View allAll Photos Tagged NMM
L12 (FD66 NMM)
2016 DAF CF 330 FAS Space Cab
J.R. Marriott (Collingham) Ltd, Newark, Nottinghamshire
Buckingham, 11 January 2021
Finally finished my Commander Dante NMM mini. He was my second attempt at NMM and am pleased with how he looks.
I'll be moving onto my Sternguard squad to practice before attacking the Marneus Calgar squad!
All feedback appreciated.
Cheers Will
Daffodils in the gardens of The National Maritime Museum, Greenwich. In the background Greenwich Power Station and a route 180 bus, along with an ambulance.
Yes Flickr Greenwich is in London, but not a very helpful location guide. Don't know why I bother putting stuff on your map, This part of the town is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
East Yorkshire Alexander Dennis E40D / Enviro400 MMC YX69 NMM (916) passing through Hull bus station, 24/07/20
Taken at the Eco-museum of Scottish Mining Landscape Launch Event (April 24th 2024). Landscape walk with Matt Harding of the Botanical Society of Britain and Ireland (BSBI).
www.mining-landscapes.org/blog/notes-from-the-ecology-gui...
The National Mining Museum Scotland is based at the Lady Victoria Colliery in Newtongrange, Midlothian. The colliery opened in 1895 as a 'superpit' and closed in 1981.
The colliery is category A listed: LB14604
"The Lothian Coal Company Ltd was formed in March 1890 by the combination of Newbattle and Rosewell Collieries with the aim of building a showpiece pit. The Lady Victoria had a 1650' deep winding shaft to the Jewel Seam and was among the first in Scotland to be extensively equipped with electric plant. Steel pit props (from 1911-19) and mechanised mining were early innovations."
2011 © David White Photography. Please do not use without permission. Visited the National Mining Museum at Wakefield with grandchildren today. An excellent day out and free! TCaphouse Colliery was a working drift mine. It closed in 1985 and opened as the Yorkshire Mining Museum in 1988 and as the National Mining museum in 1995. Visitors are able to descend 140 metres, wear helmets and carry lamps in order to see how mines operated from the late 1700s to the present day. See www.ncm.org.uk/. Unfortunately, but for reasons of safety, photos cannot be taken underground!