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Lt. Gen. Donald M. Campbell Jr., U.S. Army Europe Commander, (Right) shakes hands with Pvt. 2 Andrew Watts during a multinational wing exchange on June 12, 2014, at Adazi Training Area, Latvia. This multinational event involved Latvian, Canadian, and American paratroopers. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by: Staff Sgt. Brett Miller, 116 Public Affairs Detachment/ Released)

When I snapped these pictures a couple of years ago, the Dalkeith Corn Exchange was in a sorry state and the restoration seemed like it may not happen. As the work nears completion now, everyone interested in Dalkeith’s restoration and its history is looking forward to seeing the work finished and the new premises for Dalkeith History Society.

 

I’ve been doing a bit of research on the opening of the Corn Exchange. Here is a very brief set of details.

 

THE OPENING OF THE DALKEITH CORN EXCHANGE

 

At around 11:30 am on 10 August 1854, the new market place at Dalkeith Corn Exchange was opened by the sale of a single parcel of oats belonging to Mr John Hunter, Oxenford Mains. It was bought by Mr George Watson on behalf of the Duke of Buccleuch. It weighed 12 st. 11 lbs and sold at 57s 4d per qr. Mr Hunter had been given the privilege of the first sale as he had been the farmer who had been longest in attending the market.

 

A fuller account of the proceedings surrounding the opening of this building is available on Dalkeith: Historic Town.

 

www.facebook.com/groups/398465947021162/

 

Taken at Exchange Place, Jersey City NJ

Just another exchange... I like this shot because you can see down the track in the background and get an idea of the lead on the other runners, although the inside lane is shorter.

Peak Rail - Rowsley to Matlock, Derbyshire, UK.

Date: c.1966

 

Ref: IN18-026 CL1004

Ricoh GXR + Noctilux F1.0

The Merchants' Exchange Building, a national landmark in Philadelphia (1834). In 1831, a group of Philadelphia merchants, including Stephen Girard and Robert Ralston, formed the Philadelphia Exchange Company. They picked a location on Dock, Walnut and 3rd Streets because of its proximity to the Delaware River and the Philadelphia banking institutions. William Strickland won the contest to design the building against eight other architects. The exterior of the building was completed in marble, and merchant John Ross donated two lion statues that resembled those in the tomb of Pope Clement XII at St. Peter's in Rome. When it was completed, the Merchants' Exchange became the center of commerce in the city. It was also the home to the United States Post Office and the Philadelphia Board of Trade. It was superseded by the Philadelphia Stock Exchange in 1875.

 

Local Accession Number: 06_11_000746

Title: Exchange Bank

Statement of responsibility: P. B. Greene, photographer

Creator/Contributor: Greene, P. B. (Plymon B.), -1892 (photographer)

Genre: Stereographs; Photographic prints

Date issued: 1871-1920 (approximate)

Physical description: 1 photographic print on stereo card : stereograph ; 9 x 18 cm.

General notes: Title from handwritten text on verso.; Part of series: Views in Chicago & vicinity before and after the fire.

Date notes: Date supplied by cataloger based on the date of the Great Chicago Fire: Oct. 8-10, 1871.

Subjects: Banks; Fires; Ruins; Great Fire, Chicago, Ill., 1871

Collection: Stereographs

Location: Boston Public Library, Print Department

Rights: No known copyright restrictions.

Cotton Exchange Building, 608 N. St. Paul St. Dallas, Texas. Photo taken sometime in 1978.

 

Status: Gone

 

This building is not the first Cotton Exchange building in Dallas. The first one was over near the corner of Akard and Wood streets.

The station originally opened as Tithebarn Street railway station on 13 May 1850, as the terminus of the Liverpool, Crosby and Southport Railway, Liverpool and Bury Railway and Liverpool, Ormskirk and Preston Railway, replacing an earlier station at Great Howard Street nearby.

The station was extensively rebuilt and enlarged between 1886 and 1888, being renamed Liverpool Exchange on 2 July 1888. Its site expanded from the original location to cover Clarke's Basin (the original end of the Leeds-Liverpool Canal). The station then became the Liverpool terminus of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway and was also the terminus of the LYR's Liverpool to Manchester line. Under four extremely long roofs lay ten platforms, providing long distance services to destinations such as Manchester Victoria, Blackpool North , The Lake District, Whitehaven , Glasgow Central , Bradford Exchange and Leeds Central.

Liverpool Exchange closed on 30 April 1977. The replacement Moorfields station opened the following Monday, 2nd May .

A drawing showing the original concept for Exchange Park. I think only the Exchange Bank and Braniff buildings on the left were actually built. The Y shaped building in the middle was supposed to be a 1000 room luxury hotel. The two buildings on the right were a medical center.

 

This is from an ad that appeared in the November 1960 issue of Dallas magazine. Besides the bank and Braniff building, it says a Mickey Mantle Bowling Center is already in use. And the La Tunisia restaurant.

south side, looking west

 

Date: c.1954

 

Ref: TC/Ph/10/14/7/3

Photos from Day One of Scala eXchange 2011 at Skills Matter eXchange. Speaking - Martin Odersky.

Nice 1950s utilitarian staircase

An exchange for my our new crew member: EKAS!

Hope you like it mate.

 

- Dash

Didn`t know what to do with bckground... Left it this way

A student in a wheelchair calling with mobile phone

 

(c) Markus Lutter, ESN Bochum

Photos can be used by Sections and members of ESN (Erasmus Student Network) to promote or illustrate exchange ability and Social Erasmus

An artist's impression of the Graffiti Exchange building, in the southern Chinese city of Guangzhou, that is causing supreme unease amongst local writers, even though only the letter 'O' is currently legible.

 

Some commentators believe that the voids in the building just provide a quick line of defence for the Chinese air force, to defend against foreign bombers. Others think that the design is Inspired by the ancient graffiti on the great wall of China, a symbol of love and piece in Chinese society (see www.flickr.com/photos/pranksy/6731321035/ ).

 

Back in Beijing, construction of the building is being monitored closely by the ruling crew, who have threatened that the design may need to be altered to reference a much more populist US artistic phenomenology - along the lines of 'OBEY'.

 

Whatever the intentions of the architect, there is no doubt that the Graffiti Exchange building will change the face of Guangzhou, forever.

 

With thanks to Jerry Gunner.

 

Alan, Prank Sky Media, Hackney, London

    

The Corn Exchange is a commercial building in the St Catherine Street, Cupar, Fife, Scotland. The structure, which is now used as a community events venue, is a Category B listed building.

 

In the late-1850s, a group of local businessmen decided to form a private company, known as the "Cupar Corn Exchange Company", to finance and commission a corn exchange for the town. One of the early subscribers, in September 1959, was the Lord Chancellor, John Campbell, 1st Baron Campbell. The site they selected was on the corner of St Catherine Street and Castlehill.

The foundation stone for the new building was laid in August 1861. It was designed by Campbell Douglas in the Gothic Revival style, built in rubble masonry at a cost of £4,000 and was completed in 1862.

The design involved a four-stage tower facing onto St Catherine Street. The first stage featured a square headed doorway set in an arched recess flanked by cast iron lanterns, the second stage involved a French door and a balcony and the third stage involved a casement window with ogee-shaped carvings above, while the fourth stage involved a pair of mullioned windows. The tower was surmounted by a spire with lucarnes. The Castlehill elevation, which extended back for seven bays, was built in a plainer style and was fenestrated with small square windows on the ground floor and with dormer windows at attic level. Internally, the principal room was the main hall which was 90 feet (27 m) long and 50 feet (15 m) wide. The spire, at 136 feet (41 m) high, became a dominant feature on the local skyline.

A grand concert, held under the patronage of the 1st Forfarshire Light Horse Volunteer Corps, which had been raised in spring 1870, was held in the building on 12 July 1870. The use of the building as a corn exchange declined significantly in the wake of the Great Depression of British Agriculture in the late 19th century. Instead, it became a community events venue hosting a variety of festivals, fairs, and concerts. It was acquired by Cupar Town Council in 1961 and the dormant company, which had developed the corn exchange, was acquired, together with its books and records, by Cupar Heritage in 2016.[Wikipedia]

Exchanging the tablet as class 26 locomotive 26043 (D5343) breezes into Winchcombe station with the 15.45 Broadway-Cheltenham Racecourse (16.53) service, during the 2025 Diesel Gala on the Gloucestershire Warwickshire Railway.

Returning from a 5 year overhaul this was 26043 debut and she was paired up with the Cotswold Mainline Diesel Group other locomotive for the weekend 45149.

  

26th July 2025

Telephone Exchange in Ladywood on Ladywood Road

16th February 2007

Corn Exchange Market, Leeds, UK

Telephone Exchange in Ladywood on Ladywood Road.

The newly restored Exchange Pump located in Cornhill, close to the Royal Exchange. When I last passed it was light blue and rather sad looking and a had a granite trough between the bollards.

 

Inscription on roadside (as image): "On this spot a well was first made and a house of correction built thereon by Henry Wallis, Mayor of London, in the year 1282. Nathaniel Wright Architect"

 

Inscription on pavement side (not shown): "The well was discovered much enlarged and this pump erected in the year 1799 by the contributors of the Bank of England, the East India Company, the neighbouring fire officers, together with the bankers & traders of the Ward of Cornhill"

 

Around the top are some reliefs of the badges of early fire insurance companies: Sun, Phoenix, London and Royal Exchange.

 

The "house of correction" refers to a prison that was called the Tun, built to house "night-walkers and other suspicious persons who at that time infested the City". Stocks and a pillory replaced it in 1703

 

_DS69755ah

 

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Chicago Stock Exchange, rebuilt in the Art Institute of Chicago.

 

Michigan Ave/Millennium Park | Chicago, IL

Located in the community of Batesville in Albemarle County, Virginia, the Plank Road Exchange was previously known as the Batesville Store. The right side of the building houses the area post office. I took this shot while on a drive through the western part of the county on the last mild day before the return of snow and cold temperatures.

Exchange Square, Central, Hong Kong.

 

Probably the wind direction is not the best at that time.

 

Film: Kodak E100G

The Insurance Exchange Building, formerly known as the Middough Building and the Middough Brothers Building, is a registered historic building located on Broadway in downtown Long Beach, California, USA. The eight-story Beaux Arts building was one of the largest office buildings in downtown Long Beach when it opened in 1925. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2003.

I hope to learn a lot about exchange archiving and the Microsoft Exchange server and this is the machine that will help me.

The Leeds Corn Exchange is a Victorian building which was designed by Cuthbert Brodrick and completed in 1864. The dome design was based on that of the Bourse de commerce of Paris by François-Joseph Bélanger and François Brunet, completed in 1811

 

In 1985, Speciality Shops plc won the contract to re-develop the Corn Exchange as a shopping centre. The refurbishment designed by Alsop & Lyall restored it and added staircases to allow access to the balcony and basement levels. It opened for trade in 1990. After a further restoration the Corn Exchange re-opened in November 2008 as a boutique shopping centre for independent retailers.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leeds_Corn_Exchange

exchange on calculator. Please feel free to use this image that I've created on your website or blog. If you do, I'd greatly appreciate a link back to my blog as the source: CreditDebitPro.com

 

Example: Photo by creditdebitpro

 

Thanks!

Warren Cohen

www.exchangelanguages.org/ french language learning, french language software, french learning, french lessons, french lessons online, french study, german language, german language courses

Chicago Stock Exchange, rebuilt in the Art Institute of Chicago.

 

Michigan Ave/Millennium Park | Chicago, IL

A DMU waits at Bradford Exchange in 1982

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