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University of Hertfordshire student Formula launch

Photography 2014 © Pete Stevens

  

Willow 10k Run 2018

Pic: Christopher Dean / Scantech Media Ltd

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With the rain easing off just in time, 60024 applies the power as it approaches Hatfield & Stainforth with 6m32 Preston Docks - Lindsey empty bitumen tanks. 21/10/13

Jack Hatfield and Miller time

My old school, Hatfield Travis....now the council offices.

7 September 1980: North Front Hatfield House

Uno bus Optare Solo at Hatfield.

Hatfield House (1608-11), South Front

The Hatfield-McCoy Monument in Ransom, Kentucky twist like the Tug Fork, with markers placed chronologically, representing both sides of the feud.

 

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Hatfield House, in Hertfordshire, England, was built in 1611 by Robert Cecil, Earl of Salisbury and chief minister to James I. The Cecil family have lived there ever since.

The old palace of Hatfield which stands nearby, was built in 1497 by the Bishop of Ely and later confiscated by Henry VIII.

It then became a favourite residence of his daughter, Queen Elizabeth I. After Elizabeth's death, king James gave the palace to Robert Cecil, who then built the much larger building seen above!

 

Hatfield Colliery. 3.3.2012. In rather damp and dull weather, ex BR Britannia Class 4-6-2 No 70013 'Oliver Cromwell' passes Hatfield Colliery with the 'Lincolnshire Poacher'. The loco was to fail later in Cleethorpes and the tour returned '47' hauled.

28 of these single-storey houses were built in the mid-60s by the Cockaigne Housing Group. They were an evolution of ideas negotiated by the clients, architects (Phippen, Parkes and Randall) together with sociologist, Barbara Adams. Price on completion - from £2875(1-bed) to £5940(4-bed). They look very narrow but from looking at the floor plans, I can see they go back a long way. This is how they looked when they were first built.

56113 powers through H&S with the 6M07 Roxby-Pendleton Bins, 8/7/2002

Police Constable No. 6, William Henderson, was killed whilst on duty on 14th April 1893. He was shot by 33-year-old John Gould, better known as “Horse Harry”, owner of the local “knackers’ yard”, as locals attempted to arrest him and commit him to the Clifton Asylum in York.

  

William died instantly from his injuries after he received “a blast through the heart” when he was shot at close range, and “a hole the size of a half pint glass had been made in his chest.”

 

Henderson, 37, had worked with the Middlesbrough Borough Police (as it was then known) for ten years and was well respected in the community. He was married with eight children and lived in Ruby Street in Middlesbrough.

 

Following his death, his widow, Margaret Ann Henderson returned to her family roots in West Auckland in Durham.

The 'West Garden' fountain, seen here at Hatfield House, Hertfordshire.

Hatfield Marine Science Center--Newport, Oregon

Hatfield Marine Science Center--Newport, Oregon

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