service on Friday and Saturday evenings with buses running to Oxford until 2am and buses from Oxford to Wantage until 3am.
Wantage does not have a railway station; Didcot Parkway, 8 miles to the east, is the nearest station, with services towards London, Bristol and Cardiff. The Great Western Mainline is just north of Grove (2 miles North of Wantage) where the former Wantage Road railway station used to be. It was closed during the Beeching cuts in 1964. The Wantage Tramway used to link Wantage with Wantage Road station. The tramway's Wantage terminus was in Mill Street and its building survives, but little trace remains of the route. Wantage has been the site of a church since at least the 10th century and the present Church of England parish church of Saints Peter and Paul dates from the 13th century, with many additions since. SS Peter and Paul also contains seventeen 15th-century misericords.
( Wantage - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Wantage . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Wantage - UK
Join us for more :
Homophobic Killing in Trafalgar Square
On 25 September, 2009, Ian Baynham was attacked as he walked through Trafalgar Square with a friend. He suffered homophobic abuse before being punched to the ground by Joel Alexander, 20. Ruby Thomas, 18, and Rachel Burke, 18, then joined in by kicking his body as he lay unconscious. Thomas even stamped on his head with her ballet pumps. CCTV cameras captured part of the attack (top centre). The group then left Ian Baynham bleeding on the pavement and got into a lift at Hungerford Bridge (1min 22secs). Burke can be seen touching up her makeup, Ruby Thomas is seen dancing in front of the lift doors and Burke then kisses a boy before leaving.
In December 2010, Ruby Thomas and Joel Alexander were convicted of manslaughter. Rachel Burke was convicted of affray.
Norman Tomb with effigies... Cathedral of the Peak, Tideswell, u.k
Circa i320-i400: building interrupted by the Black Death catastrophe... Monks stealing lambs! Eighteen lambs killed within the church precepts, the monks carried off fourteen: were these Druid priests? Pope Innocent iv harshly fined the monks.... Disputes continuing til dissolution of monasteries by Henry viii.. Templar Monks too rich and powerful!
EP 1: UK's sexual assault dilemma | INSIDEUK | Full documentary
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Kingsbridge South Hams Devon.
Kingsbridge is a market town and tourist hub in the South Hams district of Devon, England, with a population of 6,116 at the 2011 census. Two electoral wards bear the name of Kingsbridge (East & North). Their combined population at the above census was 4,381. It is situated at the northern end of the Kingsbridge Estuary, a river that extends to the sea six miles south of the town. It is the third largest settlement in the South Hams, following Ivybridge, the largest, and Totnes.
The town formed around a bridge which was built in or before the 10th century between the royal estates of Alvington, to the west, and Chillington, to the east, hence giving it the name of Kyngysbrygge (King's bridge). In 1219 the Abbot of Buckfast was granted the right to hold a market there, and by 1238 the settlement had become a borough. The manor remained in possession of the abbot until the Dissolution of the Monasteries, when it was granted to Sir William Petre. Kingsbridge was never represented in Parliament or incorporated by charter, the local government being by a portreeve. It lay within the hundred of Stanborough.
Kingsbridge is in fact a combination of two towns, Kingsbridge and Dodbrooke. Dodbrooke was granted its own market in 1257 and had become a borough by 1319. While Dodbrooke was originally considered to be the dominant of the two, Kingsbridge later expanded to include it. The town consists of two ecclesiastical parishes: St. Edmund's in the west and St. Thomas Becket at Dodbrooke in the east. St. Edmund's Church, in mainly Perpendicular style, retains some 13th-century features including a font, but was enlarged and reconsecrated around 1414 and was mostly rebuilt in the 19th century. The parish church of St. Thomas Becket displays a particularly well-preserved rood screen, restored in 1897.
In 1798 the town mills were converted into a woollen manufactory, which produced large quantities of cloth, and serge manufacture was introduced early in the 19th century. During the 19th century the town had an active coastal shipping trade, shipbuilding, a tannery, other industries and a large monthly cattle market. The chief exports were cider, corn, malt, and slate.
The town centre retains many 18th and 19th-century buildings. The Shambles, or market arcade, was rebuilt in 1796 but retains its 16th-century granite piers. The former grammar school, now a museum, was founded and built by Thomas Crispin in 1670.
Kingsbridge has been the main market town in the area for centuries. Being situated within the South Devon Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) and its proximity to the spectacular south Devon coast and sailing venues, such as Salcombe, Kingsbridge has developed into a popular tourist destination. Its attractions include several restaurants, pubs, a cinema housed in the town hall building, and a museum devoted to the chemist William Cookworthy, born in Kingsbridge in 1705.
There are two supermarkets in Kingsbridge: a Morrisons and a Tesco Store, which opened on Valentines Day 2011. It also has a large secondary school, Kingsbridge Community College, which has over 1000 pupils and serves the surrounding area. Kingsbridge is home to the only nightclub in the South Hams, Coast, with the next nearest club being in Torquay.
The town is linked to Plymouth and Dartmouth by the A379 road, and to Salcombe and Totnes by the A381. For seventy years Kingsbridge boasted a railway station until the branch line, via South Brent, was closed in 1963 as part of the reshaping of British railways.
Intro Music:-
Cinematic (Sting) by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Artist:
Main Music:-
Daily Beetle by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Source:
Artist:
London walk from Westminster to the London Eye: Walking in London 30-minute walk + Christmas Market
Walk from Westminster and the Houses of Parliament to the London Eye on a cold November morning. I set out from College Green opposite the Palace of Westminster, through the little-known Dean's Yard of Westminster Abbey and School, then past Westminster Abbey and across Parliament Square Garden, taking in Big Ben and the Houses of Parliament before crossing Westminster Bridge to join up with the Queen's Promenade which delivers us to the London Sealife Centre and the London Dungeon onto the London Eye and then the South Bank Christmas Market. I get a rare chance to walk around in the South Bank Skatepark before entering the Royal Festival Hall for a coffee:)
Timewise, this first-person, immersive London sightseeing walk takes you on a short route on foot from Westminster to the London Eye, which can be done in around 20 minutes at a good pace or 30 minutes or so if you take a more leisurely approach.
Route timestamps:
00:15 to 00:33 Train journey arriving at London Waterloo Station
00: 34 College Green looking towards the Jewel Tower, St Margaret's Church and the Houses of Parliament
01:15 Great College Street
03:28 Westminster Abbey Precincts - Dean's Yard looking towards Westminster Abbey
05:37 Crimea and Indian Mutiny Memorial
05:44 Central Hall Westminster
05:52 Westminster Abbey
06:14 Queen Elizabeth II Centre
07:55 St Margaret's Church
08:22 Supreme Court of the United Kingdom
08:57 Parliament Square Garden, including statues
10:55 Big Ben and Houses of Parliament
12:50 Westminster Underground Station
13:45 Entrance to Westminster Bridge
15:28 View east along the Thames towards Hungerford Bridge, Waterloo Bridge and the City of London (London is two cities - the City of Westminster and the City of London)
18:10 View towards St Thomas' Hospital and the Florence Nightingale Museum
19:34 Entrance from Westminster Bridge to the Queen's Walk
20:15 Namco Funscape
20:42 London Sealife
21:12 Shrek's Adventure
21:43 The London Dungeon
22:30 The London Eye
24:00 South Bank Christmas Market
25:48 Royal Festival Hall and South Bank
25:55 Festival Pier
26:54 South Bank Skatepark
27:50 Royal Festival Hall
London is a huge city that is great to walk in, so these London sightseeing walks take you through the main tourist sights in a super-efficient way.
Music: Scouting by Eveningland in the YouTube audio library
My equipment:
Gimbal - DJI Osmo 2 Mobile, I am not very good at using it:/
LG mobile phone - a bit on its last legs and overheating at all the hard work, but just about hanging in there.
Poor image quality is a combination of an old camera phone and me being rubbish with a gimbal!
I do the immersive first-person walks with these two items.
For vlogging to camera, I use my Canon G7X Mark ii. One day I hope to buy a proper camera gimbal so as to use the Canon for the actual filming, but this will take a bit of saving up for, and then a bit of learning! Probably by then my head will have been turned by a GoPro....
Bell Ringing at Bray, Berkshire
The fourth and last tower on my friend Jo's Birthday Outing...
St Michael's Church in Bray is an impressive Gothic building situated right by the River Thames. The church holds a fantastic 24cwt eight cast by a variety of different founders, including Thomas Swain and Gillet and Johnston which would explain the retuned major 3rd tierce tenor bell.
The bells go niceky but some (the 7th in particular) are slightly oddstruck and wobble around due to the tall and wobbly tower. They sound very nice and are very rewarding!
James E. Talmage Introduction - Grandin Press
James E. Talmage (1862--1933) was born in Hungerford, England. He was ordained an Apostle December 8, 1911. Previous to his call to the Council of the Twelve he was a distinguished geologist and writer. His classics were written both before and after his call: Articles of Faith (1899), The Great Apostasy (1909), The Story of Mormonism (1910), The Philosophy of Mormonism (1914), Jesus the Christ (1915), and the Vitality of Mormonism (1919). His Parables were posthumously gathered from among his many sermons.
Places to see in ( East Molesey - UK )
Places to see in ( East Molesey - UK )
Molesey is a suburban district comprising two large villages, East Molesey and West Molesey, just outside the edge of Greater London. Molesey is located on the southern bank of the River Thames in the northeast of the borough of Elmbridge in Surrey, England, with the post town of East Molesey extending north across the Thames into the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames.
Molesey lies between 11.7 and 13.5 miles from Charing Cross and forms part of the capital's contiguous suburbs within the Greater London Urban Area. It has the London dialling code (020), and was from 1839 until 2000 under the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Police.
East and West Molesey share a high street, and there is a second retail and restaurant-lined street (Bridge Road) close to Hampton Court Palace in the eastern part of the district, which is also home to Hampton Court railway station in Transport for London's Zone 6. Molesey Hurst or Hurst Park is a large park by the River Thames in the north of the area, and is home to East Molesey Cricket Club. The Hampton Ferry runs from here to Hampton on the Middlesex bank, from where it is a short walk to the central area of Hampton.
Molesey is divided into three wards of the United Kingdom: Molesey South, East and North. The majority of Molesey's detached properties are in the east, which also contains the highest proportion of apartments of the three wards.
Molesey is directly south of the River Thames, with several large reservoirs bordering the town to the west and south that provide water within the London Basin. Some of these are now disused and are being converted into nature reserves. To the west lie Bessborough Reservoir and Knight Reservoir, to the north-west Molesey Reservoirs, to the south Island Barn Reservoir, and to the south-west Queen Elizabeth II Reservoir. There are walks beside Metropolitan green belt fields to the south along the river Mole to Esher, and to the west along the Thames Path to Walton-on-Thames.
Hampton Court Palace is immediately north-east of East Molesey across Hampton Court Bridge. The Palace, together with the southern part of Bushy Park and most of Hampton Court Park are in the post town East Molesey. Molesey Lock is just above Hampton Court Bridge, downstream of Sunbury Lock and upstream of Teddington Lock. Cigarette Island Park is just below the bridge, occupying the eastern extremity of the town. Hurst Park is on the south bank of the Thames, from where there is a daily ferry service to Hampton on the Middlesex bank. It once had a horse racing course but no longer does.
Molesey itself has some interesting landmarks, including three listed Church of England churches and The Bell, a public house, formerly known as The Crooked House, built in the mid-15th century. Other Landmarks include The Jubilee Fountain in Bridge Road. There are three designated Conservation Areas in East Molesey. Other historic buildings include the Grade II-listed Matham Manor, an altered 15th-century house with timber frames and red brick; and a 16th-century house, Quillets Royal, with an 18th-century extension (The Manor House). Both buildings lie near The Bell in Bell Road/Matham Road.
There are no permanent traveller sites in East or West Molesey, but there is believed to be a significant settled traveller population in the Field Common area to the south of Molesey Heath and in adjacent Hersham, which featured in the TV series My Big Fat Gypsy Wedding. Elmbridge borough as a whole has also had the equal largest number of illegal traveller sites in Surrey in recent years and the former leader of Elmbridge Council referred to this being a particular problem in Molesey in extensive press coverage of the issue which has become contentious in recent times.
The railway station in East Molesey is Hampton Court railway station in Transport for London's Zone 6, operated by South West Trains. This is the terminus of a stopping commuter service to Waterloo that takes around thirty-five minutes. Principal stops are Surbiton, Wimbledon and Clapham Junction. During the Hampton Court Palace Flower Show extra trains run to and from London.
( East Molesey - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting East Molesey . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in East Molesey - UK
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Dunblane school massacre
The Dunblane school massacre occurred at Dunblane Primary School on 13 March 1996. The gunman, 43-year-old Thomas Hamilton (b. 10 May 1952), entered the school armed with four handguns, shooting and killing sixteen children and one adult before committing suicide. Along with the 1987 Hungerford massacre, 1989 Monkseaton shootings and the 2010 Cumbria shootings it remains one of the deadliest criminal acts involving firearms in the history of the United Kingdom.
Public debate subsequent to these events centred on gun control laws, including public petitions calling for a ban on private ownership of handguns and an official enquiry, the Cullen Report. In response to this debate, the Firearms (Amendment) Act 1997 and the Firearms (Amendment) (No. 2) Act 1997 were enacted, which effectively made private ownership of handguns illegal in the United Kingdom.
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News In A Nutshell (1937)
Item title reads - 'His Majesty's Guests.' (News in a Nutshell).
A look at the industrial workers who will be present at the Coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth. M/S of Lizzie McCulloch a weaver in Glasgow, she laughs. M/S of Alfred Thomas of Wales stood with wife and little daughter, M/S of them smiling. M/S of Doris Griffiths of Birmingham. M/S of Leslie Pollard, a pit boy, walking along covered in coal dust. M/S after he has had a bath, he shakes hands with the colliery manager. C/U of his face.
Intertitle - 'London' - M/S of soldiers walking along at Wellington barracks wearing new uniforms for the Coronation. M/S as the camera pans across them, we see Scots Greys, West Yorks, Royal Scots Fusiliers, Seaforths, and King's Royal Rifles. M/S of people watching them through railings at the barracks. Various shots of the soldiers. M/S of Australian soldier looking at them.
Intertitle - 'Portland' (Dorset) - L/S of English Trader in the sea, M/S of its lifeboat. M/S showing its bows are missing after going ashore, it is being towed to Portland harbour. Various shots as they build a new bulk head. M/S as they salvage the cargo of grain.
Intertitle - 'St. Catherine's Point, Isle of Wight' - L/S aerial shots of Italian steamer Luigi Acarne (?) run aground, water laps over it.
Intertitle - 'Atlantic Ocean' - L/S of Norwegian freighter foundering in heavy seas. M/S of crew rowing in their lifeboat to the coastguard where they are pulled to safety. M/S of the crew, and the captains shaking hands. C/U of the two men smiling.
Intertitle - 'Derby' (Derbyshire) - M/S of Sherwood Foresters regiment lined up in parade ground, camera pans across them. They are to receive the Victoria Cross earned by a member of their regiment, Jacob Rivers. M/S of his sister Mrs E. Potter holding Jacob's Victoria Cross, which his mother wanted returned to the regiment after she died. M/S as she hands it to the Commanding Officer, C/U of the medal. M/S as the soldiers stand to attention then march off.
Intertitle - 'South Africa' - L/S across bay, various shots of speedboats being prepared and starting up. Various shots as they race around in the regatta. M/S of people water-skiing behind them. M/S as lady presents trophies to the winners.
Intertitle - 'Padang' (Sumatra) Nice L/S's of hills and sea, M/S of people waiting on the quay doing Nazi salute. A band plays, various shots of the Emden sailing in and people waiting for it. M/S as Commander comes ashore, various shots of the crew and band playing. M/S of Nazi flag flying on the ship. L/S of ship.
Intertitle - 'Paris' (France) - M/S of Oxford and Cambridge boat crews approaching the water's edge of the river Seine. President Lebrun watches from the stands. President Cambridge take the water and race a Parisian team, various shots as they row along. Cambridge win by six lengths. M/S of Oxford team in their boat, M/S as they row against another Parisian team and win by 5 lengths.
Intertitle - 'Cockfosters' (London) - M/S pan down Christ church spire, bridesmaids step out of a car, crowds watch. M/S of the bride, Dorothy Shaw, getting out of her car. M/S as she emerges from the church with her new husband, cricketer Alan T. Barber. M/S as their car drives off. M/S of the bridesmaids lined up, L/S of guests.
Intertitle - 'Hungerford' (Berkshire) Hocktide - M/S of children walking along with the tithe man who is holding a floral display on a long pole, he goes around kissing all the women he can find as part of an old tradition. M/S of orange scatterer in top hat throwing oranges to everyone, various shots.
Intertitle - 'Washington' (America, USA) - M/S as the car carrying Lord Tweedsmuir, Governor General of Canada, drives up to the White House. He gets out and is received by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and his wife Eleanor they shake hands and smile. Various shots as they pose on the steps of the White House.
Intertitle - 'Perry v. Tilden in New York' (America, USA) - M/S as Fred Perry plays a tennis match with Bill Tilden, Perry serves and there is a good rally until Tilden loses the point. Perry wins another point and the crowds watch. Various shots of the match, Perry goes onto win and jumps over the net to shake Tilden's hand.
Intertitle - 'London' - M/S's as Islington Squadron of the Legion of Frontiersmen in uniform march from Highbury Corner on annual parade to St. Thomas's church where they all enter. After service they march to headquarters where salute is taken by Commandant Headington.
Intertitle - 'Morocco' - M/S as Guards ride through in front of the French Residential Governor's car. He gets out, people watch him. M/S as two men bow to him. Various shots as he walks a
FILM ID:905.09
2016 British Queen Elizabeth New Years Honours - KNIGHTS BACHELOR
New Year honours 2016:
KNIGHTS BACHELOR 2016
Henry Campbell Bellingham, MP. MP for North West Norfolk. For political and parliamentary service. (Norfolk)
Matthew Christopher Bourne, OBE. Choreographer. For services to dance. (London)
Dr David John Collins, CBE. Further education commissioner. For services to further education. (Gloucestershire)
Clive Cowdery. Philanthropist and founder Resolution Foundation. For services to children and social mobility. (London)
Lynton Keith Crosby. A.O. lately campaign director, Conservative party. For political service. (London)
Prof Paul James Curran. Vice-chancellor, City University London. For services to higher education. (London)
The Rt Hon Edward Jonathan Davey. For political and public service. (Surrey)
Jonathan Stephen Day, CBE. Formerly chair, joint intelligence committee, Cabinet Office. For public service.
William Robert Fittall. For services to the Church of England. (Kent)
Paul Edward Grice. Clerk and chief executive, Scottish parliament. For services to the Scottish parliament and voluntary service to higher education and the community in Scotland. (Edinburgh)
Dr Michael Graham Jacobs. Clinical lead in infectious diseases, Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust. For services to the prevention and treatment of infectious diseases. (London)
Harpal Singh Kumar. Chief executive, Cancer Research UK. For services to cancerresearch. (Middlesex)
Steve Lancashire. Founder and chief executive officer, REAch2, and executiveheadteacher, Hillyfield Primary Academy, London Borough of Waltham Forest. For services to education. (Kent)
Martyn John Dudley Lewis, CBE. For services to the voluntary and charitable sectors, particularly the hospice movement. (London)
Prof David John Cameron MacKay. Regius professor of engineering, Cambridge University engineering department. For services to scientific advice in government and science outreach. (Cambridgeshire)
Anthony Peter McCoy, OBE. For services to H horse racing. (Hungerford, Berkshire)
Harvey Andrew McGrath. For services to economic growth and public life. (London)
David Ronald Norgrove. Chair, low pay commission and chair, family justice board. For services to the low paid and the family justice system. (London)
Jack Petchey, CBE. For services to young people in east London and Essex through the Jack Petchey Foundation. (London)
Robert Alexander Talma Stheeman, CB. Chief executive officer, Debt Management Office. For services to UK government debt management. (Walton-on-Thames, Surrey)
Norman Kelvin Stoller, CBE. For philanthropic service. (Bowness on Windermere, Cumbria)
John Michael Leal Uren, OBE. For philanthropic service. (Tenterden, Kent)
Alan Colin Drake Yarrow. Formerly lord mayor of London. For services to international business inclusion and the City of London. (London)