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This nice lady in the middle helped us out to find our way to the black cat delivery service. She was a legend - but couldn't say 'loch'.
The charitable trust for education in Mumbai was established in order to provide educational opportunities for underprivileged children in the city. The trust provides financial assistance to children from low-income families so that they can attend private schools. The trust also funds scholarships for students who wish to pursue higher education. In addition to financial assistance, the trust also provides mentorship and guidance to children in order to help them succeed in their studies. For more information, you can visit the website: www.rset.edu.in/
A Memorial Flight and War Time Exhibition organised by Frinton & Walton Heritage Trust held on the greensward, Esplanade, Frinton-on-Sea .
A Spitfire from the RAF's Battle of Britain Memorial Flight was due to carry out a flypast to Pilot Officer Gerard Maffett , who was killed bailing out of his fighter aircraft in WWII at Walton on the Naze Essex.
Unfortunately, due to the weather conditions the Spitfire was grounded.
Charlecote Park, Warwickshire.
The National Trust,
Forecourt and steps to the Cedar Lawn.
Lead Statues of a Shepherd & Shepherdess, 1718.
By Edward Hurst for George Lucy.
Each is Grade ll listed.
An almost life-size statue of a shepherdess in bodice and short skirt, holding a crook and a lamb, leaning against a bough.
An almost life-size statue of a shepherd in a short tunic and wide-brimmed hat, with a dog and flute, leaning against a bough.
The garden walls, steps, gates and gate piers. C16, C18 & C19 are Grade ll* listed.
Charlecote lies on the banks of the Avon between Warwick and Stratford. A grand Tudor house surrounded by a deer park and formal gardens, it is still the home of the Fairfax Lucy family.
There have been Lucys living at Charlecote since the 12th century. Wealthy country gentry. their income came primarily from land, occasionally augmented by fortuitous marriages.
Grand Canyon Trust volunteer trip to North Leupp Family Farms, to prepare for the annual planting of crops, 2009.
a collage i made from found items in a magazine, a felt tip pen and a stencil, and construction paper
To view more images, of Hailes Abbey & Church click "here"
From the achieves, reprocessed using Photoshop CC 2025
I would be most grateful if you would refrain from inserting images, and/or group invites!
Hailes Abbey was founded in 1245 or 1246 by Richard, Earl of Cornwall, called "King of the Romans" and the younger brother of King Henry III of England. Richard founded the abbey to thank God after he had survived a shipwreck. Richard had been granted the manor of Hailes by King Henry, and settled it with Cistercian monks from Beaulieu Abbey in Hampshire. The great Cistercian abbey was entirely built in a single campaign in 1277, and was consecrated in a royal ceremony that included the King and Queen and 15 bishops.
Hailes Abbey became a site of pilgrimage after Richard's son Edmund donated to the Cistercian community a phial of the Holy Blood, purchased in Germany, in 1270. Such a relic of the Crucifixion was a considerable magnet for pilgrimage. From the proceeds, the monks of Hailes were able to rebuild the Abbey on a magnificent scale. One Abbot of Hailes was executed as a rebel after the Battle of Bramham Moor, in 1408. Though King Henry VIII's commissioners declared the famous relic to be nothing but the blood of a duck, regularly renewed, and though the Abbot Stephen Sagar admitted that the Holy Blood was a fake in hope of saving the Abbey, Hailes Abbey was one of the last religious institutions to acquiesce following the Dissolution Act of 1536. The Abbot and his monks finally surrendered their abbey to Henry's commissioners on Christmas Eve 1539. After the Dissolution, the west range consisting of the Abbot's own apartments was converted into a house and was home to the Tracy family in the seventeenth century, but these buildings were later demolished and now all that remains are a few low arches in a meadow with outlines in the grass. Surviving remains include the small church for the disappeared parish, with unrestored medieval wall-paintings. The abbey is owned by the National Trust and managed by English Heritage.
Hailes Church. Across the road from Hailes Abbey in Gloucestershire is Hailes Church, a small country chapel that predates its more famous neighbor by a half-century. The 12th-century church is small and charming and contains some magnificent 13th-century wall paintings of saints, coats of arms, and hunting scenes. The early history of Hailes Church is obscure, but it is at least known to date from the 12th century. Two different sources from this period mention a church in Hailes, though it is not known whether they all refer to the same church. In 1114, William de Tancarville is recorded as giving Hailes Church to the monastery of St. Georges-de-Boscherville near Rouen in France. The Tancarvilles were Chamberlains of Normandy and had their castle on the Seine upriver from Le Havre. They also seem to have been Chamberlains of England and to have owned the manor of Hailes. Hailes Church is also mentioned in the records of nearby Winchcombe Abbey. One record provides details about a church built at Hailes between 1139 and 1151. They say that Ralph de Worcester had taken over almost the whole district and fortified a castle and built a church at Hailes, summoning the Bishop of Worcester to dedicate it. The monks of Winchcombe Abbey were alarmed at this because it might threaten their parochial rights (which had to do with charging burial dues) at Hailes and tried to prevent him. The priests of Hailes Abbey paid burial fees to Winchcombe Abbey until 1191, when the priest Simon refused to pay and entered into a dispute with the abbey. In the end, Hailes Church was formally recognized as a "full Mother and Baptismal Church." Hailes still had to pay a fee of seven shillings a year to Winchcombe until 1309, when the payment was exchanged for some lands and tithes. In 1246, Hailes Abbey was founded by the brother of King Henry III. The monastery was given to monks of the Cistercian order, whose austere rules required them to live "far from the concourse of men." The existing settlement at Hailes was therefore moved to Didbrook a few fields away. All that remained in Hailes was the parish church, which came under Hailes Abbey's jurisdiction in 1248. Hailes Church was thereafter used as the place of worship for visitors, pilgrims and abbey workmen, since the public was not allowed to use the grand church of Hailes Abbey. A monk from the abbey probably led the services at Hailes Church.
Erddig, Wrexham - 252.06ha (622.85acres) A late 17th century house, containing much of the furniture and textiles supplied for it in the 1720s, with an early 18th century formal garden. The magnificent state bedroom is decorated in the Chinese taste. An unusually rich history of master/servant relations includes a servants' hall with 18th century portraits of estate and household staff and there is a complete range of outbuildings with smithy, joiner's shop and bakery still in operation. The property was extensively restored in 1973-77 following severe mining subsidence. Given in 1973 with an extensive area of land, by Mr P.S.Yorke.
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A view across the lake from the grotto at Stourhead, a National Trust property in Wiltshire.
© Mike Broome 2017
The House that Time Forgot. With peeling paintwork and overgrown courtyards, Calke Abbey tells the story of the dramatic decline of a country house estate. The house and stables are little restored, with many abandoned areas vividly portraying a period in the 20th century when numerous country houses did not survive to tell their story. (National Trust website).
I think that one of the interesting things about this property is that it is as it was left by the owners. The last lady of the manor tried to save the place by selling some of the collection, particularly apparently from the taxidermy collections, some of the foreign birds being quite valuable, but having failed to save it, she threw her arms in the air and gave it to the NT. there are still some family apartments that are lived in, and if you visit on the right day, you can visit them too. We will probably return to walk the park and gardens. It looked very good. The geology and natural history collections are amazing, almost a complete collection of British birds and mammals. It felt a bit like snooping to be honest, as if the people had just walked out after an argument, and never came back. Worth seeing definitely, but worth going to see? Perhaps! I think they'll leave it as it is. I'm not even sure that they'll dust it.