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The childhood home and favourite residence of Queen Elizabeth I. Built in 1497 by the Bishop of Ely, King Henry VII's minister John Cardinal Morton.
Students participate in a self-guided tour called a tsunami quest at the Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport. They followed clues that led them up a ramp to the top of a building where people can gather in the event of a tsunami. Oregon Sea Grant coordinates the creation of quests along the Oregon coast and publishes the educational walks in a book that people can buy. Learn more at seagrant.oregonstate.edu/education/quests (photo by Trav Williams of Broken Banjo Photography)
People participate in a self-guided tour called a tsunami quest at the Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport. They followed clues that led them up a ramp to the top of a building where people can gather in the event of a tsunami. Oregon Sea Grant coordinates the creation of quests along the Oregon coast and publishes the educational walks in a book that people can buy. Learn more at seagrant.oregonstate.edu/education/quests (photo by Trav Williams of Broken Banjo Photography)
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Hatfield House
Old Palace
The Old Palace was built in about 1485 by the Bishop of Ely, John Morton. It is one of the foremost examples of medieval brickwork in the country and originally formed a quadrangle around a central courtyard.
The remaining wing contains the Banqueting Hall, with most of its original roof timbers. Many of them are peppered with gunshot, apparently because sparrows flew in and were shot at when the building was later used as stables!
Henry VIII acquired the Palace from the Bishop of Ely in 1538 and used it as a nursery for his three children. It is with Elizabeth that the Palace is most closely associated. She had a happy childhood here, sharing in her brother Edward’s education. Circumstances changed for Elizabeth when Queen Mary came to the throne in 1553, for Mary feared that her enemies might plot to place her protestant sister on the throne. Effectively Elizabeth was kept under house arrest at Hatfield.
In 1558 Elizabeth was sitting under an oak tree in the Park when she learnt of her succession to the throne. One of her first acts was to call her trusted advisers, including William Cecil, later Lord Burghley, together for her first Council of State which was held in the Banqueting Hall of the Palace.
In 1607 King James I exchanged the Palace at Hatfield for Theobalds, the home of Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury. Robert Cecil demolished three-quarters of the original building. The remaining wing survived as the stables for Hatfield House for the next three centuries, until it was restored by the 4th Marquess in 1915.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hatfield_House
One of many Corbels supporting the original C15 roof in the Banqueting Hall.
People participate in a self-guided tour called a tsunami quest at the Hatfield Marine Science Center in Newport. They followed clues that led them up a ramp to the top of a building where people can gather in the event of a tsunami. Oregon Sea Grant coordinates the creation of quests along the Oregon coast and publishes the educational walks in a book that people can buy. Learn more at seagrant.oregonstate.edu/education/quests (photo by Trav Williams of Broken Banjo Photography)
Hatfield Forest
TL 5338 1918
Girth tbm
Sadly, Magog died in recent years, but Gog is strong and healthy. Gog and Magog were two giants of legend that fought the earliest Britons. There are two mighty oaks at Glastonbury also called Gog and Magog and their carved effigies still guard London's Guildhall.
56078 passes the loading bunker at Hatfield colliery with a Grimsby-Donny Up Decoy engineers train. 13th March 2002
Afters, Toshiba / Virgin Japan paper sleeve CD, 2011 - the world's only CD issue of this great 1980 title?