Words on War
Boroughbridge High School, Hackforth & Hornby and Barton Church of England primary schools worked on the Words on War project between February and June 2014, creating new prose, drama and song to mark the hundredth anniversary of the start of the First World War. This slideshow tells their Words on War story and features the original song created during the Richmond Cultural Education Partnership project.
KanOwurmz at the Roman Bath , York
Gig excerpt from 29th Dec 2018. The joint was bouncing ....an excellent evening. Party on!
Part 1 of 2. No. 214 Squadron Memorial Dedication Ceremony
This is a video produced by an ex-squadron member and shows the No. 214 Squadron (FMS) Memorial Dedication held on 18 July 2009 at the National Memorial Arboretum in Alrewas Staffordshire. Part 1 of 2.
A1 road (Great Britain)
The A1 is the longest numbered road in the UK, at 410 miles. It connects London, the capital of England and the United Kingdom, with Edinburgh, the capital of Scotland. It passes through and near North London, Hatfield, Welwyn Garden City, Stevenage, Baldock, Letchworth Garden City, Huntingdon, Peterborough, Grantham, Newark-on-Trent, Retford, Doncaster, Leeds, Harrogate, York, Ripon, Darlington, Durham, Gateshead, Newcastle upon Tyne, and Berwick-upon-Tweed.
It was designated by the Ministry of Transport in 1921, and for much of its route it followed various branches of the Great North Road, the main deviation being between Boroughbridge and Darlington. The course of the A1 has changed where towns or villages have been bypassed, or where new alignments take a slightly different route. Several sections of the route have been upgraded to motorway standard and designated A1(M). Between the M25 and A696 the road is part of the unsigned Euroroute E15 from Inverness to Algeciras.
This video is targeted to blind users.
Attribution:
Article text available under CC-BY-SA
Creative Commons image source in video
Trashed roc post - Hoo
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All surface features are intact with some flaking of the green paint. A metal dome on the ventilation shaft indicates this was a master post. The hatch is open. Internally this was the best preserved post in SE England (excluding Knockholt which has been restored). With the exception of the instruments, battery, generator and siren virtually everything was still in place including folding table, cupboard, shelf, chairs, metal clothes lockers with ROC uniforms hanging on the front, more uniforms inside, posters, ROC magazines, tool board, splint, maps, all telecommunications equipment, wiring, post log and a mass of other papers. As this open post was in a very vulnerable position on a main road near a sports-field I returned the next day with Victor Smith and the monitoring room was stripped, everything going to the Gravesend bunker museum. For many years the post remained open but after recent road widening the hatch is now welded shut.
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Roman Bath
Historian Mark Olly dives into a bit of history on Yorks Roman Bath pub.
''NATURE & ANOMALiES WiTHiN SHiPLEY GLEN'' (2/3) 'SPIRITUAL WARFARE & MIND CONTROL'
09tH JULY 2013..... Part 2
aN EVENiNG WALK AROUND THE MOORS, LOOKiNG AT THE SKY, TREES, ROCKS OF THE NEPHiLiM , aND ONE LiL DOG WiTH ME TALKiNG MY WAY AROUND... MiDDLE PART !!
((more info regarding area below))
''In a field near Boroughbridge huge vertical stones rise mysteriously from the morning mist. On moors above Wharfedale strange fairy-rings of standing stones peer through the heather. Enormous boulders carved with still undeciphered symbols gaze down on the modern inhabitants of Ilkley. At Thornborough in the Vale of York titanic earth mounds form rings so big that passers-by would need an aeroplane to appreciate their shape and scale. In ancient barrows on the Yorkshire Wolds our distant ancestors sleep forever. Welcome to the world of Neolithic Yorkshire, an enchanted, ritual landscape far removed from our age of motorways and malls. Welcome to the Yorkshire of the Stone Age.
They did things differently in the 'new' Stone Age, or Neolithic times as the archaeologists call it. Several thousand years before Christ the place that would one day be Yorkshire had a relatively small and scattered population who had emerged from a hunter-gatherer lifestyle to take up settled agriculture and cattle rearing but with hunting still a vital part of life. The Bronze Age, when metallic tools revolutionised man's life, still lay in the future. But these New Stone Age farmers, despite the harsh lives they led, were no fools. They had a sophisticated understanding of the earth that sustained them and the heavens that sent the sun and rain they needed. And this almost intuitive knowledge and appreciation led them to begin a tradition of constructing mighty monuments that even now fill us with wonder. Over hundreds, perhaps thousands of years, from the New Stone Age to the Bronze Age, the landscape of England was scattered with enigmatic standing stones, earthworks and other curious features, mute testimony to a vanished culture. In the south, Stonehenge is the greatest memorial to these distant forbears; in Yorkshire, our heritage from the remote past is no less impressive. In fact, our three Ridings contain some of the most important sites in England's collection of prehistoric monuments. Yorkshire's heritage in this area is truly second to none.''
((taken from ~ full article at ))
New York State Senate Session - 05/06/14
New York State Senate Session - 05/06/14