View allAll Photos Tagged Hatfields

Hatfield & the North: Phil Miller; at the Robin 2, Bilston, Wolverhampton. 25 September 2005

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www.richardsinclair.net

Sunrise at Hatfields Beach, Orewa, New Zealand.

Hatfield & the North: Pip Pyle; at the Robin 2, Bilston, Wolverhampton. 25 September 2005

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www.richardsinclair.net

1 March 1981: Hatfield Church

Visit to this country house

7 September 1980: West Front from garden, Hatfield House

Unique SD35 WC 2500 leads CN's Taylor-Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., local eastbound at Hatfield on March 4, 2007.

Hatfield House is a fine example of Greek Revival architecture.

Sadly it stands in disrepair after surviving over 200 years.

The plaque, which is rusting away, gives information on the history of the home and it's importance to Philadelphia history.

Northampton U3A's May outing was to Hatfield House.

www.hatfield-house.co.uk/index.asp

7 September 1980: Clock Tower Hatfield House

St Mary, Hatfield Broad Oak, Essex

 

I cycled on forestwards, and ahead of me on a hill suddenly appeared a dramatic church tower, the houses falling away below it, thickets of dark trees beyond. I climbed to a delightful village, its main street lined by grand 18th and 19th Century buildings, and a pub at each end. It reminded me of Dedham. Halfway between the pubs was the church. A magnificent building - despite it being in the Jenkins book I wasn't prepared for how splendid it is. It is just the former nave of a vast Benedictine church, bankrolled by the de Veres. The splendour of the interior is partly due to a multitude of 18th Century furnishings - there is a feel of a smaller, simpler Walpole St Peter - after which the most famous feature, the stone effigy of a de Vere as a crusading knight, comes as something of a disappointment. This is the kind of church you can't be alone in, and a couple of people I spoke to were very friendly. This was the first church of the day that I thought I really must come back to. And then I veered eastwards from the forest entering the emptiest and most remote area of Essex. No villages for miles, just hamlets, fields and the occasional farmstead.

Northampton U3A's May outing was to Hatfield House.

www.hatfield-house.co.uk/index.asp

This photo is from a visit to Hatfield Forest in June 2014. Hatfield Forest is near Bishop's Stortford, Essex, UK. It's run by the National Trust.

 

I'm currently selling prints of my work on RedBubble.

 

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A southbound express speeds through led by DVT 82223.

 

The train is in GNER livery with "East Coast" labels.

St Mary, Hatfield Broad Oak, Essex

 

I cycled on forestwards, and ahead of me on a hill suddenly appeared a dramatic church tower, the houses falling away below it, thickets of dark trees beyond. I climbed to a delightful village, its main street lined by grand 18th and 19th Century buildings, and a pub at each end. It reminded me of Dedham. Halfway between the pubs was the church. A magnificent building - despite it being in the Jenkins book I wasn't prepared for how splendid it is. It is just the former nave of a vast Benedictine church, bankrolled by the de Veres. The splendour of the interior is partly due to a multitude of 18th Century furnishings - there is a feel of a smaller, simpler Walpole St Peter - after which the most famous feature, the stone effigy of a de Vere as a crusading knight, comes as something of a disappointment. This is the kind of church you can't be alone in, and a couple of people I spoke to were very friendly. This was the first church of the day that I thought I really must come back to. And then I veered eastwards from the forest entering the emptiest and most remote area of Essex. No villages for miles, just hamlets, fields and the occasional farmstead.

The changing energy sources of Britain are shown as 66197 passes Hatfield Colliery, one of the country's last working coal mines. The train contains biomass - wood pellets - which have been shipped from Baton Rouge, Louisiana to Immingham and are making the last part of the journey by rail to Drax power station.

St Mary, Hatfield Broad Oak, Essex

 

I cycled on forestwards, and ahead of me on a hill suddenly appeared a dramatic church tower, the houses falling away below it, thickets of dark trees beyond. I climbed to a delightful village, its main street lined by grand 18th and 19th Century buildings, and a pub at each end. It reminded me of Dedham. Halfway between the pubs was the church. A magnificent building - despite it being in the Jenkins book I wasn't prepared for how splendid it is. It is just the former nave of a vast Benedictine church, bankrolled by the de Veres. The splendour of the interior is partly due to a multitude of 18th Century furnishings - there is a feel of a smaller, simpler Walpole St Peter - after which the most famous feature, the stone effigy of a de Vere as a crusading knight, comes as something of a disappointment. This is the kind of church you can't be alone in, and a couple of people I spoke to were very friendly. This was the first church of the day that I thought I really must come back to. And then I veered eastwards from the forest entering the emptiest and most remote area of Essex. No villages for miles, just hamlets, fields and the occasional farmstead.

Hatfield & the North: Phil Miller; at the Robin 2, Bilston, Wolverhampton. 25 September 2005

050925_3652.jpg

www.richardsinclair.net

Juliana Hatfield at World Cafe Live, September 10, 2008.

66429 at Hatfield Colliery loading as 6D60 12.28 Hatfield to Ratcliffe 21/08/2008 This was a Fastline service the DRS loco being on hire.

7 September 1980: South Front, Hatfield House

Train of imported coal passes the coal mine at Hatfield & Stainforth. No further comment required.!

Juliana Hatfield live at Bush Hall

08/03/2006 London, UK

 

2nd and final encore.

Portraits of Queen elizabeth Ist.

live @ W2, Den Bosch (Holland)

March 3rd 2006

St Mary, Hatfield Broad Oak, Essex

 

I cycled on forestwards, and ahead of me on a hill suddenly appeared a dramatic church tower, the houses falling away below it, thickets of dark trees beyond. I climbed to a delightful village, its main street lined by grand 18th and 19th Century buildings, and a pub at each end. It reminded me of Dedham. Halfway between the pubs was the church. A magnificent building - despite it being in the Jenkins book I wasn't prepared for how splendid it is. It is just the former nave of a vast Benedictine church, bankrolled by the de Veres. The splendour of the interior is partly due to a multitude of 18th Century furnishings - there is a feel of a smaller, simpler Walpole St Peter - after which the most famous feature, the stone effigy of a de Vere as a crusading knight, comes as something of a disappointment. This is the kind of church you can't be alone in, and a couple of people I spoke to were very friendly. This was the first church of the day that I thought I really must come back to. And then I veered eastwards from the forest entering the emptiest and most remote area of Essex. No villages for miles, just hamlets, fields and the occasional farmstead.

You can now purchase some of my images on Print, Posters & Canvas. Please visit www.photo4me.com/davewilkins1979

Hatfield Marine Science Center, Newport, bay trail, facing SSE, 11/14/2012, 12:15pm, photo by Charlie Plybon

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1929 aerial view of the University of Pretoria's Campus, Hatfield, Pretoria.

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