View allAll Photos Tagged fifield
Detail of the west window at Bedworth, depicting a stylised St Luke seemingly merging with an otherwise totally abstract background.
This striking window is the work of local artist Roger Fifield and dates from 1965 (a more recent window by the same artist can be seen at Burton Hastings church).
The west end of Bedworth church was extensively reordered and subdivided in the 1990s, with the result that this window is now somewhat dificult to see from within the main body of the church. It is best to ascend the staircase at the west end of the north aisle and access what is now the ringers chamber beneath the old west tower to view this work.
A new 356-unit apartment complex in downtown Evanston.
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With a view of 360 W Hubbard. Shot from a 5th floor balcony at K2, 365 N Halsted.
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Number:
171615
Date created:
1923
Extent:
1 photographic print : gelatin silver ; 7 x 10 in.
Front row: 1) A. Gramlich; 2) J. Balfour; 3) E. Smale; 4) R. Cleland; 5) H. Garrigues; 6) G. Kyles; 7) A. Hall; 8) A. Ruge; 9) H. Douw; 10) M. Wright; 11) M. Hazlewood; 12) E. Stearns; 13) H. Bedinger; 14) E. Hinves; 15) E. Meyers; 16) D. Armstrong; 17) P. Crossley; 18) R. Sterling; 19) M. Busby. Second row: 1) H. Quinn; 2) C. Timberman; 3) H. Giddings; 4) Miss Lawler; 5) L. Helbig; 6) M. Lewis; 7) M. Gonyeau; 8) L. Bodurtha; 9) M. Sprague; 10) L. Garey. Third row: 1) F. Scott; 2) M. Fahey; 3) A. Bryce; 4) M. Mays; 5) M. Scott; 6) A. Laird. Fourth row: 1) E. Hussey; 2) L. Hafer; 3) L. Muller; 4) A. McKinnon; 5) N. Cox; 6) E. MacChesney; 7) V. Dunbar; 8) S.Danford. Back row: 1) R. Talbott; 2) R. Swanson; 3) N. Austin; 4) H. Rogers; 5) D. Gager; 6) L. Shangraw; 7) M. White; 8) D. Robinson; 9) I. Collings; 10) M. Black; 11) G. Rood; 12) E. Montgomery; 13) L. McMahon.
Rights:
Photograph is subject to copyright restrictions. Contact the Alan Mason Chesney Medical Archives for reproduction permissions.
Subjects:
Johns Hopkins Hospital School of Nursing--People
Clark, Dora Armstrong
Fifield, Naomi Austin
Keefer, Jean Balfour
Bedinger, Hennrietta L.
Ester, Lois Bodurtha
Black, Marjorie O.
Felty, Alice Bryce
Shaffer, Mabel Busby
Cleland, Ruth
Collings, Ida A.
Hare, Nannie Cox
Crossley, Phoebe C.
Neuhart, Sarah Danford
Richards, Helen Douw
Dunbar, Virginia
Fahey, Mary A.
Gager, Theodora H.
Garey, Vashti Louise
Rogers, Margaret (Marguerite) Garrigues
Giddings, Helen
Gonyeau, Mildred E.
Anderson, Alice Gramlich
Lewis, Lorena Hafer
Truax, Alice Hall
Hazlewood, Marjorie
Helbig, Lillian
Hinves, Edith
Hussey, Elma J.
Kyles, Georgia
Laird, Agnes
Lewis, Martha K.
Cugle, Emma MacChesney
Lonergan, Margaret Mays
Ritchie, Anna McKinnon
McMahon, Margaret Leona
Keeler, Esther Montgomery
Muller, Louise M.
Snoke, Edna Myers
Quinn, Hannah M.
Thompson, Dorothy Robinson
Rogers, Helen Margaret
Rood, Grace M.
Ruge, Ann E.
Murray, Florence Scott
Scott, Mary B.
Johnston, Lucille E
Allen, Erma Smale
Sprague, Marion B.
Stearns, Elinor
Kerr, Ruth Sterling
McNulty, Ruth Swanson
Talbott, Rebecca
Timberman, Charlotte A.
White, Mary W.
Ritchie, Margaret Wright
Lawler, Elsie M.
Nursing students--Maryland--Baltimore--1920-1930
Nurses--Maryland--Baltimore--1920-1930
Graduation ceremonies--Maryland--Baltimore--1920-1930
Portrait photographs
Group portraits
Notes: Photographer unknown.
18th November 2011 at the Queen Elizabeth Hall (Front Room), London SE1.
London Jazz Festival (free event), www.londonjazzfestival.org.uk/.
Country: Britain - Scotland. Style: Jazz - Modern.
Lineup: Phil Bancroft (tenor sax/soprano sax), Felicity Provan (trumpet), Aidan O'Rourke (fiddle), Paul Harrison (p/keyboard), Graeme Stephen (g), Mario Lima Caribe (b/bass g), Stuart Ritchie (d).
Phil Bancroft was born in London and moved to Scotland aged 9. Of the rest of band, three were born in Scotland - O’Rouke (born Glasgow, but moved to Oban aged 1), Stephen (Aberdeen) Ritchie (Aberdeen, but now living in London). Of the others, Harrison was born in Manchester (though he moved to Scotland aged 17), Caribe was born in São Paulo, Brazil (moved to Scotland in 1996) and Provan was born in Melbourne, Australia (and now lives in the Netherlands). The band demonstrates the mingling of the Scottish Jazz and Folk scenes, with O’Rourke best known as a member of Lau (for my photo of this band see: www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157625811547273/) and Stephen regularly playing with Fraser Fifield. However unlike other projects I’ve seen (e.g. Colin Steele’s Stramash O’Rourke’s Parallelogram), the music isn’t a Jazz / Folk fusion. It does represent the tendency of both scenes for funded projects with themed compositions (and often a bit of multi-media). The tunes (and back projection video) exploring the idea of home, the project being called “Home: Small as the World”.
More information: www.philbancroft.com/, www.smallastheworld.com/.
This photograph was in an unmarked album of 128 photos. Few were dated: two photographs from 1924; eight from 1925; six from 1926; and three from 1932. The images all appear to be centered on Stuart Guy Fifield family and friends.
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28th January 2018 at the Old Fruitmarket, Glasgow.
Celtic Connections Festival, www.celticconnections.com/.
Country: Sweden. Style: various styles of traditional music.
Lineup: Ale Möller (låtmandola/flutes/whistle/trumpet/cow's horn/piano accordion/harmonium/hammered dulcimer), Aly Bain (fiddle), Fraser Fifield (low whistle/border pipes/soprano sax), Tuva Syvertsen (v/hardanger fiddle/harmonium/percussion), Knut Reiersrud (g/lap steel g), Olle Linder (d/percussion/b).
This project began as a commission for a 2016 concert in the Jazz At Berlin Philharmonic series. The aim was to step away from Jazz towards "Celtic Music". However, as a Swede and a Norwegian were asked to put the concert together it became about the paths taken by Celtic music as it travelled across northern European and the United States. The performance at Celtic Connections lacked one of the seven musicians from 2016 - Eric Bibb. However there were still several American folk songs e.g. "Mole in the Ground", "In the Pines", "St James Infirmary" (though not ones I have ever thought of as "Celtic"). The group is now two Swedes, two Norwegians and two Scots. I have previously taken photos of Ale Möller and Aly Bain in a trio with Bruce Molsky (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157625540625666/), Bain in his duo with Phil Cunningham (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/albums/72157680303772331/), and a Fraser Fifield Quartet (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157638468331024/),
A new 356-unit apartment complex in downtown Evanston.
Get a fresh take on new homes, apartments, neighborhoods and the way life’s lived in Chicago at YoChicago.
Get a fresh take on new homes, apartments, neighborhoods and the way life’s lived in Chicago at YoChicago.
28th January 2018 at the Old Fruitmarket, Glasgow.
Celtic Connections Festival, www.celticconnections.com/.
Country: Britain - Scotland. Style: various styles of traditional music.
Lineup: Ale Möller (låtmandola/flutes/whistle/trumpet/cow's horn/piano accordion/harmonium/hammered dulcimer), Aly Bain (fiddle), Fraser Fifield (low whistle/border pipes/soprano sax), Tuva Syvertsen (v/hardanger fiddle/harmonium/percussion), Knut Reiersrud (g/lap steel g), Olle Linder (d/percussion/b).
This project began as a commission for a 2016 concert in the Jazz At Berlin Philharmonic series. The aim was to step away from Jazz towards "Celtic Music". However, as a Swede and a Norwegian were asked to put the concert together it became about the paths taken by Celtic music as it travelled across northern European and the United States. The performance at Celtic Connections lacked one of the seven musicians from 2016 - Eric Bibb. However there were still several American folk songs e.g. "Mole in the Ground", "In the Pines", "St James Infirmary" (though not ones I have ever thought of as "Celtic"). The group is now two Swedes, two Norwegians and two Scots. I have previously taken photos of Ale Möller and Aly Bain in a trio with Bruce Molsky (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157625540625666/), Bain in his duo with Phil Cunningham (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/albums/72157680303772331/), and a Fraser Fifield Quartet (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157638468331024/),
One of 8 Designer Showcase models.
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Built in 1894, this lovely structure is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. It, today, houses the Price County Historical Society Museum.
Fifield, Wisconsin is a small community located between Phillips and Park Falls in northern Price County.
www.flickr.com/photos/30484128@N03/5466400985/in/set-7215...
I have been posting photos from Gram Fifield's photo album on Flickr.
Gram Fifield and her husband Edward Fifield (of whom I never heard family elders speak) are buried in Willis Cemetery, Dummer, Coos County, New Hampshire.
Hester Ann Ellingwood Fifield and her husband, Edward Fifield, were foster parents for my Great-grandmother Rose Ella Andrews after her father died in the Civil War and her mother died soon after. My maternal grandparents saw I was interested in old photos and gave me Gram Fifield's album in the 1960s.
Get a fresh take on new homes, apartments, neighborhoods and the way life’s lived in Chicago at YoChicago.
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18th November 2011 at the Queen Elizabeth Hall (Front Room), London SE1.
London Jazz Festival (free event), www.londonjazzfestival.org.uk/.
Country: Britain - Scotland. Style: Jazz - Modern.
Lineup: Phil Bancroft (tenor sax/soprano sax), Felicity Provan (trumpet), Aidan O'Rourke (fiddle), Paul Harrison (p/keyboard), Graeme Stephen (g), Mario Lima Caribe (b/bass g), Stuart Ritchie (d).
Phil Bancroft was born in London and moved to Scotland aged 9. Of the rest of band, three were born in Scotland - O’Rouke (born Glasgow, but moved to Oban aged 1), Stephen (Aberdeen) Ritchie (Aberdeen, but now living in London). Of the others, Harrison was born in Manchester (though he moved to Scotland aged 17), Caribe was born in São Paulo, Brazil (moved to Scotland in 1996) and Provan was born in Melbourne, Australia (and now lives in the Netherlands). The band demonstrates the mingling of the Scottish Jazz and Folk scenes, with O’Rourke best known as a member of Lau (for my photo of this band see: www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157625811547273/) and Stephen regularly playing with Fraser Fifield. However unlike other projects I’ve seen (e.g. Colin Steele’s Stramash O’Rourke’s Parallelogram), the music isn’t a Jazz / Folk fusion. It does represent the tendency of both scenes for funded projects with themed compositions (and often a bit of multi-media). The tunes (and back projection video) exploring the idea of home, the project being called “Home: Small as the World”.
More information: www.philbancroft.com/, www.smallastheworld.com/.
Name: DogOnIt
Pilot/Owner: Doug Fifield
Location: Washington
S/N: 5765
Year Built: 2022
Model: 100E
Size: 100,000 cubic feet.
Status: In Service
Previous Name(s): Paws Up
Previous Pilot(s): N/A
A small village set high above the Evenlode valley on the border of Oxfordshire and Gloucestershire. Recorded in Domesday as Fyfhide or five hides (600 acres), the manor was held by Henrici de Ferriers a Norman knight.
The church is 13th century in origin and has an unusual 14th century octagonal west tower. The south porch is also of interest as it has a roof of stone slabs carried on a single arch, it is believed to date from Early English period, the13th century. The south-west chancel window has two heraldic shields, one is of the Zouche family and dates from the 13th century.
One of 8 Designer Showcase models.
Get a fresh take on new homes, apartments, neighborhoods and the way life’s lived in Chicago at YoChicago.
28th January 2018 at the Old Fruitmarket, Glasgow.
Celtic Connections Festival, www.celticconnections.com/.
Country: Britain - Scotland. Style: various styles of traditional music.
Lineup: Ale Möller (låtmandola/flutes/whistle/trumpet/cow's horn/piano accordion/harmonium/hammered dulcimer), Aly Bain (fiddle), Fraser Fifield (low whistle/border pipes/soprano sax), Tuva Syvertsen (v/hardanger fiddle/harmonium/percussion), Knut Reiersrud (g/lap steel g), Olle Linder (d/percussion/b).
This project began as a commission for a 2016 concert in the Jazz At Berlin Philharmonic series. The aim was to step away from Jazz towards "Celtic Music". However, as a Swede and a Norwegian were asked to put the concert together it became about the paths taken by Celtic music as it travelled across northern European and the United States. The performance at Celtic Connections lacked one of the seven musicians from 2016 - Eric Bibb. However there were still several American folk songs e.g. "Mole in the Ground", "In the Pines", "St James Infirmary" (though not ones I have ever thought of as "Celtic"). The group is now two Swedes, two Norwegians and two Scots. I have previously taken photos of Ale Möller and Aly Bain in a trio with Bruce Molsky (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157625540625666/), Bain in his duo with Phil Cunningham (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/albums/72157680303772331/), and a Fraser Fifield Quartet (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157638468331024/),
Credit: Adam Schultz/Clinton Global Initiative
Water availability and quality is at risk globally—two-thirds of the population will experience water shortages by 2025, creating health, economic, and environmental risks, as well as exacerbating poverty. It is estimated that water use has risen at more than twice the rate of population growth over the last century, and a lack of access to safe water already impacts 750 million people around the world. In this session, participants will identify ways, as populations and industries continue to grow, that the private sector can reduce its water use and assess its role in water stewardship through core business practices. Participants will also explore how organizations can improve quality and access to water.
Objectives:
• Address water scarcity at different scales—including interventions at the regional, watershed, corporate, and community levels
• Identify opportunities for increased coordination among various stakeholders, including conservationists, water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) advocates, and private sector industry leaders
• Workshop Commitments to Action in development related to the Water Scarcity Call to Action
MODERATOR:
Brooke Barton, Senior Program Director, Water Program, Ceres
SPEAKERS:
Ezgi Barcenas, Global Manager, Beer & Better World, Anheuser-Busch InBev Services
Melissa Fifield, Director of Sustainable Innovation, Gap, Inc.
28th January 2018 at the Old Fruitmarket, Glasgow.
Celtic Connections Festival, www.celticconnections.com/.
Country: Britain - Scotland. Style: various styles of traditional music.
Lineup: Ale Möller (låtmandola/flutes/whistle/trumpet/cow's horn/piano accordion/harmonium/hammered dulcimer), Aly Bain (fiddle), Fraser Fifield (low whistle/border pipes/soprano sax), Tuva Syvertsen (v/hardanger fiddle/harmonium/percussion), Knut Reiersrud (g/lap steel g), Olle Linder (d/percussion/b).
This project began as a commission for a 2016 concert in the Jazz At Berlin Philharmonic series. The aim was to step away from Jazz towards "Celtic Music". However, as a Swede and a Norwegian were asked to put the concert together it became about the paths taken by Celtic music as it travelled across northern European and the United States. The performance at Celtic Connections lacked one of the seven musicians from 2016 - Eric Bibb. However there were still several American folk songs e.g. "Mole in the Ground", "In the Pines", "St James Infirmary" (though not ones I have ever thought of as "Celtic"). The group is now two Swedes, two Norwegians and two Scots. I have previously taken photos of Ale Möller and Aly Bain in a trio with Bruce Molsky (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157625540625666/), Bain in his duo with Phil Cunningham (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/albums/72157680303772331/), and a Fraser Fifield Quartet (www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157638468331024/),
One of 8 Designer Showcase models.
Get a fresh take on new homes, apartments, neighborhoods and the way life’s lived in Chicago at YoChicago.
Get a fresh take on new homes, apartments, neighborhoods and the way life’s lived in Chicago at YoChicago.
Get a fresh take on new homes, apartments, neighborhoods and the way life’s lived in Chicago at YoChicago.
Freshmen:
Agnes Bannan
Mary Basset
Ernest Blankenship
Terryl Boyer
Harriet Brown
Marvin Brown
Trevor Bryant
Florence Burrows
Alma Bullen
Betty Clapp
Peter Cookson
Aimee Corrin
Elizabeth Cridge
Marcella Dellan
Raymond Fifield
Ena Fisher
Gordon Foster
Walter Gage
Sara Griffin
William Hamblin
Leslie Holt
Randolph Hughes
Lorrayne Hupp
Joe Israel
Cynthia Johnston
Gwladys Jones
Kathleen Jones
Kathryn Jones
William Jones
Dorita Kenney
Thomas King
Paul Loomis
Walter Marchant
James Matheson
Robert McKnight
Helen Milner
Verne Moore
James Neel
Donald Needham
Donata Nichols
Louise Phillips
William Schlip
Bonita Smith
Evelyn Smith
Virginia Stephenson
Paul Stevens
William Strayer
Martha Taylor
Waring Thorne
Olive Ukeneskey
Agnes Walton
Curtis Zahn
Credit: Adam Schultz/Clinton Global Initiative
Water availability and quality is at risk globally—two-thirds of the population will experience water shortages by 2025, creating health, economic, and environmental risks, as well as exacerbating poverty. It is estimated that water use has risen at more than twice the rate of population growth over the last century, and a lack of access to safe water already impacts 750 million people around the world. In this session, participants will identify ways, as populations and industries continue to grow, that the private sector can reduce its water use and assess its role in water stewardship through core business practices. Participants will also explore how organizations can improve quality and access to water.
Objectives:
• Address water scarcity at different scales—including interventions at the regional, watershed, corporate, and community levels
• Identify opportunities for increased coordination among various stakeholders, including conservationists, water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) advocates, and private sector industry leaders
• Workshop Commitments to Action in development related to the Water Scarcity Call to Action
MODERATOR:
Brooke Barton, Senior Program Director, Water Program, Ceres
SPEAKERS:
Ezgi Barcenas, Global Manager, Beer & Better World, Anheuser-Busch InBev Services
Melissa Fifield, Director of Sustainable Innovation, Gap, Inc.
Get a fresh take on new homes, apartments, neighborhoods and the way life’s lived in Chicago at YoChicago.
People crowding around the truck to buy their copy of the Bible on dedication day. Photo by Tom Fifield on SONY DSC.
Evanston's most amenity-rich apartment tower has just started leasing.
Get a fresh take on new homes, apartments, neighborhoods and the way life’s lived in Chicago at YoChicago.
18th November 2011 at the Queen Elizabeth Hall (Front Room), London SE1.
London Jazz Festival (free event), www.londonjazzfestival.org.uk/.
Country: Australia (Netherlands resident). Style: Jazz - Modern.
Lineup: Phil Bancroft (tenor sax/soprano sax), Felicity Provan (trumpet), Aidan O'Rourke (fiddle), Paul Harrison (p/keyboard), Graeme Stephen (g), Mario Lima Caribe (b/bass g), Stuart Ritchie (d).
Phil Bancroft was born in London and moved to Scotland aged 9. Of the rest of band, three were born in Scotland - O’Rouke (born Glasgow, but moved to Oban aged 1), Stephen (Aberdeen) Ritchie (Aberdeen, but now living in London). Of the others, Harrison was born in Manchester (though he moved to Scotland aged 17), Caribe was born in São Paulo, Brazil (moved to Scotland in 1996) and Provan was born in Melbourne, Australia (and now lives in the Netherlands). The band demonstrates the mingling of the Scottish Jazz and Folk scenes, with O’Rourke best known as a member of Lau (for my photo of this band see: www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157625811547273/) and Stephen regularly playing with Fraser Fifield. However unlike other projects I’ve seen (e.g. Colin Steele’s Stramash O’Rourke’s Parallelogram), the music isn’t a Jazz / Folk fusion. It does represent the tendency of both scenes for funded projects with themed compositions (and often a bit of multi-media). The tunes (and back projection video) exploring the idea of home, the project being called “Home: Small as the World”.
More information: www.philbancroft.com/, www.smallastheworld.com/.
18th November 2011 at the Queen Elizabeth Hall (Front Room), London SE1.
London Jazz Festival (free event), www.londonjazzfestival.org.uk/.
Country: Australia (Netherlands resident). Style: Jazz - Modern.
Lineup: Phil Bancroft (tenor sax/soprano sax), Felicity Provan (trumpet), Aidan O'Rourke (fiddle), Paul Harrison (p/keyboard), Graeme Stephen (g), Mario Lima Caribe (b/bass g), Stuart Ritchie (d).
Phil Bancroft was born in London and moved to Scotland aged 9. Of the rest of band, three were born in Scotland - O’Rouke (born Glasgow, but moved to Oban aged 1), Stephen (Aberdeen) Ritchie (Aberdeen, but now living in London). Of the others, Harrison was born in Manchester (though he moved to Scotland aged 17), Caribe was born in São Paulo, Brazil (moved to Scotland in 1996) and Provan was born in Melbourne, Australia (and now lives in the Netherlands). The band demonstrates the mingling of the Scottish Jazz and Folk scenes, with O’Rourke best known as a member of Lau (for my photo of this band see: www.flickr.com/photos/kmlivemusic/sets/72157625811547273/) and Stephen regularly playing with Fraser Fifield. However unlike other projects I’ve seen (e.g. Colin Steele’s Stramash O’Rourke’s Parallelogram), the music isn’t a Jazz / Folk fusion. It does represent the tendency of both scenes for funded projects with themed compositions (and often a bit of multi-media). The tunes (and back projection video) exploring the idea of home, the project being called “Home: Small as the World”.
More information: www.philbancroft.com/, www.smallastheworld.com/.
A new 356-unit apartment complex in downtown Evanston.
Get a fresh take on new homes, apartments, neighborhoods and the way life’s lived in Chicago at YoChicago.
Sorry, I couldn't resist posting another from this shoot!
Fifield Hall groundskeeper, I owe you a debt of gratitude!
Shadow Minister for Disability, Carers and the Voluntary Sector, Senator Mitch Fifield, and Senate Opposition Leader, Senator Eric Abetz join Divisional Manager John Hollis on a tour of Oakdale Industries; one of OAK Tasmania's Australian Disability Enterprises (ADEs).
Get a fresh take on new homes, apartments, neighborhoods and the way life’s lived in Chicago at YoChicago.
South nave window by Roger Fifield 1988, depicting the parable of the Prodigal Son.
St Mary's dominates the village of Newton Regis and serves the most northerly parish in Warwickshire.
The building itself is aisleless but with a later clerestorey and quite light inside, being mainly plain glazed except for the odd medieval fragment here and there and two recent windows by Warwickshire based artist Roger Fifield.
The outstanding medieval feature here however is on the north side of the sanctuary, a highly unusual 14th century priest's tomb in a recess with a slab in high relief portraying a praying bust of the deceased amidst canopywork (inhabited by angels) with two kneeling mourners below, a unique composition as far as I know, worn but still enjoyable.
For more see the church's entry on the Warwickshire Churches site:-
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