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Trinity Church in the City of Boston, located in the Back Bay of Boston, Massachusetts, is a parish of the Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts. The congregation, currently standing at approximately 4,000 households, was founded in 1733
Trinity United Church
Trenholm (Now part of St Felix)
Eastern Townships, Qc, Canada
built in 1840 - 1842 as Methodist
The Granton Branch in Edinburgh survived into the 1980s, latterly serving a Texaco oil distribution depot alongside the former gasworks there.
Heading inland from the Firth of Forth in June 1979, a class 25 brings its train of empty oil tanks through Trinity Bridge station, closed in 1925 and now a private residence.
The southern part of this line served the Powderhall refuse works until recently and is still largely in situ, but this northern section of route is now a cycleway.
Ground Zero of the Trinity Test at White Sands Missile Range, New Mexico. The bomb was placed atop a 100-foot steel tower..
This is the fourth installment of the Trinity Bridge Study from Manchester a few weeks ago. Almost there with these shots now but I did want to present them together - hence throwing them out in quick succession.
Thank you all very much for your comments so far.
Technical Details
Nikon D700
50mm f1.8 lens @f8
1/125 seconds
Circular Polarizer
ISO 200
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The Library of Trinity College Dublin serves Trinity College and the University of Dublin. It is the largest library in Ireland and, as a legal deposit or "copyright library", it has rights to receive material published in the Republic of Ireland free of charge; it is also the only Irish library to hold such rights for the United Kingdom. The Library is the permanent home to the famous Book of Kells. Two of the four volumes are on public display, one opened to a major decorated page and the other to a typical page of text. The volumes and pages shown are regularly changed.[2] Members of the University of Dublin also have access to the libraries of Tallaght Hospital and the Irish School of Ecumenics, Milltown.
Holy Trinity Church, Balsham in Cambridgeshire. Another dull December Day.
Three 50mm portrait images stitched together in Photoshop and then cropped square.
Trinity College (Irish: Coláiste na Tríonóide) is the sole constituent college of the University of Dublin, a research university in Ireland. The college was founded in 1592 as the "mother" of a new university, modelled after the collegiate universities of Oxford and Cambridge, but, unlike these ancient universities, only one college was ever established; as such, the designations "Trinity College" and "University of Dublin" are usually synonymous for practical purposes. It is one of the seven ancient universities of Britain and Ireland, as well as Ireland's oldest university. (Wikipedia)
IMGP8068. - The timber octagon that sits on the tower of the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity at Ely is one of the greatest engineering feats of the Middle Ages. Completed in 1334, it weighs around 400 tons.
The cathedral was built by the Normans between 1080 and 1189, on the site of an earlier building. In 1322 the original stone tower over the main crossing collapsed. We don't know the reason.
However, this event enabled the sacrist, Alan de Walsingham, to direct the construction of a replacement. The first phase of the work, completed in 1328, included the eight massive stone columns that support tall arches that span the nave and transept, and support the octagonal base for the lantern.
The timber lantern was designed by William Hurley, the King's carpenter. It is framed by eight vertical oak posts 63ft high, each weighing 10 tons. Imagine the difficulty of raising these posts more 100ft in the air to position them on the stone base. The posts are braced by a complex framework of timber struts and curved members with a compression ring at the top, vaulted in timber above.
James Essex undertook major repairs and improved the internal support system for the lantern in the C18th, removing its flying buttresses on the exterior. These were reinstated a century later by Sir George Gilbert Scott.
Scott also restored the original outline shape of the lantern
Trinity Apse was originally part of Trinity College Kirk, built around 1460, but then carefully dismantled in 1848 to make way for Waverley Station, each piece of masonry numbered with the intention of reconstructing the kirk on another site. In the 1870s the apse was reconstructed in Chalmers Close in the Old Town as part of a new church, but in the 1960s this was demolished leaving behind just the medieval building.
For more information see Lost Edinburgh: Trinity College Church.
Trinity Church in the City of Boston, located in the Back Bay of Boston, Massachusetts & was founded in 1733 via 500px 500px.com/photo/147497931
This is a view of the chimneys, along Thomas Nevile's south range (1597) of the Trinity College Cambridge buildings surrounding Trinity Great Court, as seen from Trinity Lane. The castellated Queen's Gate (1599?), named after Elizabeth I, can be clearly seen two-thirds along the range from the nearest end*. Part of the north range of Gonville and Caius College can be seen on our left.
This shot is part of a series taken during an Olympus photowalk. The low cumulous clouds portend rain and indeed it did rain that day about 30 minutes later.
Treatment: a very minor rotation and subsequent crop followed by the application of the 'High Structure (harsh)' preset from the Silver Efex Pro 2 filter within the Google NIK Collection.
Perhaps what started the rumor about Trinity Parish being haunted had to do with the sign with its cross, smacking of gothic anti-vampirism, especially with the other cross in the background. There is something eerie about it, and I processed this by how it made me feel when I captured it in passing.
Trinity Parish, like many old churches, has a long history and the entire area of St. Augustine has its battle scars and painful memories of wars, territorial disputes, slavery and even plague. This church and its parishioners bore witness to many of the events, as it was built during slave days, and is right across the street from where slave auctions and whippings were held.
Strangely enough, The cathedral which is close by, doesn't seem to hold the feeling this building does. I've always sensed something that made me uneasy when I walked past it, but even going inside the Catholic cathedral never made me feel the same way. I have never been inside this building, and it is one of the only churches I've ever walked past in my life that made me feel like I wouldn't WANT to go in!
Processed with Analog Efex Pro
Trinity Church is the only church in the United States and the only building in Boston that has been honored as one of the "Ten Most Significant Buildings in the United States" by the American Institute of Architects
Boston, Massachusetts, USA