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This 1960 Nash Metropolitan was brought in for a little color. the owner requested we paint the bottom half Gold. The two tone looks much nicer than the solid green the car had been.
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Nash Point Lighthouse was designed and built by
Joseph Nelson being completed in 1832 to mark the
hazardous sandbanks off Nash Point, overlooking
the Bristol Channel. This followed the wrecking of
the passenger steamer Frolic on these sands in 1831,
with a heavy loss of life.
Two circular towers were built, each with massive walls and
a stone gallery. The eastern, or high lighthouse being 37
metres high and the western or low lighthouse 25 metres
high. Placed 302 metres apart they provided leading lights
to indicate safe passage past the sandbanks. The high
light was painted with black and white stripes and the low
light was white. In those days both towers showed a fixed
light which was either red or white depending on the
direction from which a vessel approached. The red sector
marked the Nash Sands.
The low light was abandoned circa 1925 and the high
light was modernised and painted white. In place of the
fixed light a new first order catadioptric lens was installed
which gave a white and red group flashing, this was
removed in the automation of the station and replaced
with a rotating optic. Nash Point Lighthouse was the last
manned lighthouse in Wales. It was automated in 1998
with the keepers leaving for the last time on the 5 August.
The lighthouse is now monitored and controlled from the
Planning Centre at Trinity House in Harwich, Essex.
© Trinity House is the General Lighthouse
Authority for England, Wales and the
Channel Islands.
I loved these little cars. Access to the trunk from the rear seat, continental kit, white walls, three on the tree and great mileage.
Nash Point is a headland and beach in the Monknash Coast of the Vale of Glamorgan in south Wales. It is a popular location for ramblers and hiking along the cliffs to Llantwit Major beach.
It is well known for its vast numbers of fossils.
Starkville, Mississippi's own Nash Street were musical guests during MSU Libraries' 2008 Dessert Theatre in the John Grisham Room of Mitchell Memorial Library.
Nash Point is a headland and beach in the Vale of Glamorgan in south Wales. It is a popular location for ramblers and hiking along the cliffs.
George Jagerson and his Nash at his Wisconsin Ave. home. From the Jagerson family photograph collection.
Part of a National Forest project. The Noon Columns are a series of six interpretive sculpture pieces that represent the flavour of the six main landscape areas of the Forest.
This one is at Grangewood and stands in a clearing in a newly planted woodland area. It's shape reflects the church spires well known in this part of the forest.
The works are by David Nash and are all designed with slots in them that will allow the sun to shine through them at true noon. Hence the name.
"Embracing 200 square miles of the Midlands, The National Forest is taking root in the heart of England across parts of Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Staffordshire.
From one of the country’s least wooded regions, the ambitious goal for The National Forest is to increase woodland cover to about a third of all the land within its boundary."