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The evening walk around Stratton-on-the-Fosse on our first day staying in the village.
Checking out Downside Abbey after closing time, and just before sunset.
The Abbey Church of St Gregory the Great.
Grade I Listed Building
Abbey Church of St Gregory the Great, Downside Abbey
Description
In the entry for:
STRATTON-ON-THE-FOSSE FOSSE WAY
ST 65 SE (west side)
13/187
Abbey Church of St
Gregory The Great,
Downside Abbey and
School
GV
I
The address shall be amended to read:
ST 65 SE FOSSE WAY
5/187 (west side)
Abbey Church of St
Gregory The Great,
Downside Abbey
- I
and the description shall be amended to read
Abbey church and north cloister. Commenced 1873 and as yet unfinished (west front
and two bays of nave are missing). Main building periods 1872-82, c.1890, 1901-5,
1911-12, c.1923-25, 1938. Architects in date order, A M Dunn and E J Hansom,
Thomas Garner, F.A.Walters, Sir G.G.Scott. Interior fittings and furnishings by
the principal architects and Sir J N Comper. Bath stone ashlar with red plain
tile roofs, the east end chapels roofed very conspicuously in copper sheeting.
Abbey church consists of nave with blind aisles and gallery chapels to south over
north cloisters, by Sir G G Scott 1922-25 incorporating temporary west front, in
simplified early Perpendicular style. Transepts with chapels opened 1882 and base
of tower 1884, by A Dunn and E Hansom in early English style; tower finished 1938
by Scott in Somerset Perpendicular. Choir 1902-05 by Thomas Garner in early
Decorated style; east end, ambulatory and radiating chapels with large projecting
Lady Chapel opened 1888 by Dunn and Hansom in a French C13 style. Of the earliest
work by Dunn and Hansom the 2 bays transepts have a rose window to the north,
south transept with tower on south side; tower with much emphasised doorway and
with gabled canopy with figures; with Scott's addition it rises to about 166 ft,
corner buttresses, pinnacles, 3 tiers of 2-light bell-chamber windows. Eight bay
nave with triforium and clerestorey, pierced parapet, 2-light windows, rich
tracery, west end (unfinished) with triple lancets. Chancel of 7 bays, with tall
transomed clerestory windows, pierced parapets, flying buttresses, massive end
pinnacles, 3-light east window. Chapels at east end with much emphasis on
facetted roofs. Interior rib-vaulted in C13 French style; nave with tall
Perpendicular arcades; triforium in Decorated style; richly fitted and furnished
with much high quality work including altars, carvings, tombs, paintings and
stained glass; canopied tomb of Cardinal Gasquet (d.1929) by Sir G G Scott, effigy
by E Carter Preston. The Lady Chapel was decorated, glazed, paved and screened by
Comper.
'The most splendid demonstration of the renaissance of Roman Catholicism in
England' (Pevsner) it was built for a community of Benedictine monks, founded at
St Gregory's monastery at Douai in Flanders in 1607, house re-established in
England 1795, present estate purchased 1813.
References: Pevsner. Buildings of England, North Somerset and Bristol 1958 and
for full description of church: James, Dom Augustine. The Story of Downside Abbey
Church 1961. Fitzgerald-Lombard, Dom C.A guide to the Church of St Gregory the
Great Downside Abbey, 1981.
------------------------------------
STRATTON-ON-THE-FOSSE CP FOSSE WAY (West side)
ST65SE
13/187 Abbey Church of St. Gregory The
Great, Downside Abbey and School
-
GV I
Abbey Church, and north cloister. Work commenced 1872 and as yet unfinished, viz. west end of Abbey Church. For
community of Benedictine monks, founded at St Gregory's Monastery at Douai in northern France, 1601; house
re-established in England 1795, present estate purchased 1814. Bath and Doulting stones, lias; tile and copper sheeting
roofs. Abbey Church consists of nave with blind aisles and gallery chapels to south over north cloister, by Sir G G
Scott c1923-25 incorporating temporary west front, in simplified French Perpendicular style. Transepts with chapels and
base of tower c1882, by A Dunn and C Hansom in rich Early English style; tower finished 1938 by Scott in Somerset
Perpendicular. Chancel c1901-05 by Thomas Garner in Early Perpendicular style; east end, ambulatory and radiating
chapels with large projecting Lady Chapel c1890 by Dunn and Hansom in French Perpendicular style. Of the earliest work
by Dunn and Hansom the 2 bay transepts have a rose window to the north, south transept with tower on south side; tower
with much emphasised door opening, gabled canopy with figures; with Scott's addition it rises to about 160 m, corner
buttresses, pinnacles, 3 tiers of 2-light bell-chamber windows. Eight bay nave with triforium and clerestory, pierced
parapet, 2-light windows, rich tracery, west end with triple lancets. Chancel of 7 bays, with tall transomed clerestory
windows, pierced parapets, flying buttresses, massive end pinnacles, 3-light east window. Chapels at east end with much
emphasis on facetted roofs. Interior rib-vaulted in C13 French style; nave with tall Perpendicular arcades; triforium
in Decorated style; richly fitted and furnished with much high quality work including carvings, tombs, paintings and
stained glass; tomb and recess by Sir Ninian Compter. (Pevsner, Buildings of England, North Somerset and Bristol, 1958;
Fitzgerald-Lombard Dom C, A Guide to the Church of St Gregory the Great Downside Abbey, 1981).
Listing NGR: ST6550550832
This was the first view of the church tower from the end of Church Lane onto Fosseway.
The downside of renting - we're house-hunting again. A little bit of a pre-emptive strike at this stage, but worth doing.
So far we haven't seen anywhere we like.
'There's a Place' for the May 2011 Monthly Scavenger Hunt.
The downside of having a sharp pointed bill is that once a fish is speared it can be hard to dislodge and swallow it. This anhinga was moving its head all around trying to loosen its catch without much success. It finally ducked under the water and when it came up again, there was no fish. Did it manage to slip it off and swallow it? I have no idea.
The downside of having family over for tea; double the amount of washing-up!
Normally we'd get the children to do it, but it was already way past their bedtime. So it was Kaptain Kobold to the rescue!
A year ago today I caught some light.
The downside of living near the sea. It seems I am washing it more than driving it the moment...
2014 Jaguar XF S Sportbrake.
The evening walk around Stratton-on-the-Fosse on our first day staying in the village.
Checking out Downside Abbey after closing time, and just before sunset.
The Abbey Church of St Gregory the Great.
Grade I Listed Building
Abbey Church of St Gregory the Great, Downside Abbey
Description
In the entry for:
STRATTON-ON-THE-FOSSE FOSSE WAY
ST 65 SE (west side)
13/187
Abbey Church of St
Gregory The Great,
Downside Abbey and
School
GV
I
The address shall be amended to read:
ST 65 SE FOSSE WAY
5/187 (west side)
Abbey Church of St
Gregory The Great,
Downside Abbey
- I
and the description shall be amended to read
Abbey church and north cloister. Commenced 1873 and as yet unfinished (west front
and two bays of nave are missing). Main building periods 1872-82, c.1890, 1901-5,
1911-12, c.1923-25, 1938. Architects in date order, A M Dunn and E J Hansom,
Thomas Garner, F.A.Walters, Sir G.G.Scott. Interior fittings and furnishings by
the principal architects and Sir J N Comper. Bath stone ashlar with red plain
tile roofs, the east end chapels roofed very conspicuously in copper sheeting.
Abbey church consists of nave with blind aisles and gallery chapels to south over
north cloisters, by Sir G G Scott 1922-25 incorporating temporary west front, in
simplified early Perpendicular style. Transepts with chapels opened 1882 and base
of tower 1884, by A Dunn and E Hansom in early English style; tower finished 1938
by Scott in Somerset Perpendicular. Choir 1902-05 by Thomas Garner in early
Decorated style; east end, ambulatory and radiating chapels with large projecting
Lady Chapel opened 1888 by Dunn and Hansom in a French C13 style. Of the earliest
work by Dunn and Hansom the 2 bays transepts have a rose window to the north,
south transept with tower on south side; tower with much emphasised doorway and
with gabled canopy with figures; with Scott's addition it rises to about 166 ft,
corner buttresses, pinnacles, 3 tiers of 2-light bell-chamber windows. Eight bay
nave with triforium and clerestorey, pierced parapet, 2-light windows, rich
tracery, west end (unfinished) with triple lancets. Chancel of 7 bays, with tall
transomed clerestory windows, pierced parapets, flying buttresses, massive end
pinnacles, 3-light east window. Chapels at east end with much emphasis on
facetted roofs. Interior rib-vaulted in C13 French style; nave with tall
Perpendicular arcades; triforium in Decorated style; richly fitted and furnished
with much high quality work including altars, carvings, tombs, paintings and
stained glass; canopied tomb of Cardinal Gasquet (d.1929) by Sir G G Scott, effigy
by E Carter Preston. The Lady Chapel was decorated, glazed, paved and screened by
Comper.
'The most splendid demonstration of the renaissance of Roman Catholicism in
England' (Pevsner) it was built for a community of Benedictine monks, founded at
St Gregory's monastery at Douai in Flanders in 1607, house re-established in
England 1795, present estate purchased 1813.
References: Pevsner. Buildings of England, North Somerset and Bristol 1958 and
for full description of church: James, Dom Augustine. The Story of Downside Abbey
Church 1961. Fitzgerald-Lombard, Dom C.A guide to the Church of St Gregory the
Great Downside Abbey, 1981.
------------------------------------
STRATTON-ON-THE-FOSSE CP FOSSE WAY (West side)
ST65SE
13/187 Abbey Church of St. Gregory The
Great, Downside Abbey and School
-
GV I
Abbey Church, and north cloister. Work commenced 1872 and as yet unfinished, viz. west end of Abbey Church. For
community of Benedictine monks, founded at St Gregory's Monastery at Douai in northern France, 1601; house
re-established in England 1795, present estate purchased 1814. Bath and Doulting stones, lias; tile and copper sheeting
roofs. Abbey Church consists of nave with blind aisles and gallery chapels to south over north cloister, by Sir G G
Scott c1923-25 incorporating temporary west front, in simplified French Perpendicular style. Transepts with chapels and
base of tower c1882, by A Dunn and C Hansom in rich Early English style; tower finished 1938 by Scott in Somerset
Perpendicular. Chancel c1901-05 by Thomas Garner in Early Perpendicular style; east end, ambulatory and radiating
chapels with large projecting Lady Chapel c1890 by Dunn and Hansom in French Perpendicular style. Of the earliest work
by Dunn and Hansom the 2 bay transepts have a rose window to the north, south transept with tower on south side; tower
with much emphasised door opening, gabled canopy with figures; with Scott's addition it rises to about 160 m, corner
buttresses, pinnacles, 3 tiers of 2-light bell-chamber windows. Eight bay nave with triforium and clerestory, pierced
parapet, 2-light windows, rich tracery, west end with triple lancets. Chancel of 7 bays, with tall transomed clerestory
windows, pierced parapets, flying buttresses, massive end pinnacles, 3-light east window. Chapels at east end with much
emphasis on facetted roofs. Interior rib-vaulted in C13 French style; nave with tall Perpendicular arcades; triforium
in Decorated style; richly fitted and furnished with much high quality work including carvings, tombs, paintings and
stained glass; tomb and recess by Sir Ninian Compter. (Pevsner, Buildings of England, North Somerset and Bristol, 1958;
Fitzgerald-Lombard Dom C, A Guide to the Church of St Gregory the Great Downside Abbey, 1981).
Listing NGR: ST6550550832
View through the gate of Downside School to the Abbey Church from Fosseway.
Cal Harris of Head First Acrobats from their Fringe show 'Elixir', which is at Underbelly's Circus Hub.
This was highly entertaining...and lots of fun. It has a zombie....what more can one want? :-)
You can find out more and book tickets, here: www.underbellyedinburgh.co.uk/whats-on/elixir
My thanks are due to Susie Gray and Catriona Meriel from The Cornershop PR.
Shot on a Canon AE-1 Program with a 50mm f1.4 nFD on AGFA Vista Plus 200 film developed with a Rollei C41 Colorchem kit.
Harrow Downside buildings from the back. Although I went to the trouble of detailing this side it is now facing away from the normal viewing side. But at least I know it's complete.
The "downside" with a photo that makes Flickr Explore; means the bar has been raised impossibly high for the next photo, so I won't try. Let's make it fun -- here's what the rope was attached to...on that foggy Sanfran morning in Chicago.
One downside of our desperate, breathless scheduling is that our exhausted participants are particularly vulnerable to bizarre groupthink, and make poor decisions under peer pressure. Buying a Freitag bag is a matter of paying a hundred bucks for something that almost literally fell off the back of a truck. Most of the group had never even heard of them before we showed up here, and yet, bizarrely, something like half of us ended up buying one of the things. They are durable and versatile, but still! In order to escape the heady and dangerous atmosphere of spending, I fled upstairs to the observation platform.
The downside of drinking and paddling.
Hanging above the bar at ReUnion Brewery. A photograph was required.
We took the Amtrak out to Iowa City over Thanksgiving to our brother-in-law and nieces. I had two cameras with me, the Ondu 6x6 pinhole camera and the Yashica-D Twin Lens Reflex. I got to take both of the nieces out before we left. On Friday, Deidre and I went to ReUnion Brewery for some very fine beer.
Yashica-D Twin Lens Reflex
Kentmere Pan 400 exposed at 800, developed in D76 1:1 17 min
Epson Perfection V500 Photo scanner
#ilfordfilm, #kentmere400, #kentmerepan400, #pushedonestop,
#tlr, #twinlensreflex, #yashicad, #blackandwhite, #shootfilmstaypoor, #ishootfilm,
#niece, #beer, #brewery, #reunionbrewery, #kayak, #skeleton, #capsized,
Abstract reverie of what i witnessed in an art exhibit between a famous couple ....
A partnership
Respect
Love
The lovely 南灣 South Bay of 墾丁 Kenting, Taiwan, where you can swim in sight of a nuclear power plant. Early morning before the crowds arrived, the day after the Ironman 70.3 Taiwan half Ironman race.
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Kodachrome 64 (Expired April 1989) with Olympus XA
The manufactures plate on Southern Railway Express Bogie Brake Van No S56288 as it sits in the Downside Sidings. This is one of these vans that was still in capital operating stock.
Downside Abbey, Somerset. E window by Comper, 1936. (Choir by Thomas Garner, 1901-5).
Through the arches below you can just see Comper's wrought-iron gates to the Lady Chapel.
Euston Downside Carriage sidings (aka Euston Granby Terrace) last used to store withdrawn TPO viehilces in 2004
"Downside up
Upside down
Take my weight off the ground
Falling deep in the sky
Slipping into the unknown"
Peter Gabrielle
The downside of living in a neighborhood that pre-dates the spread of communications and electricity. It is really interesting to scan the skies of our quaint little South Pasadena,... with so much protection of our architectural heritage, it is a real wonder to me why more attention is not paid to the wired chaos polluting the tree lines. This image may not seem that out of the ordinary for most US towns, so I intend to post additional images that might be considered more extreme (there are plenty such locations I have encountered).
ok ..
that day we've just tried to get the magic time in the early morning and we were late around half an hour ..
also I've forgot my 10-20 lens wth a friend so I've tried to get a good results wth the 18mm ..
it's just an upload ^_^
Our 2007 Volkswagen Passat has xenon headlights and one of the bulbs went out. This meant that the bumper shell had to come off (as the headlights need to be completely removed to replace the bulbs), and to get to the necessary fasteners off, the wheel-well shields also had to be taken off. Here you can see the downside of the protective shield; there was a lot of dirt and leaves behind the shield. I wouldn't be surprised that if the shield were left for too long, that it might rust behind it.