View allAll Photos Tagged George
this is what boredom and a linens and things circular drove me to while riding in the car on a road trip. I need help. Thank Terra for extra inspiration.
Fort George is a large 18th century fortress near Ardersier, to the north-east of Inverness.
www.historic-scotland.gov.uk/propertyresults/propertyover...
Photograph from the Belper News, 6th July 1917
Winson, George, Lance Corporal, 28007, “B” Company, 12th Battalion, Nottinghamshire & Derbyshire Regiment
Disembarked for service 6th October 1915
Born: Belper, Derbyshire
Enlisted: Derby
Resided: Belper, Derbyshire
Killed in action 27th June 1917
Aged 35
Son of George and Sarah Winson, of 13 Canada Street, Belper; husband of Mary Ellen Fletcher (formerly Winson), of 12 Croft Cottages, Cow Hill, Belper, Derbyshire
Commemorated on the Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial, Belgium, Panel 39 and 41
1911 Census
A coal miner hewer
Husband of Mary Ellen, and father of Thomas, Annie Maria and Ivy Ellen Winson, of 18, Canada Street, Belper, Derbyshire
Pension Records
Husband of Mary Ellen (born 21st September 1884); father of Thomas (born 4th October 1904), Annie Maria (born 29th November 1906), Ivy Ellen (born 5th April 1910), Sarah Ellen (born 1st September 1912) and Julia Winson (born 29th December 1914), of 5 Holbrook Road, Belper, Derbyshire
Later of 5 Canada Street, Belper, Derbyshire
Image © Johnston Press plc. Image created courtesy of THE BRITISH LIBRARY BOARD.
This was NOT taken by moi, but my Fancy, he rules at taking pics of the girls, a total natural if I must say so myself. This Time Machine effect is circa '92. I thought it felt like Nirvana should be on the radio and the person holding the leash should be wearing a plaid shirt...
George has been such a good bunny lately. He recently started giving little licks and kisses on the nose when I put my face near his cage or playpen. It's too sweet :)
George Street, Hintlesham, Suffolk, UK.
All photographic images are the exclusive property of Paddy Ballard. The photographs are for web browser viewing only and may not be reproduced, copied, stored, downloaded or altered in any way without prior permission.
Doesn't look the most high-tech arrangement but it was still working as it disappeared into the murk around Liverpool Bar.
Creator of Bournville and a lot more besides. From a niche in the wall of the Friend's Meeting House in Bournville, he stares out over The Green.
George W Gray
Co B, 27th Maine Infantry
Enlisted from North Berwick, at age 39, on 10 Sept 1862 and mustered in on 30 Sept. He was discharged on 20 Oct 1862 (no reason found).
He was a tailor, and lived his life in North Berwick.
Great George was rung on 24th May 2009 to mark the centenary celebrations of the University of Bristol. The nine-and-a-half ton bell is very rarely swung and when it is, it produces a deafening sound.
It is normally struck by a mechanical clock hammer on the hour. The photos here show the bell being swung by members of the University of Bristol Society of Change Ringers (UBSCR).
Co C 62nd Ohio Infantry
Enlisted as a Corporal on 5 October 1861 at age 20
Promoted to Full Sergeant 1st Class on 3 January 1865
POW on 9 April 1865
Mustered out on 11 June 1865 in Camp Chase, Ohio.
Buried in Belle Vista Cemetery, Section 3, El Dorado, Butler County, Kansas.
George Grubb Dalton, Brick Manufacturer, Builder & Contractor, Linthorpe, Middlesbrough is recorded in the London Gazette as giving Notice of Intended Dividends on the 13th November 1888. In this Notice George is listed as being at residence at Cambridge Road, Linthorpe & trading in Linthorpe, in Middlesbrough & all of Yorkshire.
On the 1900 O.S.map there were two brickworks marked in Linthorpe, Middlesbrough of which one was owned by George Grubb Dalton and the other by George Ball, owner of the Star Brick Works.