View allAll Photos Tagged gatepost
A view of the old gatepost that is on Slater Avenue in the New Zealand suburb of Derby. This post must have been part of the original land here before any houses or major development took place.
Photo Taken: 22/05/12
New gate and gatepost in traditional style recently added to 59 Meeting Street. Charleston, SC. Photo taken September 2011.
Image and text posted: 6 November 2011
Revised: 6 November 2011
Copyrights reserved: hdescopeland
Hogarth lived in a noisy little house under the Chiswick flyover, so Garrick would bring him lead architectural ornaments like this urn, as a token of moral support.
One of the two iron gateposts that once stood at the entrance to the great house of Pyrgo. The grand drive is now a farm track and the gateposts and a few twisted, coroded and overgrown ornate railings, are all that's left of Pyrgo House, once home to Henry VIII's daughters Mary and Elizabeth. The old estate of Pyrgo Park has become farmland. Crops are now grown where Royal hunting parties once chased down deer.
Walk here on route 21 of the London Loop from Havering-atte-Bower and take a small detour along the farm track to see whats left of the ornate railings.
For details www.walklondon.org.uk/
One of a pair of stone eagles that formerly sat on the gateposts of the rectory to St Nicholas Church, Sutton. Can now both be seen on the side of fairly new houses off St Nicholas Way. The original rectory having been demolished.
A Gatepost on Mill Common, Huntingdon, has the Broad Arrow mark, denoting British Government ownership.
© [R. C. Tarling
This is a wall supporting gateposts into 2 fields. It was built by the farmer in 2014. Apparently weather had been great, he'd had a good harvest and wanted to celebrate.
More info www.lifeofpottering.co.uk/2014/10/dartmoor-if-youre-happy...
On the road from Ponsworthy to Dunstone, Dartmoor.
First time back at a National Trust property since the lockdown began.
We had to book a slot in advance online days before we went.
There is a one way system at Baddesley Clinton due to social distancing since they reopened.
Gateposts near the exit from Baddesley Clinton.
Could see them from the Walled Garden.
the lens is not recognised correctly by the camera due to reverse engineering for the Pentax mount. it is Sigma DG EX 50-150mm f2.8 ii APO HSM
Photograph taken by Vera Chapman (1923-2015), a geographer and local historian who wrote more than 20 local history books on Darlington and the surrounding area.
Image from the Darlington Local Studies picture collection. If you would like a copy of this image please contact local.studies@darlington.gov.uk quoting picture reference 'E820049450 ', or if you would like to see other images of the Darlington area please visit the Centre for Local Studies, at Darlington Library.
A rusty gatepost to the once grand Rosefield House, now being converted into flats. Note the Greek key pattern, part of the Greek revival in early 19th Century British architecture.
Rock wall pedestrian gateposts, Mo‘ili‘ili Cemetery, Honolulu, November 2012: The rock wall is replacing an old, ugly wire fence.
The gatepost on the right was the entrance to Reedyford Hospital, all gone now
Originally called Reedyford Halll it was the home of the Tunstill family who donated it to the Red Cross during WW1 to use as a military hospital. After the war it was then donated to Nelson as a hospital and maintained by public funding. It had two extensions to the original Hall and in 1948 was taken over by the NHS.
One of the gateposts at the former Braim Wood school site on Wetherby Road. If you think it looks rather grand for a 1960's council run middle school (as was), then you'd be right. Look closely and you can still make out the word "lodge" which is a giveaway to it's true origins. This was originally the site of the Lodge (Gatehouse) at the bottom of the carriage drive up to Elmet Hall, which lays much further up the hill beyond the treeline.
The gatepost dates from 1905. At that time the owner of Girsby Manor was John St Vigor Fox. He was only 25 at the time, but the following year he became Sheriff of Lincolnshire and in the 1920s he was Deputy Lieutenant of the county.
Gateposts built from stones of old church which opened 18 Dec 1859 as Primitive Methodist, Methodist after Union 1900, last service 28 Jun 1931, replaced by new church in Balhannah. History of church displayed in columbarium built on site of church destroyed by bushfire 2 Jan 1955.
“Votes of thanks were moved to J. Camac, Esq., for his liberal donation and valuable services in overseeing the erection of the building.” [Advertiser 22 Dec 1859]
“The old church at Bonney's Flat, about a mile from the township, has been in use for more than 70 years, and is now inadequate.” [Chronicle 19 Feb 1931]