Dance Floor Deluxe - The Cross Keys Malvern 18-4-2015
Dance Floor Deluxe - The Cross Keys Malvern 18-4-2015
All rights remain with the original artists
The Delray Rockets I'm Ready Willing & Able The Cross Keys Malvern
Rockabilly band The Delray Rockets play the Fats Domino classic minus piano giving it the usual Delray Rocket fuelled treatment!
Check out the new CD Album Strictly Not Fluffy
Cd is available at their gigs and purchased from the website at thedelrayrockets.com
Abandoned church / Malvern England we got in ????
#malvern #england #abandoned
Abandoned church / Malvern England we got in ????
Make sure to like and subscribe to the channel
Part 2 will be up shortly
Delray Rockets Baby Please Don't Go (cover) Beauchamp Arms Malvern
Rockabilly band The Delray Rockets rock out to the high octane number Baby Please Don't Go at the Beauchamp Arms in Malvern Worcestershire
The Cross Keys, Erith
Micky Kimber can sing really but....
Redgrave Residents Support Don't Lose The Keys
interviews of residents campaigning to save the Cross Keys pub in Redgrave.
Rough Six - Ring Of Fire
Rough Six playing the Johnny Cash classic at the Great Malvern Hotel, Worcestershire as part of ARKFest 2017 (30-04-17).
Cosy little gig without drums.
For bookings contact us through our FaceBook page @roughsixmusic
Paragliding XC from Malvern. 22/09/2012
XC flight from Malvern, 37k left the hill late and sky quite blue so some low saves,
Using ground sources to find lift,
Buzzard joined me and turned twice before getting fed up of me.
great fun.
CROSS MALVERN 700c MENS HYBRID BIKE from Argos
Hi guys!
Just a quick video to have a look at this bike a bit closer in case you're thinking of getting one. I picked this one up from Clearance Bargains in Walsall and I thought as it was such a good deal I would share it with you all. If you like what you see or you just want to check out the store please see the address details below!
Clearance Bargains Walsall
Located in: Jerome Retail Park
Address: Jerome Retail Park, Bridgeman St, Walsall WS1 3QB
Hours:
Thursday 9am–8pm
Friday 9am–8pm
Saturday 9am–7pm
Sunday 10am–4pm
Monday 9am–8pm
Tuesday 9am–8pm
Wednesday 9am–8pm
Phone: 01922 748800
The Jam DRC - Thats Entertainment
Live at The Cross Keys Malvern Friday 8th January 2010, for Amanda Mason Hammonds birthday
The Rope Pull at Callow End Music Festival 2014
Repton and Milton, Derbyshire villages by car series.
Andy's Driving videos around Derbyshire, UK :
Are you an ex-pat of Derbyshire, feeling homesick? Or perhaps you just want a clear way of giving someone directions to a location in Derbyshire or just want to show people your village. Well in this video and the many others I have made, you will be able to take a virtual drive around the streets as though you were in the driving seat. I use a dash-mounted camera, Traffic lights and heavy traffic have been edited out.
This is a journey through the Derbyshire villages of Repton and Milton.
Key points on journey :
00:08 Pinfold Lane
00:22 Right onto High Street
00:29 The Bull's Head pub on left
00:44 17th century Tudor Lodge on right
01:00 Repton village Cross.
01:05 Right down Brook End
01:11 The Boot Inn pub to right (off shot)
01:19 Brook Farm Tea Rooms and Restaurant on left side
01:22 Monsom Lane ahead
01:23 Right onto Milton Road
01:46 leaving Repton, heading for Milton
02:10 Milton Village
02:12 Main Street
02:27 Swan Inn pub on left
02:38 Right onto single file track road to Repton.
03:04 The Mount Pleasant Inn pub
03:05 Mount Pleasant Road
03:22 Pinfold Lane
03:31 Over the Brook
03:38 Right onto Main Street
04:11 Onto Willington Road (B5008) with
Repton School on right.
04:14 St Wystan's Church
04:29 Over the original route of the river Trent before it was moved !
04:39 End
--------------
This journey continues in my next video:
Willington, Findern, Littleover :
For photographs of Derbyshire visit my photographic website :
This is one of many Derbyshire Villages by car videos I have made, check out the others if you like this one.
If you have any fond memories of any of the locations featured please leave comments including time-code
To learn more about Repton, Derbyshire please visit their website :
Repton Church :
Repton School :
Photos of Repton :
Photographs of Milton, Derbyshire :
The Delray Rockets Burnin' Love Beauchamp Arms Malvern
Rockabilly band The Delray Rockets perform their revved up version of Burnin' Love at The Beauchamp Arms Malvern
Check out the new CD Album Strictly Not Fluffy
Cd is available at their gigs and purchased from the website at thedelrayrockets.com
HOW NOT TO - St. George's Day
From the very bottom of our hearts we wish you a happy St. George's Day - an *almost* official UK holiday where we celebrate unexpected sunburn, continental beer and our national dish; curry.
There's no one specific agreed way to commemorate the patron saint of our part of this sceptred isle, but then getting the English to agree on pretty much anything other than America is about as easy as trying to punch an entire swimming pool.
It's not easy being Death Metal's Gentlemen, but at least we have a semi-Scot in our ranks to force to do the odd stuff.
©2017 Eulogy Media Ltd.
talanas.org
Filmed on location at:
- NXAV Studios, Bedfordshire
Camera & Lighting by Hal & Beth Sinden for Eulogy Media Ltd.
Editing & Post Production by Hal Sinden for Eulogy Media Ltd.
TALANAS are:
Hal Sinden (vocals, guitar)
Ewan Parry (guitar, vocals)
Mark 'Duff' Duffy (bass, vocals)
Joe Butterworth (drums, vocals)
Beth Sinden (live keyboards, vocals)
With thanks to: Nick & the staff @ Escapade Fancy Dress, Alan & the family Luckett, Cardinalis Erebus.
Come undone by Thorne Hill, Performed by Arizona Storm and Thorne Hill
Malvern County Western Motorhome Show.
Haunted Malvern Hall : The Ghost of Rev. Charles Wigley (part 1)
A view of the haunted hall - Haunted by the Ghost of the Reverend Charles Meysey Wigley (1804 - 1830) died 4th October.
Clergyman of nearby St Alphege Church, son of Edmund Meysey Wigley and Anna Maria Meysey. The Ghost of Reverend Charles Wigley haunts the main staircase, after falling down them and breaking his neck.
He had just inherited Malvern Hall and a great amount of money - on the night he died he had been drinking heavily with friends to celebrate his good fortune. It seems that in a drunken state he tripped and fell to his death, breaking his neck. There is no suspicion of foul play.
It was falsely reported in the newspapers at the time that he sustained his fatal injury after falling from his horse. Not true. That was his family trying to protect his reputation and avert a scandal.
The Ghost of Reverend Charles Wigley still haunts the main staircase today - a benign Ghost, more sorrowful than scary - is said to be particularly luminescent with well defined features. He can be seen between the hours of midnight and 3am. For more details see comments.
See also :
Haunted Malvern Hall : The Ghost of Rev. Charles Wigley (part 2)
More Redgrave residents support Don't Lose The Keys
More Redgrave residents share their support for the Don't Lose The Keys campaign to save the Cross Keys pub in Redgrave, Suffolk
MALVERN HILL - Ultimate General: Civil War version .92 - Confederate Campaign #12
To see the start of the series go here -
Get the game here (Still in early access on steam)
Facebook:
Twitter:
Email: thehistoryguy25@gmail.com
The Seven Days battles ended with a tremendous roar at Malvern Hill on July 1, 1862. The contending armies collided for the final time that week on ground that gave an immense advantage to the defenders—in this case McClellan’s Army of the Potomac. With the security of the James River and the powerful United States Navy at his back, McClellan elected to stop and invite battle. The Confederates, elated by their victories but frustrated by their inability to achieve truly decisive battlefield results, obliged McClellan by attacking Malvern Hill.
The hill itself was a modest elevation about 2 ½ miles north of the James River. Its strength lay not in its height, but rather in its fields of fire. Gently sloping open fields lay in front of the Union position, forcing any Confederate attacks against the hill to travel across that barren ground. McClellan unlimbered as much artillery as he could at the crest of the hill, facing in three directions. Nearly 70,000 infantry lay in support, most of them crowded in reserve on the back side of the hill.
General Lee recognized the power of Malvern Hill. In tandem with James Longstreet, one of his top subordinates, Lee devised a plan where Confederate artillery would attempt to seize control of Malvern Hill by suppressing the Union cannon there. Lee believed his infantry could assault and carry the position if they did not have to contend with the fearsome Union batteries.
The Confederate bombardment failed, but Lee’s infantry attacked anyway, thrown into the charge after a series of misunderstandings and bungled orders. Lee himself was absent when the heaviest fighting erupted. He was away looking for any alternate route that would allow him to bypass Malvern Hill. But once the attack started, Lee threw his men into the fray. Some twenty separate brigades of Southern infantry advanced across the open ground at different times. As the Confederate leaders had feared, the Federal batteries proved dominant. Most attacks sputtered and stalled well short of the hill’s crest. Occasionally McClellan’s infantry, commanded by Fitz John Porter, George Morell, and Darius Couch, sallied forward to deliver a fatal volley or two. Pieces of Confederate divisions led by D. H. Hill, Benjamin Huger, D. R. Jones, Lafayette McLaws, Richard S. Ewell, and W. H. C. Whiting advanced at different times, always without success. General John B. Magruder organized most of the attacks.
Late in the day, a few Union brigades and some fresh artillery raced to the hilltop in support. But in fact only a small segment of the Army of the Potomac saw action at Malvern Hill. The dominance of the position enabled less than one-third of the Union army to defeat a larger chunk of the Confederate army at Malvern Hill.
As with each of the other battles during the dramatic week, darkness concluded the action. Malvern Hill had demonstrated the power and efficiency of the Union artillery in particular. Confederate leaders and soldiers alike could look back on poor command and control as the principal cause of their defeat. The casualty totals were more balanced than expected for a battle in which the outcome never was in doubt. Slightly more than 5000 Confederates fell killed and wounded, while roughly 3000 Union soldiers met a similar fate.
Today Malvern Hill is the best preserved Civil War battlefield in central or southern Virginia. Nearly unaltered in appearance since 1862, the battlefield's rural setting and extensive walking trails offer an ideal environment for visitors to study the climactic battle of the Seven Days Campaign.
Bard of Malvern TV - Trance with the Cyber Gods
This is a poem about letting go and rising up, free of the chains of banal bureacracy and corrupt governments. It is about peacefully defying the eco-suicide policies of selfish governments and the fascist governments who control their populations and dictate religions and belief systems.
It also celebrates the infamous 1992 Castlemorton free rave party where 25,000 ravers danced free under the stars for days and days. Although it had a negative impact on some of the locals being trapped in their own homes and theft etc which I strongly condemn, it was a symbol of people's desire to break free of the corrupt leaders at local and national level who govern with their own self-importance and ego-minded backhanders over policy decisions. Castlemorton festival was a true moment of Bohemian history, it was the veritable Woodstock of the nineties.
Peace Out
Fire, flame and fierce passion
Bard of Malvern
Take no bullshit, suffer no fools,
Kick ass mentality towards the corrupt junta,
Peacefully we shall build a new Cyber Eden!
Babylon shall fall!!!!!!!!
Om namah shivay
General Stonewall Jackson Gods & Generals - LifeLessons from Movies
Thomas Jonathan Stonewall Jackson
January 21, 1824(1824-01-21) May 10, 1863 (aged 39)
General Jackson's Chancellorsville Portrait, taken at a Spotsylvania County farm on April 26, 1863, seven days before his wounding at the Battle of Chancellorsville.
Nickname Stonewall, Old Jack, Old Blue Light, Tom Fool
Place of birth Clarksburg, Virginia (now West Virginia)
Place of death Guinea Station, Virginia
Place of burial Stonewall Jackson Memorial Cemetery
Lexington, Virginia
Allegiance United States Army
Confederate States Army
Years of service 184651 (USA)
186163 (CSA)
Rank Major (USA)
Lieutenant General
Commands held Stonewall Brigade
Second Corps, Army of Northern Virginia
Battles/wars Mexican-American War
American Civil War
Great Train Raid of 1861
First Battle of Bull Run (First Manassas)
Romney Expedition
Valley Campaign
Battle of Kernstown
Battle of Front Royal
Battle of Winchester (1862)
Battle of Port Republic
Seven Days Battles
Battle of Gaines' Mill
Battle of Savage's Station
Battle of White Oak Swamp
Battle of Malvern Hill
Northern Virginia Campaign
Battle of Cedar Mountain
First Battle of Rappahannock Station
Battle of Manassas Station Ops.
Second Battle of Bull Run (Second Manassas)
Battle of Chantilly
Maryland Campaign
Battle of Harpers Ferry
Battle of Antietam
Battle of Fredericksburg
Battle of Chancellorsville †
Thomas Jonathan Stonewall Jackson (January 21, 1824[1] May 10, 1863) was a Confederate general during the American Civil War, and probably the most well-known Confederate commander after General Robert E. Lee.[2] His military career includes the Valley Campaign of 1862 and his service as a corps commander in the Army of Northern Virginia under Robert E. Lee. Confederate pickets accidentally shot him at the Battle of Chancellorsville on May 2, 1863, which the general survived, albeit with the loss of an arm to amputation. However, he died of complications of pneumonia eight days later. His death was a severe setback for the Confederacy, affecting not only its military prospects, but also the morale of its army and of the general public.
Military historians consider Jackson to be one of the most gifted tactical commanders in United States history. His Valley Campaign and his envelopment of the Union Army right wing at Chancellorsville are studied worldwide even today as examples of innovative and bold leadership. He excelled as well in other battles: the First Battle of Bull Run (where he received his famous nickname Stonewall), the Second Battle of Bull Run, Antietam, and Fredericksburg. Jackson was not universally successful as a commander, however, as displayed by his weak and confused efforts during the Seven Days Battles around Richmond in 1862.