a tour of doncaster uk vlog #33
keep subscribes coming we need loads
Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England 26th May 2015
People really look concerned.
Doncaster Railway Station, South Yorkshire, England - 2nd January, 2015
Doncaster railway station serves the town of Doncaster, in South Yorkshire, England. It is situated on the East Coast Main Line 156 miles (251 km) north of London Kings Cross, and is about five minutes walk from Doncaster town centre. The station is managed by East Coast. It is a major passenger interchange between the East Coast Main Line and Cross Country Route and local services running across the North of England. It is also the point for which East Coast services from London divide, either branching off to Leeds or continuing north to Scotland via Newcastle and the North East.
This film features footage of train movements at Doncaster Railway Station. It was shot over a 90 minute period from 09:10 to 10:40am on Friday 22nd August, 2014. To read more about Doncaster Railway Station, click here: .
In the film the following train operating companies are featured:
DB Schenker Rail (UK) - ;
East Coast - ;
Freightliner - ;
Grand Central Railways - ;
Northern Rail - ;
East Midlands Trains - ;
Southern - ;
First Hull Trains - ;
First TransPennine Express - ; and
CrossCountry Trains - .
Featured train class types are as follows:
Class 43 - ;
Class 66 - ;
Class 67 - ;
Class 70 - ;
Class 91 - ;
Class 142 - ;
Class 144 - ;
Class 158 - ;
Class 180 - ;
Class 185 - ;
Class 220 - ; and
Class 460 - .
To see other films that I have made at Doncaster station, click on the following links: / / / .
To read more about the town of Doncaster click here: .
If you liked this film there are many more like it on my YouTube channel please check out my channel and subscribe to my videos by clicking the red subscribe button.
You can also find my travel films and photography updates on the following:
Facebook: please like my Facebook page;
WordPress: please follow my blog by clicking the +Follow link;
Tumblr: please follow my blog by clicking the +Follow button; and
Blogger: please follow my blog by bookmarking the page.
You can follow my travels on Twitter @mosstraveltv or by visiting .
Tour de Yorkshire 2018 Day 1: Visit Doncaster
Highlights from Tour de Yorkshire Day 1, as Doncaster welcomed the thrilling finishes of both the ladies and gents races; crowds soaked up the sun as well as the party atmosphere in the Fan Zone, right by the finish line. What a day!
Doncaster Railway Station, South Yorkshire, England - 22nd August, 2014
Doncaster railway station serves the town of Doncaster, in South Yorkshire, England. It is situated on the East Coast Main Line 156 miles (251 km) north of London Kings Cross, and is about five minutes walk from Doncaster town centre. The station is managed by East Coast. It is a major passenger interchange between the East Coast Main Line and Cross Country Route and local services running across the North of England. It is also the point for which East Coast services from London divide, either branching off to Leeds or continuing north to Scotland via Newcastle and the North East.
This film features footage of train movements at Doncaster Railway Station. It was shot over a 90 minute period from 09:10 to 10:40am on Friday 22nd August, 2014.
In the film the following train operating companies are featured:
Colas Rail - ;
DB Schenker Rail (UK) - ;
East Coast - ;
Freightliner - ;
Grand Central Railways - ;
Great Britain Railfreight (GBRf) - ;
Northern Rail - ;
Featured train class types are as follows:
Class 43 - ;
Class 66 - ;
Class 70 - ;
Class 91 - ; and
Class 142 - .
To read more about Doncaster Railway Station click here: .
To read more about the town of Doncaster click here: .
If you liked this film there are many more like it on my YouTube channel please check out my channel and subscribe to my videos by clicking the red subscribe button.
You can also find my travel films and photography updates on the following:
Facebook: please like my Facebook page;
WordPress: please follow my blog by clicking the +Follow link;
Tumblr: please follow my blog by clicking the +Follow button; and
Blogger: please follow my blog by bookmarking the page.
You can follow my travels on Twitter @mosstraveltv or by visiting .
Visit Doncaster 2018
An historical market town, at the southern edge of Yorkshire, Doncaster is renowned for its horse racing, rich railway heritage and its wealth of Georgian and Regency architecture on the Great North Road.
Doncaster tribute, South Yorkshire, travel, tourism, hotels, museum, theatre, castle
Doncaster (/ˈdɒŋkəstər/[1] or /ˈdɒŋkæstər/) is a large market town in South Yorkshire, England. Together with its surrounding suburbs and settlements, the town forms part of the Metropolitan Borough of Doncaster, which had a mid-2016 est. population of 306,400.[2] The town itself has a population of 109,805 [3] The Doncaster Urban Area had a population of 158,141 in 2011[citation needed] and includes Doncaster and neighbouring small villages. Historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire until 1974, Doncaster is about 17 miles (30 km) north-east of Sheffield, with which it is served by an international airport, Doncaster Sheffield Airport in Finningley. The metropolitan boroughs of Barnsley, as the county town, Doncaster, and Rotherham, were created in 1974, and incorporated with the city of Sheffield into the metropolitan county of South Yorkshire.
Doncaster,
Doncaster tourism,
Doncaster tribute,
Doncaster tourist,
Doncaster travel,
Doncaster Sheffield Airport,
Doncaster castle,
Doncaster cathedral,
Doncaster church,
Doncaster hotels,
Doncaster hotel,
Doncaster South Yorkshire,
Doncaster Yorkshire,
Doncaster downtown,
Doncaster sightseeing,
Doncaster Museum and Art Gallery is the town's main museum. It opened in 1964, and explores natural history, archaeology, local history, and fine and decorative art.[37] It has a major exhibit dedicated to silverware and trophies won at Doncaster Racecourse. The museum houses the Regimental Museum of the King's Own Yorkshire Light Infantry.
The aircraft museum Aeroventure is based on the site of the former site of RAF Doncaster at Doncaster Lakeside. The Trolleybus Museum in the nearby village of Sandtoft specialises in the preservation of trolleybuses, and claims to have the largest collection of preserved trolleybuses in Europe, with over 60 examples. Markham Grange Steam Museum, in a garden centre in the nearby village of Brodsworth, features a private collection of steam engines.
Cusworth Hall is an 18th-century Grade I listed country house in Cusworth. It is open to the public and features displays documenting the history of South Yorkshire. Doncaster Mansion House features an art gallery and displays on local history.
Ashworth Barracks Museum is a military museum in Balby telling the story of the men awarded the Victoria Cross. It also houses a First World War exhibit including a 'Weekers Helmet' one of only two known to exist in the UK.
Theatre and cinemas[edit]
Cast is the new £22 million venue opened officially on Monday 2 September 2013. Cast includes a 620-seat auditorium, a flexible studio space, drama studio, dance studio, education and ancillary space, and a large foyer with a café. Its director was Kully Thiarai, formerly of the Contact Theatre, Manchester.[38]
The Doncaster Little Theatre is a 99-seat community theatre which puts on their own in-house shows including a pantomime, along with 2 films a month during the day. Hire companies also use the theatre space for their own shows.
The town has a 7 screen multiplex Vue which is currently undergoing work to be expanded.
Events and concerts take place at Doncaster Racecourse and The Dome Leisure Centre.tribute to Emma Chambers , British actress dies aged 53, Notting Hill , Vicar of Dibley,
Emma Chambers tribute,
Emma Chambers Notting Hill
Emma Chambers Vicar of Dibley,
Emma Chambers Alice Tinker
Emma Chambers Ian Dunn,,
Emma Chambers died,
Emma Chambers dies aged 53,
Emma Chambers dies,
Emma Chambers funeral,
British actress Emma Chambers has died aged 53, her agent has confirmed.
Known for playing Alice Tinker in the BBC's The Vicar of Dibley, the Doncaster-born star also had roles in Notting Hill and the TV adaptation of Martin Chuzzlewit.
Places to see in ( Doncaster - UK ) Conisbrough Castle
Places to see in ( Doncaster - UK ) Conisbrough Castle
Conisbrough Castle is a medieval fortification in Conisbrough, South Yorkshire, England. The Conisbrough Castle was initially built in the 11th century by William de Warenne, the Earl of Surrey, after the Norman conquest of England in 1066. Hamelin Plantagenet, the illegitimate, parvenu son of Henry II, acquired the property by marriage in the late 12th century. Hamelin and his son William rebuilt the Conisbrough Castle in stone, including its prominent 28-metre (92 ft)-high keep. The Conisbrough Castle remained in the family line into the 14th century, despite being seized several times by the Crown. The fortification was then given to Edmund of Langley, passing back into royal ownership in 1461.
Conisbrough fell into ruin, its outer wall badly affected by subsidence, and was given to the Carey family in the 16th century. Its derelict state prevented it from involvement in the English Civil War of the 17th century and the remains were bought by the Duke of Leeds in 1737. Sir Walter Scott used the location for his 1819 novel Ivanhoe and by the end of the 19th century the ruins had become a tourist attraction, despite the increasing industrial character of the area.
The state took over the management of the property in 1950, but by the 1980s the visitor facilities were felt to be unsuitable, leading to a three-way partnership being created between the local council, the state agency English Heritage and a local charitable trust to develop the Conisbrough Castle . The keep was re-roofed and re-floored in the 1990s with the help of European Union funding. English Heritage took over control of the castle in 2008 and continue to operate the property as a tourist attraction.
The Conisbrough Castle is made up of an inner and an outer bailey, the former surrounded by a stone curtain wall defended by six mural towers and the Conisbrough Castle keep. The inner bailey would have included a hall, solar, chapel and other service buildings of which only the foundations survive. The design of Conisbrough's keep is unique in England, and the historians Oliver Creighton and Stephen Johnson consider it an architectural gem and one of the finest examples of late Norman defensive architecture. The keep comprises a circular central tower with six massive buttresses; its four floors would have included a main chamber and a private chamber for the lord above it. Although militarily weak, the design would have been a powerful symbol of Hamelin Plantagenet's new social status as a major lord.
( Doncaster - UK) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Doncaster . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Doncaster - UK
Join us for more :
Places to see in ( Yorkshire - UK ) Cusworth Hall
Places to see in ( Yorkshire - UK ) Cusworth Hall
Cusworth Hall is an 18th-century Grade I listed country house in Cusworth, near Doncaster, South Yorkshire in the north of England. Set in the landscaped parklands of Cusworth Park, Cusworth Hall is a good example of a Georgian country house. Cusworth Hall is now a country house museum. The house is constructed of ashlar with slate roofs. The rectangular 6 x 5 bay plan main block is linked to 5 x 2 bay service wings.
The Wrightson family had held the lordship of Cusworth since 1669. The present house was built in 1740-1745 by George Platt for William Wrightson to replace a previous house and was further altered in 1749-1753 by James Paine. On William's death in 1760 the property passed to his daughter Isabella, who had married John Battie, who took the additional name of Wrightson in 1766. He employed the landscape designer Richard Woods to remodel the park. Woods was one of a group of respected landscape designers working across the country during the 18th century and Cusworth was one of his most important commissions in South Yorkshire, another being at Cannon Hall. Woods created a park of 250 acres with a hanging and a serpentine river consisting of three lakes embellished with decorative features such as the Rock Arch and the Cascade.
Cusworth Estate Cusworth was first mentioned as ‘Cuzeuuorde’ in the domesday survey of 1086 but there has been a settlement here for centuries dating back to the Anglo-Saxon period. Many different families had held the lands and manor but they did not always live at Cusworth.
‘Old Hall’ A large house is first mentioned in 1327. Robert Wrightson bought the lands and manor of Cusworth in 1669 from Sir Christopher Wray. The first surviving map of Cusworth is that of Joseph Dickinson’s 1719 plan which shows the hall and gardens covered only 1 acre with the orchards a further 2 acres. What is most significant at this time was the ‘Parke’ of some 25 acres. The ‘Old Hall’ was next to the walled gardens in the centre of Cusworth village. In 1726 the ‘Old Hall’ was expanded including altering the gardens between 1726-1735. This expanded the kitchen garden into the size and form we know today with the Bowling Green and Pavilion.
In the period 1740-1745 William Wrightson employed George Platt, a mason architect from Rotherham, to build a new hall – the current Cusworth Hall – high on a scarp slope on the Magnesian Limestone removing the Hall, and the family, from the village of Cusworth. The ‘Old Hall’ was largely demolished in the process, many components from the old building re-used in the new.
Cusworth Hall Cusworth Hall itself and its outbuildings are at the centre of the park enjoying ‘prospect’ over the town of Doncaster. The Grade I-listed eighteenth century hall was designed by George Platt in the Palladian style. Cusworth Hall is handsome, well proportioned, with wings consisting of a stable block and great kitchen. Later additions by James Paine include a chapel and library. It has decorative outbuildings including a Brew House, Stable Block and Lodge. In addition it has a decorative garden called Lady Isabella’s Garden on the west side adjacent to the chapel. On its eastern flank the stable block and gardeners' bothy. Attached to the bothy is a decorative iron enclosure known as the Peacock Pen.
Cusworth Park Cusworth Park is an historic designed landscape with a Grade II listing in the English Heritage Register of Parks and Gardens. It was designed and created by the nationally known landscape architect Richard Woods to ‘improve’ the park in the style made famous by Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown now termed ‘The English Landscape Park’. Work started in 1761 laying out the ‘grounds and the serpentine river’.
( Yorkshire - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Yorkshire . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Yorkshire - UK
Join us for more :
The Doncaster Minster
That was my project for collage wish you enjoy it
The Air Up There - Askern, Doncaster
Ariel Footage of the village of Askern Just outside Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England.
Music by
Danosongs - I'm gonna go
Brevonart Gallery Doncaster
Established in 2007, BrevonArt Gallery in Doncaster represents a variety of carefully selected contemporary artists from across the UK and abroad.
The American Civil War comes to the UK (Doncaster South Yorkshire)
620,000 Deaths in the American civil war that lasted from 1861-1865 between the Union and Confederates, This re-enactment was in Doncaster South Yorkshire England on a fine summers day.
Doncaster Steam and Vintage Rally 2016
Classic cars, miniature steam, stalls, and displays of various sorts were featured at this reasonably popular show.
A Mining Statue for Doncaster
We are fundraising to get a statue in Doncaster's town centre which celebrates our proud mining heritage.
To pledge your support go to: doncastersminingstatue.org.uk
First visit to Denison House for Doncaster LNER Heritage Centre
We see here the first visit by representatives of the Doncaster P2 Locomotive Trust to Denison House, the 19th century office block of the Doncaster Plant Works. The plan is to create a Doncaster LNER Heritage Centre on the site, featuring a display of historical artifacts and a workshop in which a replica LNER Class P2 2-8-2 locomotive can be built. 23rd July, 2014.
Donations can be sent to -
Doncaster P2 Locomotive Trust, c/o TAG's Modelshop Ltd., 19-21 Netherhall Road, Doncaster, DN1 2PH, UK
Doncaster's new Central Library and Museum
This fantastic video shows you what the new Central Library and Museum will look like.
Places to see in ( Bawtry - UK )
Places to see in ( Bawtry - UK )
Bawtry is a small market town and civil parish which lies at the point where the western branch of the Roman road Ermine Street crosses the River Idle in the Metropolitan Borough of Doncaster in South Yorkshire, England and met the Great North Road. Nearby towns include Gainsborough to the east, Retford south south-east, Worksop to the south-west and Doncaster to the north-west. Historically within the West Riding of Yorkshire.
Bawtry is located in the metropolitan borough of Doncaster on the border with Nottinghamshire, and is situated between Bircotes and Misson at the conjunction of the A614, A631 and A638 roads. The present A638 was for centuries the Great North Road, and in the 20th century the town was a notorious bottleneck, until it was bypassed in 1965. The county boundary with Nottinghamshire runs just to the south of the town and for this reason the southernmost house on the Great North Road is named 'Number One Yorkshire'.
The town's former prosperity was based on its communications, the River Idle in the days when it was a port, the Great North Road in the coaching era, and the Great Northern Railway.
Bawtry has a school called Bawtry Mayflower School named after the ship Mayflower, which took William Bradford, leader of the Pilgrims, to the Americas, settling the first Plymouth Colony. Bradford lived at Austerfield, close to Bawtry. The White Hart in Swan Street is the oldest surviving pub in Bawtry dating back to 1689. The older Swan Inn, also in Swan Street, is still intact, but converted to other uses.
South Parade is a terrace of Georgian houses. The Market Hill and High Street contain other buildings of that period, interspersed with more recent developments. The Courtyard in Bawtry is a modern development hosting a variety of shops and businesses. The entire development was designed by Graham Smith Design, who went on to win the Green Apple Awards 2005 in recognition of the efforts to preserve and enhance the heritage of Bawtry.
( Bawtry - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Bawtry . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Bawtry - UK
Join us for more :
Business opportunities in DONCASTER South Yorkshire England now
CLICK HERE Business opportunities in DONCASTER South Yorkshire England now
Cusworth Hall and Park
Short aerial film of Cusworth Hall and Park, taken in late August 2015.
Filming, Flying, Editing by Overland