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In 1085 Bishop Remegius acquired a manor at Lyddington. It was rebuilt in the C14th and served as a wing of the Bishop of Lincoln’s palace. It was altered again in the C15th and early C16th. In 1547 it was seized on behalf of the king.
By 1600 it had passed to Sir Thomas Cecil who converted it into an almshouse for 12 poor ‘bedesmen’. The men had to be over 30 years old and the women over 45, free of lunacy, leprosy and the French pox. At this time it was known as the Jesus Hospital, but later became known as the Bedehouse. It was used as an almshouse until 1930.
In 1954 English Heritage took it on.
Her ear is flipped back, as always. She has pretty big ears, though she has grown into them since we got her.
We were told the horse-drawn carriage would stop at this door for the residents to enter. There is a pole outside that represents a horse hitch, though uncertain if it is original. Also intact parquet floors and a continuation of the Bradbury wallpaper theme on walls and ceiling.
Elevated view of the phantom side of the building. 1362 is actually more like a duplex building; it shares its overall footprint with 1366, a currently unoccupied, but larger, office on the north side of the building. I only wanted to build 1362, so I placed the Zetta logo into the wall that separates the buildings internally, and built a signature area where the building and rest of the landscaping/parking would be.
Panorama of the three right-side wheels of Curiosity. I like the quality of the light in these images (it almost makes it look as if the images were taken in a studio).
In early May we had a surprise overnight snowfall that blanketed our part of the world with two inches of snow that stayed on the ground for only about twelve hours.
This led to a wonderful shoot early on the morning of 8 May 2010. Here the side-by-side tracks of two animals stand, undisturbed, on a footbridge over a creek in Jay Cooke State Park. By noon that day the snow, and all memory of the tracks, had melted away.