View allAll Photos Tagged Trinity,
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
How bizarre to find a three-way bridge in the middle of a town with no apparent reason for it! This unusual and possibly unique structure was built between 1360 and 1390. It stands at the point where the River Welland divided into two streams. One led past the abbey at the water gate on the south side of the abbey site and drained into the River Nene. The main branch of the Welland meanwhile carried on northwards towards Spalding. These waterways were eventually arched over, and now serve as sewers. The ancient carved figure, which appears to be wearing a crown, is on one of the three arches to Trinity Bridge at Crowland in the Lincolnshire Fens. Its identity is unknown, but it is possible that the figure, which appears to be wearing a crown, came from the nearby abbey.
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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Trinity is a fictional character in The Matrix franchise. She was portrayed by Carrie-Anne Moss in the films.
Here is our take on Trinity's clothing as she appears in the first film in the trilogy, The Matrix.
All clothing parts are custom tailored to fit a 1:6 Scale Phicen S23B Body which consists of a Wired Trench Coat, Coveralls, Gun Holster with Belt and a Pair of Boots made from High Gloss coated Patent Stretch Leather.
Head sculpt and Shades that were used is made by Kumik and re-painted by Sinag Creations.
For 1:6 Scale tailoring inquiries, you can send your requests to geewhizcustoms@gmail.com
#OneSixthTailoring
#Movie
#TheMatrix
#Trinity
#CarrieAnneMoss
#GeewhizCustoms
Holy Trinity would have been the star attraction in any other town or city, it is a majestic cruciform 15th century Perpendicular church with a tapering central tower and spire, the second of Coventry's famous 'Three Spires'. However it has always been overshadowed by larger neighbours, having been encircled by no less than three separate cathedrals through it's history, a unique distinction! Holy Trinity was founded by the monks of the adjoining priory to act as a parish church for it's lay tenants, thus it is ironic that it has long outlived the parent building.
The earliest part is the north porch, which dates from the 13th century, but the majority of the building dates from a more ambitious phase in 15th century Perpendicular style. The 15th century rebuilding has given us the present cruciform arrangement with small transepts and extra chapels on the north side giving an overall roughly rectangular footprint. These chapels were some of many in the church that served the city's separate guilds in medieval times.
The church has gone through much restoration, most notably the rebuilding of it's spire after it was blown down in a storm in 1665. The east end of the chancel was extended in 1786 (in sympathetic style) and much of the exterior was refaced in the early 19th century in then fashionable Bath stone (which clashes with the original red sandstone).
The church luckily escaped major damage during the Coventry Blitz in 1940, largely thanks to the vigilance of Canon Clitheroe and his team of firewatchers who spent a perilous night on the roof tackling incendaries. The main loss was the Victorian stained glass in the east and west windows, which were replaced with much more fetching glass in the postwar restoration.
The most recent restoration involved the uncovering of the 15th century Doom painting over the chancel arch in 2004. Hidden under blackened varnish since it's rediscovery in the early Victorian period, it has now been revealed to be one of the most complete and important medieval Last Judgement murals in the country. There is further painting contemporary with this on the exquisite nave ceiling, painted a beautiful dusty blue with large kneeling angels flanking coats of arms on every rafter.
There are only a handful of monuments and most of the furnishings date from G.G.Scott's 1850s restoration (as does the magnificent vaulted ceiling high above the crossing) but there are some notable medieval survivals in the rare stone pulpit and the brass eagle lectern, both 15th century, along with a fine set of misericords originating from the former Whitefriars monastery church. Just a few fragments of medieval glass survive in the north west chapel.
The church is happily normally open and welcoming to visitors every day.
For more detail on this church see it's entry in the new Warwickshire Churches website below:-
warwickshirechurches.weebly.com/coventry---holy-trinity.html
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_...
A crane & a pile drive are now on the site. I had thought at first the smaller equipment was a crane but when erect I see it is a pile driver..
The oldest house in Trinity, dating back to 1790 (although the tower is a later addition).
It has a rich literary past having been built by David Hunter of Blackness, whose son, Alexander, was a partner of Archibald Constable, Sir Walter Scott's publisher. Acquired in 1811 by Lord Provost Creech (publisher of the 2nd edition of Burns' poems). In 1818 Creech's trustees sold it to John Ballantyne, younger brother of Scott's partner James, who called it 'Harmony Hall.' There is a famous description of the house, garden, and Ballantyne's 'entertainments' there in Chap. 41 of Lockhart's biography of Scott.
From Wikipedia:
It is the largest college in either Oxford or Cambridge. In terms of student numbers, it is second to Homerton College, Cambridge.
In the 20th century, members of Trinity won 31 Nobel Prizes (of the 75 won by members of Cambridge University), and five Fields Medals in Mathematics (of the six awarded to members of British universities).
In the 21st century, its relative performance has declined: its members have won one Nobel Prize (out of 13 won by members of Cambridge University) and no Fields Medals (although none have been won by members of Cambridge or any other British university).
Trinity is one of Cambridge University's three royal colleges, along with King's and St John's.
Two members of the British Royal Family have studied at Trinity and been awarded degrees as a result: Prince William of Gloucester and Edinburgh, who gained an MA in 1790, and Prince Charles, who was awarded a lower second class BA in 1970. Other British Royal family members have studied there without obtaining degrees, including King Edward VII, King George VI, and Prince Henry of Gloucester.
Trinity alumni include six British prime ministers (all Tory or Whig/Liberal), British King George VI, several heads of other nations [including India's first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru], physicists Isaac Newton and Niels Bohr, philosophers Ludwig Wittgenstein and Bertrand Russell (whom it expelled before reaccepting), and Soviet spies Kim Philby, Guy Burgess, and Anthony Blunt.
Holy Trinity would have been the star attraction in any other town or city, it is a majestic cruciform 15th century Perpendicular church with a tapering central tower and spire, the second of Coventry's famous 'Three Spires'. However it has always been overshadowed by larger neighbours, having been encircled by no less than three separate cathedrals through it's history, a unique distinction! Holy Trinity was founded by the monks of the adjoining priory to act as a parish church for it's lay tenants, thus it is ironic that it has long outlived the parent building.
The earliest part is the north porch, which dates from the 13th century, but the majority of the building dates from a more ambitious phase in 15th century Perpendicular style. The 15th century rebuilding has given us the present cruciform arrangement with small transepts and extra chapels on the north side giving an overall roughly rectangular footprint. These chapels were some of many in the church that served the city's separate guilds in medieval times.
The church has gone through much restoration, most notably the rebuilding of it's spire after it was blown down in a storm in 1665. The east end of the chancel was extended in 1786 (in sympathetic style) and much of the exterior was refaced in the early 19th century in then fashionable Bath stone (which clashes with the original red sandstone).
The church luckily escaped major damage during the Coventry Blitz in 1940, largely thanks to the vigilance of Canon Clitheroe and his team of firewatchers who spent a perilous night on the roof tackling incendaries. The main loss was the Victorian stained glass in the east and west windows, which were replaced with much more fetching glass in the postwar restoration.
The most recent restoration involved the uncovering of the 15th century Doom painting over the chancel arch in 2004. Hidden under blackened varnish since it's rediscovery in the early Victorian period, it has now been revealed to be one of the most complete and important medieval Last Judgement murals in the country. There is further painting contemporary with this on the exquisite nave ceiling, painted a beautiful dusty blue with large kneeling angels flanking coats of arms on every rafter.
There are only a handful of monuments and most of the furnishings date from G.G.Scott's 1850s restoration (as does the magnificent vaulted ceiling high above the crossing) but there are some notable medieval survivals in the rare stone pulpit and the brass eagle lectern, both 15th century, along with a fine set of misericords originating from the former Whitefriars monastery church. Just a few fragments of medieval glass survive in the north west chapel.
The church is happily normally open and welcoming to visitors every day.
For more detail on this church see it's entry in the new Warwickshire Churches website below:-
warwickshirechurches.weebly.com/coventry---holy-trinity.html
This is Trinity the Bear, keeper of the Holy Trinity Church in Barrow upon Humber in Lincolnshire. Seen here keeping watch during a recent church open day. He was a little shy and didn't say much but he managed to write it all down anyway.......
Ronald Kirk Bridge (left) now a pedestrian bridge and park over the Trinity River. Named after the first African American Mayor of Dallas. Santiago Calatrava designed Margaret Hunt Hill Bridge (right), named after Dallas philanthropist from Hunt Oil family
Dallas, June 2017
Ken Feinberg meets with Irish law students at Faculty in Dublin on October 13, 2011. Hosted by Trinity College Dublin for the US-Ireland Alliance at Foster Place. Senator Ivana Bacik moderated. Ken's visited was sponsored by Arthur Cox and Cross Atlantic Capital Partners
Trinity Church Cemetery consists of three separate burial grounds associated with Trinity Church in downtown Manhattan. These burial grounds have been the final resting place for many historic figures since the Churchyard cemetery opened in 1697. A non-denominational cemetery, it is listed in the United States National Register of Historic Places and is the only remaining active cemetery in Manhattan. There are two bronze plaques at the Church of the Intercession cemetery commemorating the Battle of Fort Washington, which included some of the fiercest fighting of the Revolutionary War.