View allAll Photos Tagged Waterloo
A gloomy rainy day on the Thames.
View shows Victoria Embankment between Waterloo Bridge and Blackfriars Bridge in London, England.
Waterloo Staion - Main entrance. Despite travelling through Waterloo a number of times, this is one view I have never seen before.
A weekend visit to London. Although we did not go to the Olympics, we visited the International Food Market and took a walk by the Thames.
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Work to make the ex-Eurostar platform usable for normal suburban use.
Waterloo Village is now the remains of a formerly prosperous port on the Morris Canal in the mid 1800's. It was once restored to it's glory days by The Waterloo Foundation for the Arts. Through lack of funding and misguided uses of the village it is now a shamble of deteriorating buildings. Hopefully there will be a rebirth of interest in this historic and important part of history in the Northwestern pat of New Jersey. Photo by Mary 9-2013
Waterloo 200 celebrations, Kilmarnock's link to Waterloo is of course through Ensign Charles Ewart, born in Kilmarnock he was a Sergeant in the Scots Greys at the Battle of Waterloo and captured the Eagle (standard) of the French 45th Regiment, he was promoted to Ensign after the battle by the Prince Regent, a very rare honour.
The Union Jack Club, Waterloo
The club is an Armed Forces Club for members and veterans of the British Armed Services (and their families), including serving members of the Volunteer Reserve Forces, below commissioned rank.
The 1970s building is the second Union Jack Club on the site.
The club was founded at the start of the c20th, and formally opened in 1907 by Edward VII. Although damaged in the Second World War, the building was only demolished in 1971, replaced by the current one (holding 290 rooms) which was erected in 1972.
Waterloo Bridge looking towards The Strand with Somerset House on the right, oh and a good looking man striding south.
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Waterloo Village takes the visitor through time from a 400-year old Lenape (Delaware) Indian village to a bustling port along the once prosperous Morris Canal. This early 19th-century restored village contains a working mill complex with gristmills and sawmills, a general store, blacksmith shop and several historic houses.
Waterloo Village takes the visitor through time from a 400-year old Lenape (Delaware) Indian village to a bustling port along the once prosperous Morris Canal. This early 19th-century restored village contains a working mill complex with gristmills and sawmills, a general store, blacksmith shop and several historic houses.