View allAll Photos Tagged Trinity,
Alt.Title: String Art
Trinity Bridge by Santiago Calatrava, (1995).
Connecting Manchester and Salford across the Irwell.
This may turn into a series...depends how I get on with the other 40-odd shots I took, (amidst bewildered lunching office workers). Just wanted to get this posted before I start on any of the others.
Please...view B i g g e r on black.
Salford, UK.
20 May 2010.
The Trinity Bantams versus the Amherst Mammoths NCAA college football game Saturday, Oct. 1, 2022 in Amherst, Mass. (Damian Strohmeyer for Amherst Football Parents)
The main Trinity College building, now site of the high school, can be seen on the right.
Repository: Duke University Archives. Durham, North Carolina, USA. library.duke.edu/uarchives
Trying to locate this photo at the Duke University Archives? You’ll find it in the University Archives Photograph Collection, box 79.
Trinity bracelet , Trinity necklace, ohne Trinity ring,
Symbol Dreieck: Vergangenheit, Gegenwart und Zukunft in einem Schmuckstück vereint - so wird der Megatrend Geometrie perfekt in Szene gesetzt
Title: Trinity Place Station
Creator: City of Boston
Date: circa 1939-1951
Source: Public Works Department photograph collection, 5000.009
File name: 5000_009_1127
Rights: Copyright City of Boston
Citation: Public Works Department photograph collection, Collection 5000.009, City of Boston Archives, Boston
It seems unlikely that there was a shipmen's guild in Hull during the early years of the town's history. The Trinity House, at any rate, possesses no earlier record, other than a few deeds of property acquired later, than a document of 1369, afterwards known as the 'First Subscription'. This sets out the intention of Robert Marshall, alderman, and some fiftyfive other persons, both men and women, to found a guild in honour of the Holy Trinity. (fn. 1) The annual subscription was 2s., payable quarterly, and the affairs of the guild were to be managed by an elected Alderman who was to choose two constables and four 'discrete' men. Admission was to be regulated by the officers, and the objects were those usual to a religious guild: the provision of candles and masses, and attendance at funerals of members. A member incapacitated by sickness was to receive 8d. a week, and if the accumulated funds of the guild were inadequate to meet this liability, provision was made for a collection from members.
One question that immediately arises is whether this can be regarded as in any sense a shipmen's guild. On the face of it, the document is merely the foundation deed of a religious guild of the normal pattern. Apart from the dedication to the Holy Trinity, which shared with St. Nicholas the especial veneration of sailors, there is nothing to link the 1369 document with the Hull shipmen. It has been suggested, however, that a group of traders or craftsmen might find it easier to unite under the cloak of a religious guild, and it has been shown that the founders of the religious guild at York which developed into the Merchant Venturers were, in fact, mercers and their wives. (fn. 2) It cannot be shown that the Hull founders were seamen. That they were substantial burgesses is suggested by the comparatively high rates of subscription and sickness benefit; but references in the document to members standing surety for one another probably refer not to trading activities, but to the payment of dues to the guild.
There is one peculiar feature of the guild: no return was made in 1389, when particulars were called for of all religious and other guilds in the country. Hull made returns of three religious guilds, those of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Corpus Christi, and St. John the Baptist. All these were founded in the same way as the Trinity Guild, by a foundation deed attested by the mayor, bailiffs, and other leading citizens, and sealed by the founding members. The inclusion of this information is an unusual feature in the returns of 1389, when most guilds simply sent a copy of their rules. It was perhaps due to the recent foundation of these guilds: the date of the foundation of St. John's guild is missing, but the others were founded in 1357 and 1358 respectively. (fn. 3) As the guild returns are notoriously incomplete, the omission of the Trinity Guild does not imply that it had ceased to exist in 1389. Indeed, the 'Second Subscription' of 1398 refers to 'the brothers and sisters who founded the guild and have continued it up to now'.
The deed later known as the Second Subscription is of the same form as the earlier one, witnessed by the mayor, bailiffs, chamberlains, and others. (fn. 4) Apart from the reduction of the annual subscription to 1s., the main purport of the document seems to have been to clarify the rules laid down in 1369. The Alderman was now to appoint two stewards, and these three were to keep the charters, money, and jewels of the guild, to distribute benefits to members, and to lend to members on approved security. The Alderman and stewards were also to choose four members without whose assent they themselves could not act. Refusal to accept office was punishable by fine—6s. 8d. for an Alderman, half that amount for a steward. Disputes between members were to be settled by the Alderman, and not referred to the borough courts. The rules concerning candles, masses, and funerals were modified, and in particular a trental of masses for deceased members provided for in 1369 was omitted. Members who died in poverty were to be buried at the expense of the guild, but it is noticeable that the provisions of 1369 for the support of impoverished members were dropped. Thus two of the more expensive of the earlier provisions disappeared. The terms of this deed were to be read over every year, apparently at the election of the Alderman. It is likely that they were also read to new members, for the deed served as a list of members, beginning with those whose names appear in the 1369 and 1398 deeds. In all, the names of 257 members are recorded. Some of them must have been shipmen, but there were many others, including priests, canons, drapers, shearmen, and goldsmiths. The guild presumably still had no habitation, other than Holy Trinity Church where the elections could be held.
About the middle of the 15th century the guild, quite suddenly as far as can be gathered, changed its whole character. In 1456 twenty-four shipmasters, with the assent of the Vicar of Hessle, whose parish included the chapelry of Holy Trinity, and of the mayor and aldermen of the town, agreed to found a perpetual chantry in Holy Trinity Church. To pay for this they agreed to give the money accruing to them by way of 'lowage and stowage'; the money was to be paid to two Aldermen to be elected yearly on Trinity Sunday, and no shipmaster was to hire any mariner, under penalty of £10, unless he agreed to pay in his lowage and stowage to the guild. (fn. 5) Lowage and stowage was a payment made to mariners for handling cargo: stowing it in the hold, loading it on deck. Towards the end of the 16th century, the term is replaced by 'primage', which was a payment on each ton of freight. (fn. 6)
This is a Grade I listed building. "Trinity house and adjoining offices and houses. Main block 1753; Guild House c1775, by Joseph Page; adjoining houses late C18 and early C19, with late C19 and C20 alterations; adjoining offices 1844. Brick, the main block and adjoining houses with stucco fronts and ashlar dressings, the offices ashlar. Hipped and gabled slate roofs. Main block, 2 storeys; 8x7 windows. Polygonal plan with 2 internal courtyards. Plinth, quoins, moulded cornice, coped parapet and 3 large coped ridge stacks. Windows are 12-pane sashes with moulded surrounds and bracketed sills, those to the ground floor with cornices. Projecting centre with 2 windows under a 3-bay pediment with elaborate coat of arms and2 reclining allegorical figures by Jeremiah Hargrave. Below, central portal with steps and 2 engaged Doric columns carryingentablature and segmental pediment. Moulded stone doorcase with keystone, panelled recess and fielded 6-panel door. "
www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-387823-hull-trinity-h...
Trinity Terrace is a set of five beautiful and well preserved Victorian Filigree style terrace houses that are located on Royal Parade in the Melbourne suburb of Parkville. Completed in 1887, they each feature an elaborately detailed parapet and finely crafted floral cast iron lace work which is of the highest quality.
Trinitatis Kirke, Copenhagen. It was originally built in 1637-1656 in the Dutch renaissance style, by order of king Christian IV to serve the faculty and students of the University of Copenhagen. According to the king's intentions, it was to serve both religious and secular purposes, comprising in addition to the church, a library and an astronomical observatory. The baroque interior that we see today is the result of the reconstruction after the big 1727 Copenhagen fire.
History
Here at Trinity Cathedral, we are looking ahead into 2008, when we will be celebrating the 250th anniversary of Anglican worship in Pittsburgh. This year of celebration will focus on helping the diocese, the wider ecumenical community, and the city and region observe what twenty-five decades of Anglican, Protestant and Christian witness have meant to the region “as famous for God as for steel.”
Following is a brief outline of Trinity’s splendid past - for more information, please schedule a tour with one of our trained guides - contact office@trinitycathedralpgh.org
October 1787 — Land given by heirs of William Penn. Recorded in Westmoreland County, the ground was originally used by Native Americans, the French at Fort Duquesne, and British at Fort Pitt, as a burial ground. Three lots were included in deeds to the Episcopal and Presbyterian churches, including a burying ground (1.5 lots given to each group). There were originally 4,000 graves, and over 2,000 have been identified. Although the deed does not name Trinity, the trustees chosen to receive the land were the ones who were active in the creation of Trinity. John Ormsby, one of the trustees, had been recorded as a lay reader at Fort Pitt as early as 1762.
1805 — Charter given for Trinity. Until this point, although they owned the present land, they had been meeting in homes and on the second floor of the courthouse on Market Square. They had procured the services of The Rev. John Taylor as the first rector (who was also a founder of the University of Pittsburgh), and bought a triangular piece of land on Sixth Ave. and Liberty (now the site of the Wood Street subway station). The first church was octagonal and was known as “The Round Church.” Trinity soon became the center for development of parishes in the area.
1825 — The congregation had outgrown its current facilities, and the rector, The Rev. John Henry Hopkins (who was a lawyer, architect, and priest), designed a Gothic structure to be erected on the site of the present church. It was brick, covered with stucco to look like stone. There was a long chancel with galleries on both sides. A spire was built with a clock, for which subscriptions were collected from the public. Bishop William White, the first Bishop of Pennsylvania, consecrated the new Trinity Church in 1825.
1865 — The creation of the Diocese of Pittsburgh with The Rt. Rev. John Kerfoot as the first Bishop. It then included all of western Pennsylvania. In 1910, the Diocese of Erie was formed with the northwestern churches. The Bishop’s chair is carved in oak, with the seal of the Diocese of Pittsburgh in needlepoint on the cushion.
1869 — It appears that Trinity was too small for the congregations, and a new church was planned.
1872 — Completion of the new church, a stone building with spire and clock, built in the architectural style called English Gothic. The spire is 200 feet tall. Columns and piers of arches are all made of red Massillon sandstone. Interior wood is white butternut or walnut. The original church pews, of hand-carved white mahogony, are still in use. Floors are of Minton’s Encaustic tiles. The chancel ceiling is ultra-marine blue, decorated in gold. The chancel is panelled with richly carved wood.
1922 — The marble pulpit was exquisitely carved with figures of the four Evangelists interspersed with early rectors of Trinity.
1927 — Trinity Church became Trinity Cathedral. A new charter was issued, and, as a Cathedral, changes were made in the governing of the church from that of a parish church. A Cathedral is under a corporation, made up of lay and clergy delegates, who control the property. A Cathedral Chapter is responsible for the government and administration of the affairs of the church. The Bishop is the President of the corporation, and the priest in charge of the Cathedral–known as a Dean–is the Vice President. The Dean appoints assistants, known as Canons.
Trinity’s charter requires that Morning and Evening Prayer be offered daily for all time to come. This has been done faithfully, even during the 1936 flood, the 1950 snowfall, and the fire of 1967. A noon service of Holy Communion is also offered daily.
1967 — A disastrous fire swept through the church. As a result, it was decided to modernize the church. The location of the altar was changed from under the three windows at the rear of the chancel, making a free-standing altar and placing the choir and the organ to the rear. New windows replaced the side ones destroyed by the fire. A 14-foot suspended cross, made of steel, glass, and aluminum (in honor of Pittsburgh’s major industries), was installed above the new altar.
1990 — The antiphonal organ A new four-manual console was built for Trinity’s organ, and in 1991, the West division was added to the instrument (dedicated to Canon Alfred Hamer).
2003 — The Flag Project The Cathedral, in partnership with the Diocese of Pittsburgh, began the display of many world flags. These flags are symbolic of the global mission to which all the Episcopal churches of Southwestern Pennsylvania are committed.
2006 — Burial Ground renovations will begin in the summer of 2006 with surveying and finalization of design plans, with the hope of beginning stone removal, demolition, and regrading by October.
Trinity Church
Protestant Episcopal
Erected MCMXXIV
Lee Wheaton Rector
Vestry
J.D. Covert, A.F. Anderson, H.M. Marks Jr., Anderson Scott, Paul Baker, T.C. Terrell, C.G. Arnold, Dr. H.B. Trigg, B.A. Rose, W.E. Berry, A.E. Freel, F.F. Hughes
While waiting for the Amtrak Heartland Flyer to depart I took this video of a TRE train arriving into Ft. Worth station
The college was founded by Henry VIII in 1546, from the merger of two existing colleges: Michaelhouse (founded by Hervey de Stanton in 1324), and King's Hall (established by Edward II in 1317 and refounded by Edward III in 1337). At the time, Henry had been seizing church lands from abbeys and monasteries. The universities of Oxford and Cambridge, being both religious institutions and quite rich, expected to be next in line. The King duly passed an Act of Parliament that allowed him to suppress (and confiscate the property of) any college he wished. The universities used their contacts to plead with his sixth wife, Catherine Parr. The Queen persuaded her husband not to close them down, but to create a new college. The king did not want to use royal funds, so he instead combined two colleges (King's Hall and Michaelhouse) and seven hostels namely Physwick (formerly part of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge), Gregory's, Ovyng's, Catherine's, Garratt, Margaret's and Tyler's, to form Trinity.
Wikipedia
This is one of my son's and daughter's-in-law cats, Trinity. I was outside with the dogs and when I looked into the laundry room window, this is what I saw! I had to crop it a lot as you could see so much of my reflection. You can still see a bit of it under her mouth!
All rights reserved
The former Trinity College (now Trinity House) is a landmark whose three towers are visible from many approaches to the city. Designed by Charles Wilson, it was constructed in 1857 as the Free Church College. Most of the original interiors were lost when the complex was converted to condos in the 1980s. Across the broad triangular intersection is the cream-colored Park Church Tower. Part of J. T. Rochead's 1856 design, it is the other feature of the neighborhood recognizable from some distance. Alas, the church that went with the tower was razed in the late 1960s. Similar to the Tolbooth and the Tron Church at Glasgow Cross, only a steeple remains.
National Museum of Nuclear Science & History
The "gadget" is the codename given to the first atomic bomb tested. It was so called because it was not a deployable weapon and because revealing words like bomb were not used during the project for fear of espionage. It was an implosion type plutonium bomb similar in design to the Fat Man bomb used three weeks later in the attack on Nagasaki. The implosion design was very complicated, and a test was required to see if it would actually work. The gadget was tested at the Trinity Site near Alamogordo, New Mexico. Initial assembly took place at McDonald Ranch House. For the test, the gadget was lifted to the top of a hundred foot tower.
J. Robert Oppenheimer made one final inspection, described in The Making of the Atomic Bomb by Richard Rhodes. "Sometime early that evening Oppenheimer climbed the tower platform to perform a final inspection. There before him crouched his handiwork. It's bandages have been removed and it was hung now with insulation wires that looped from junction box to detonator plugs that studded its dark bulk, and exterior ugly as a Caliban's . His duty was almost done."
The team of museum volunteers and staff has developed this amazing mockup of the gadget. The brass colored objects represents the detonators, with the silver colored cones representing strain gauges used to measure the expansion of the aluminum sphere determined deficiencies should the device should not work as planned.
Trinity House, Trinity Square on Tower Hill. The house was built by Samuel Wyatt in 1796 and is home to Britain's Maritime and lighthouse authority.
Upperville, Virginia
Trinity Episcopal Church was built as a gift to the parish by Paul and Rachael (Bunny) Mellon. The architect was H. Page Cross, and the church is designed after French country churches of the 12th and 13th centuries.
This is Trinity College, Oxford and is located just across the road from one of our current projects at Wadham College.
The College of the Holy and Undivided Trinity in the University of Oxford, of the foundation of Sir Thomas Pope (Knight), or Trinity College for short, is one of the constituent colleges of the University of Oxford in England. It stands on Broad Street, next door to Balliol College and Blackwells bookshop, and opposite Turl Street. It is enclosed by an iron palisade, rather than a wall, giving the college a more open and accessible appearance than many others in Oxford. The college has four major quadrangles, as well as a large lawn and gardens, which include a small area of woodland. Despite its size, the college is relatively small in terms of student numbers, with about 400 students. As of 2010, Trinity had an estimated financial endowment of £81 million.
Press L for Lightbox view
Title: Trinity College School, Port Hope (Postcard)
Accession #: 999-4-1-707
Part Of: Souvenir Photos of Port Hope
History: Trinity College School was established in Weston in 1865, and moved to Port Hope several years later. Originally it was intended to assist young men in their transistion to Trinity College at the University of Toronto. The property has endured several major fires, and has a prestigious standing in the Municipality of Port Hope and surrounding area.
CREDIT TO THE PORT HOPE ARCHIVES - FOR HIGH RESOLUTION PRINTS/SCANS PLEASE CONTACT US AT archives@porthope.ca
The Trinity River is the longest tributary of the Klamath River, approximately 165 miles (266 km) long, in northwestern California in the United States. It drains an area of the Coast Ranges, including the southern Klamath Mountains, northwest of the Sacramento Valley. Designated a National Wild and Scenic River, along most of its course the Trinity flows swiftly through tight canyons and mountain meadows.
It rises in northeastern Trinity County, in the Shasta-Trinity National Forest along the east side of the Scott Mountains, a subrange of the Klamath Mountains. It flows south-southwest along the west side of the Trinity Mountains into Trinity Lake (20 miles (32 km) long) formed on the river by the Trinity Dam, then immediately into the smaller Lewiston Lake, formed by the Lewiston Dam at Lewiston. From the reservoir it flows generally west-northwest past Weaverville and along the southern side of the Trinity Alps. It receives the New River from the north at Burnt Ranch and the South Fork Trinity River from the south along the Humboldt-Trinity county line. From the confluence with the South Fork it flows generally north-northwest through the Hoopa Valley Indian Reservation and joins the Klamath from the south in northern Humboldt County at Weitchpec, approximately 20 miles (32 km) from the Pacific coast. Both Trinity Lake and Lake Lewiston are within Whiskeytown-Shasta-Trinity National Recreation Area.
The river has been the scene of placer gold mining, including large-scale hydraulic mining, since the days of the California Gold Rush. The river's swift current make it a popular destination for whitewater rafting and kayaking. The creation of the Central Valley Project in the 1960s and the construction of Trinity Dam and Lewiston Dam diverted most of the Trinity's water to the Sacramento Valley, but a minimum annual flow has since been established.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trinity_River_(California)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_Creative_Commons_...
Working out the coreography before the High Mass on Trinity Sunday at Holy Trinity, Reading. Holy Trinity, a brick box of the 1830s was lavishly furnished by Canon Brian Brindley in the 70s and 80s, mostly with furnishings ejected from other churches. The rood screen behind the high altar was designed by A W N Pugin for St Chad's Cathedral in Birmingham.
The 43 miles from Lewiston to Pigeon Point - the clear, cold section of the river - is world famous for its fly fishing. Paddlers enjoy the narrow valley with Ponderosa Pine, Douglas fir, Oaks and Madrone trees along the walls of the canyons. Looking for more excitement? The waters below Pigeon Point rage at class III-V! Whether your trip is extreme or laid back, you can swim and camp along the shores at the end of the day.
Photo by BLM.