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Buckleys Holidays Blaxton Doncaster Dublin Mercedes-Benz Tourismo Reg BV19 YEY is seen parked in Belfast Titanic Quarter

Elliott James Buckley – Somniloquence

. . . And furls in colours and wanders in dreams, the creators of colony and secrecy beam you up in lasers and time presses – the seams of fabrics as reams of web and tether, held together and holding out forever in sandbags of human life….

  

artistrack.com/elliott-james-buckley-somniloquence/

OU65RFZ. Neoplan Tourliner.

Buckleys, Blaxton, Doncaster.

 

taken by Cinchel

 

Buckley is for Jeff and Tim

A trip along the coast to see a '230' on the Wrexham - Bidston line, as I had not seen one to date. Arrival at Buckley and the 2J76 arrived 12 late and is seen here crawling into the station after it's climb up the 'Little Mountain'. It would be interesting to travel on one to see how they really perform on the gradient up to Buckley in either direction!

Truthfully, he's not allowed into the kitchen when I am putting up, but I think all of the shiny, rattly tools attract his attention. Also: A half-empty box.

Buckley, ensuring things are in order. It's about the only thing Ben's cat does in the office (and, considering, that is just fine).

English postcard. Photo: Lubin.

 

American stage actress May Buckley (1875-?) became a popular film heroine with the role of 'Marguerite Moreland' in the Lubin production Paid in His Own Coin (1912). The following year she moved on to Selig, but later that year, she left the film business. Her private life was often in newspaper headlines, especially in 1901, when a man who claimed to be her husband shot at her in a hotel dining room, wounding one of her dining companions.

 

May Buckley was born as Marie Uhl in San Francisco in 1875. She was the daughter of Ernest Uhl and Marie (nee Featherston) Uhl. Her mother died during Marie's birth. Her father's friend, actor Dion Boucicault, gave her the stage name "May Buckley" when she was a child actor. May began in the theatre in the 1890s. She was active on the Broadway stage, with roles in 'Hearts are Trumps' (1900), 'Caleb West' (1900), and 'The Price of Peace' (1901). On 22 March 1901 in New York City, May Buckley was almost gunned down by Robert Hayden Moulton, whom she may or may not have been married to. Moulton fired rounds that struck theatrical manager Alex F. Dingwell and J.G. Leffingwell. Moulton was found to be under the influence of morphine poisoning and alcohol addiction and taken to Bellevue Hospital. Buckley was dining with her aunt in a restaurant and was in the company of Dingwell and Leffingwell. , She continued her Broadway career in such productions as 'A Japanese Nightingale' (1903), 'The Shepherd King' (1904), 'The Galloper '(1906), 'The Right of Way (1907), Cameo Kirby (1909-1910), Where There's a Will (1910), and The Little Damozel (1910).

 

Buckley appeared in more than twenty short silent films in 1912 and 1913. In 1912, she became a popular film heroine for the Lubin Film Company and appeared in many drama and comedy shorts. She made her screen debut with the role of Marguerite Moreland in the short drama Paid in His Own Coin (N.N., 1912) opposite John Halliday. In 1913, she moved to the Selig Film Company where she often starred opposite such stars as the handsome Arthur Johnson and Harry Myers. Her last film role was in 'The Toils of Deception' directed (Oscar Eagle, 1913). After that, she returned to the stage and was not seen on screen again. Her later Broadway credits are The Unwritten Law (1913), Pigs (1924-1925), These Days (1928), and Tell Me Pretty Maiden (1937-1938). During World War I, she was one of the organizers of the Stage Women's War Relief Association, holding benefits to raise funds for a disabled soldiers' home. In the 1920s and 1930s, she was active in the Catholic Actors' Guild. She also appeared on the London stage. May Buckley was married four times, although her second marriage is disputed. Buckley's first husband was Frank Baruch, also known as Frank Clayton or Frank Cormier; they married in 1894 and divorced in 1897. In 1899, against her contract under manager Charles Frohman, she married millionaire Wilmot H. Garlick. They separated the following year. She was possibly married to Robert Hayden Moulton, before he shot at her and wounded one of her dining companions in New York in 1901. In 1908 she married fellow actor Charles Walter Martin-Sabine, also known as Charles W. S. Martin, in Denver. They divorced in 1910. In 1912, she was sued by another actress for alienation of affections, concerning her co-star, actor John Halliday. The only known source of her death is Silent Film Necrology, Vazzana, c. 2001 which states she died in or about 1941. Another possible hit is that she died in 1962 and that she's buried under her real name "Marie H. Uhl" as the entry has no date or place of birth and the place of burial is in New Haven Connecticut not far from the New York theatre district Broadway. However, her last Broadway credit is from 1937.

 

Source: Wikipedia and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

The high point of 'Little Mountain' as the 6V41 heads through the station for the descent to Hawarden.

M6 - Killington Lake 18-8-2015. Copyright TT Truck Photos.

Important legal note.

All images are copyright and must not be re posted or water marks removed, anyone found reposting is liaIble to prosecution.

In honor of spring, thought this old image of 'spring plowing' is appropriate. Actually it is from the Buckley Old Engine Show. These are steam driven engines plowing a field.

No matter how sick I am or how rotten I feel, Buckley can't wait to sleep in bed right next to me. People say that cats are so independent...I just think you have to earn their love a bit.

 

This is an odd sort of look but sometimes he's just fascinated by the fisheye lens. He likes getting super close to it.

 

Buckley is named after Tim and Jeff Buckley.

 

The texture that was used was changed significantly but you can find a variety of textures here:

  

www.flickr.com/photos/beapierce/sets/72157601574009156/

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Keith Buckley of Every Time I Die at the ETID Charity bar, at the orlando warped tour tiki party.

the man pours quite a good SOCO and coke.

 

5d Mark ii

24-70mm f2.8 L

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ALL IMAGES © EVAN DELL PHOTOGRAPHY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Es mi novio muerto. Acéptenlo.

  

Escuchen:

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www.youtube.com/watch?v=HO0svGjVEP8&ob=av2n

  

Finally got to another location on the bucket list but it was not the planned location!

The plan was Cefn Mawr Viaduct for the Margam - Dee Marsh coils - 6M86. RTT had it 13 late at Leominster so plenty of time for a trip down the A5. As Corwen got closer the time was ticking away and in the absence of one of those 'new fangled devices' namely a smartphone with an App ,I had no idea what was happening , what I did not know , it was 59 late at Shrewsbury, so I could have got to Cefn Mawr in Daylight !!

So A sharp left at Corwen across uncharted territory , ie the A5104 would get me in position, so I thought, after the 25 minute stop at Wrexham. Foregoing the stop at Wrexham it still left 23 late meaning it got to Buckley at about 1852 - the bad news was I had given up in the darkness at 1845 ! Such is the cameraman's lot - still I did get a shot at a new ,for me, location! Happy Days...and darkening nights!

Devonshire Walk Coach Park, Carlisle

He no longer cares that he's napping on a polka-dot robe.

 

To be frank, poor old El Tub Les Magnifique has been having some difficulties lately. The three of us are going to the vet in the morning. :/ It doesn't really look good. We'll see. He has been spoiled pretty rotten his whole life, so we have that comfort.

17th and John, Capitol Hill, Seattle, WA.

All images are copyright and must not be re posted or water marks removed.

...along Highway 410 in Buckley, Wash., Dec. 17, 2008.

The former Buckley Wells signal box 10 signal (set back up & down siding to down main) at Bury which is a London Midland & Scottish Railway Company 1941 type standard dwarf signal. Sunday 13th May 1984

 

Buckley Wells signal box was located by the level crossing gates in the distance, closing on 16th March 1980 when the Manchester Victoria to Bury electric train service was diverted away from Bury Bolton Street station to the new station at Bury Interchange

 

Ref no 04953

Jan 1917

MM 002414

 

Format: Silver gelatin photographic print

 

Informal photograph of members of the 42nd Battalion, just out of the line, washing the mud off their gum boots. Identified, left to right: (standing along the brick wall) 16 Lance Corporal (L Cpl) James Frederick Buckley (wounded in action 31 July 1917 - returned to Australia for discharge on 8 April 1919); 313 L Cpl Robert Deckhardt (killed in action 12 October 1917); unidentified; possibly 3310 Private (Pte) Joseph Howard Hockings; others along the wall are unidentified. Standing in the foreground and washing their boots are: Sergeant Reid and 433 Pte David Miller (killed in action 31 July 1917). [AWM, E00117]

63rd UK Coach Rally, Blackpool 2017

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