View allAll Photos Tagged Trinity,

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.

150th Anniversary Event 1866-2016 - Held at Islandbridge on Saturday 16th April 2016

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.

Sapphire Lake

 

Trailhead -- Stuart Fork

Distance --- 14.5 miles

Elevation --- 5,885 feet

Size ------ 43 acres

Depth ----- 200 feet

 

I was climbing (rock-hopping) my way up to Mirror Lake when I took this -- which is looking back toward Sapphire Lake. Most of the way to Mirror Lake there's no trail and it's brushy and rough-going in places but the view makes it well worth the effort. This trip wildflowers were abundant -- and -- here and there -- remaining winter snowpack. [Taken in Aug.] There was no one at Mirror Lake when I got there and didn't see anyone during my entire three day stay. Lots of chipmunks, though, and birds. The granite cliffs amplify sound and sometimes at night when conditions were just right ... could hear an owl, faintly, its distant call echoing up from somewhere down below. Didn't see any deer at Mirror but encountered numerous lower down (on the trail going in and out ) along the scenic Stuart Fork Drainage.

 

[Trinity Alps Wilderness -- 8-26 -04 -- Camera: Canon Elph S330.]

 

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To See Larger Size -- View on Black

 

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"People return to the wilderness for a variety of reasons ... [and] .... not everyone

can hear what the wilderness has to say ... Maybe you'll find Bigfoot ... Maybe

you'll find solitude. In any case, if you need wilderness, go to it soon."

--Wayne F. Moss [1942 - 2008]

 

[Re: "The Trinity Alps Companion" ]

 

www.amazon.com/Trinity-Alps-Companion-Wayne-Moss/dp/18932...

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Taken from the bell tower of the Holy Trinity Church in HULL, While out on a Summer outing with the F4 Photography Group. Looking at the workbench and tolls used to mainating the clock and bells , Taken using my Nikon D7100 and 18 - 105 VR kit lens 3 images then made in to this HDR using HDR FX Pro

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_...

Trinity Transportation (Durham School Services)

Wayne County, MI School Bus Roadeo 2019

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.

Taken just off Yorkey's Knob outside Cairns.

This is the First Bus which Trinity purchased in 1932.

Heading for the start of the M4 race

Holy Trinity is England's largest parish church (by area), and was founded in 1285. It did not become a parish church until 1661.

The church was restored in 1841 by H. F. Lockwood, and from 1859 to 1872 by G. G. Scott.

 

The church consists of a nave and chancel, both with aisles, transepts, crossing tower, south porch, south Chapel, and vestries. The nave has clerestory windows. It is cruciform in shape with short transepts. These were built first circa 1300, followed by the chancel, and nave some hundred years later. The tower dates from circa 1500.

 

The church is built in ashlar and brick (one of the earliest examples in England) with lead roofs. The original lead roofs were extremely thick and heavy, and had to be replaced as they were causing subsidence of the structure.

Externally, the church has buttresses, battlemented parapets and crocketted pinnacles, the nave having mostly five light windows, many of which have clear glass.

 

The crossing tower is of two stages and is topped with pinnacles, with an open work parapet. On each side there is a skeleton clock dial, the largest four faced church clock in Britain, with each face 4m in diameter. There are 15 bells.

The organ is in two cases located under the crossing tower.

 

The choir has five-bay arcades with a seven light east window by Clayton and Bell. The east end has a stone reredos from 1886, and the roof has painted panels and bosses.

To the south of the choir is the Broadly Chapel, formerly the De la Pole Chapel which is the only remaining Chantry Chapel of an original twelve in the church.

 

The nave has eight bay arcades with slender piers consisting of four round shafts with hollows between them. The clerestory has 16 triple lancets and there is a 19th-century west stained glass window of nine lights.

The interior of the church is very long at 285 feet.

 

In the early 19th century due to growing congregations a gallery was built across the west end. This was removed in the 1840s, when the pews with poppy heads were introduced. They have a range of carvings by local craftsman George Peck.

 

The font dates from circa 1380 with very fine carvings.

 

There are many memorials in the church dating from the late 14th century onwards including a brass from 1451. There is an effigy to Sir William de la Pole and his wife from the late 14th century.

 

The organ is by Forster and Andrews, incorporating pipes by Snezler. Unfortunately at the time of writing, it is in poor condition. (Mid 2016)

 

There are two south aisle stained glass windows designed by Walter Crane, good examples of early Arts & Crafts work.

 

Pic by Jenny.

Trinity Episcopal Church, built largely with funds from Paul Mellon, commenced construction in 1951 and offered its first service on September 28, 1960.

 

It was designed by NYC-based architect H. Page Cross. He also designed the Mellon mansion at Rokeby.

 

(At Rokeby, the Brick House, designed in 1941 by William Adams Delano, was vacated following Paul's first wife's death and remarriage to Bunny. They had H. Page Cross design Little Oak Spring, the much cozier farmhouse, completed in 1955, where Mrs. Mellon still lives. Cross also worked closely with her on the designs of the Mellons’ houses in New York, Antigua, and Cape Cod. Both the Cape Cod and Atigua properties have been placed on the market for sale in the last year.)

 

H. Page Cross of New York adapted the style of 12th and 13th century French country churches, using native sandstone that was quarried in Warrenton, Va.

 

As for the other key elements -

 

Robert Hanback, a master builder, made the beautiful great cross that graces the east wall. As for the imports, the spectacular stained glass windows are from the late Joep Nicholas of Holland; the ironwork is from P.A. Fiebiger, father and son, of New York City.

 

The Organ was designed by Joseph Whiteford of the Aeolian-Skinner Organ Company in Boston; there are candelabra from 16th century Austria and 18th century France, and other candlesticks from Poland, England, Spain and Colonial Virginia. The pew end carvings are the work of late and legendary Heinz Warneke and depict plants native to the countryside.

More photos of this game at maxpreps.com.

Trinity Site - site of the first nuclear explosion. It was impressive to see, and quite a privilege. There are only two open house days a year, the first Saturdays of April and October. Only about 2,500 people attended this day, so not that many people have been here. Located in such a desolate (obviously why) area and takes about 1.25 hours to get to. My heart sank when I noticed some Japanese visitors amongst the many Americans. Some of the radiated trinkets on display from the first time capsule opened at the decade mark; a pack of cigarette (ironic - die from lung cancer or radiation poisoning?) some equipment and obviously a Geiger counter. Funny; when measuring the radiation from some collected trinitite - the glass formed from desert sand - it barely registered, but when put against a common everyday glow-in-the-dark clock it ticked vigorously; means we live around more irradiatiated common items in a day-to-day life than from the blast site. In the picture with the bomb is a casing for another nuclear device, one of 120 ever made. Labeled the MK-III, this one is the same as the one dropped in Hiroshima and Nagasaki.

TRINITY AT 00.025

 

For more information or additional images, please contact 202-586-5251.

Trinity River Audubon Center Dallas Texas August 17, 2013

Trinity Medical Center

Trinity Church New York City.

DC Direct Batman from the Unmasked/Secret Identity Series. I can now say I have my old school definitive DC Comics Trinity figures.

Trinity church (Orthodox, 1900) Brezovec, Korelichsky district, Hrodno region, Belarus 2017/ Троицкая церковь, Березовец, Беларусь

Designed by George Pickering, and built in 1915, this church in Newton is a good example of the English Perpendicular school of Gothic Revival..

The pulpit of Trinitatis Kirke [Trinity Church], Copenhagen, created in 1731 by woodcarver Friederich Ehbisch (1672-1748).

 

The inscription says Jeg giver jer hyrder efter mit hjerte; de skal vogte jer med kundskab og indsigt, which is Jeremiah 3:15 I will give you pastors according to mine heart, which shall feed you with knowledge and understanding .

Trinity Church

Boston, MA

Source: 120205_024448.ORF

 

1955

MM 003171

 

Format: Silver gelatin photographic print mounted on card

 

Back row:

G. S. Brown, J. B. Vernon, J. B. Houghton, A. V. L. Hill, R. L. Simpson, A. C. Monger, C. J. Smith, A. D. Brown, I. F. Langford, J. C. Worboys, J. E. Sutherland, R. E. Creswell, S. P. Gebhardt, T. C. Murray, R. W. Smallwood, R. R. D. Watson, M. L. Hankin, R. A. Meares, W. J. Henty, P. J. Brockwell, W. J. Ewens, J. W. Brownbill, C. W. Grant, T. G. Beggs, D. G. Roberston.

 

Sixth row:

M. J. C. Moore, T. M. Thorn, R. A. Eagle, R. C. Hallowes, J. M. Starey, J. K. Nixon, H. Graham, I. F. Edwards, R. A. Smallwood, J. H. Rundle, D. W. Willshire, J. St. Q. Howells, A. B. Jones.

 

Fifth row:

R. L. Bailieu, A. A. Smithers, D. B. Mackey, A. D. Cooke, R. G. H. Morgan, R. F. Cuming, P. W. S. Milne.

 

Fourth row:

B. Newsome, J. C. Rushbrooke, J. M. Batt, P. D. Read, D. G. Eyres, M. H. Stannus, J. Warin, M. J. Cumming, A. J. Pittard, P. J. Hollingworth, D. A. E. Fawell, D. S. Beavis.

 

Third row:

G. G. de Pury, I. T. D. Sheen, R. P. C. Pockley, E. J. M. Millar, G. A. Oddie, A. R. C. Hewison, R. H. Symons, J. C. Gourlay, C. I. E. Donaldson, I. W. Jasper, J. R. Hayes, W. B. Capp, B. D. Purvis, D. C. Goss, M. J. Chryssargis, I. D. Boyd, G. R. Garrott, J. H. Wion, A. E. Stohr, A. I. Clunies-Ross.

 

Second row:

J. N. Ansett, J. Skuja, B. McC. Jones, B. F. Johnson, W. J. Clayden, C. R. Lucas, N. A. Lane (Outdoor Representative), F. S. Grimwade (Treasurer), A. M. Gibbs (Senior Student), A. J. Day (Indoor Representative), P. F. Hart, R. C. D. Casey, P. H. R. Sargeant, P. D. Curwen-Walker, F. A. Bilson, T. M. M. Long.

 

Front row:

A. W. W. Godfrey, C. P. Clarke, P. J. Hocker, W. J. Jobling, M. T. Macleod, A. W. M. Buesst, J. B. Ross-Perrier, J. L. Garrott, G. G. Brown, J. B. Paul, I. G. Nicholls, D. J. Woodbridge, G. L. Bride, H. F. Foster, A. D. Casson, T. M. Adamson, J. C. Grimwade.

 

Absent:

J. T. Bennett, P. B. Borwn, G. M. Brownbill, C. A. Eagle, R. L. Grant, F. W. Gurr, J. R. Hawkins, E. H. Morgan (Secretary), P. G. B. Nelson, J. P. Royle, T. A. H. Tyler, J. R. Worrall

Trinity College Dublin

3 photos stitched

Better large On White

Trinity College - Museum Building

Detail of the Trinity Building, Lower Manhattan, New York City

 

*** View larger: danielhopkins.com/p/i-6htRKzv ***

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Trinity Dental Arts in Trinity FL offers a wide range of cosmetic dentistry services for our patients who want to enhance the appearance of their smiles. A dental implants Trinity FL is an artificial tooth root that’s placed in your jaw. This procedure is done to hold a replacement tooth, dental bridge, or denture to replace multiple missing teeth.

 

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150th Anniversary Event 1866-2016 - Held at Islandbridge on Saturday 16th April 2016

a trinity house light ship seen in the Victoria dock in london

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.

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