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An advertising blotter for the Lorillard Fire Insurance Company, which was in business from 1852 until 1883 (see the discussion about the Lorillard Fire Insurance Company Fire Mark that's in the collection of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of American History).
Insure with the Lorillard Fire Insurance Co. of New York
Cash assets, $1,518,646
C. B. Maltbie, Agent, Falls Village, Conn.
The Grade II Listed Whitefriars House/Arkills Court, an elaborate timber framed range behind a normal plane brick shop front, dating from 1450, off Lincoln High Street, Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
1800-1850s William Akrill, baker, was owner; 1857, Mary Akrill (widow), confectioner and baker; 1860 Thomas Simpson, ironmonger; 1867, George Gould, grocer; 1877 Grantham and Godson, grocers; 1881-1899, J W Ruddock, insurance agent and printer/publisher; 1913-1950s, Crossley, house furnishers; 1961 Lincoln Cooperative Society baby wear shop.
The front building was removed and the rest of the building was restored and given a brick and glass shop front in 1963; during the work a corbel was recovered, (possibly from the property to the south). Opened as Lincoln Cooperative Society jewellers 4 December 1964 trading until 1979; 1980-2005 Roseby fabric shop; 2005-Spring 2006 Oggie Oggie Cornish pasty restaurant and shop. November 2006-Uniform, school clothes shop.
Information Source:
www.heritageconnectlincoln.com/character-area/st-peter-at...
The Grade II Listed Whitefriars House/Arkills Court, an elaborate timber framed range behind a normal plane brick shop front, dating from 1450, off Lincoln High Street, Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
1800-1850s William Akrill, baker, was owner; 1857, Mary Akrill (widow), confectioner and baker; 1860 Thomas Simpson, ironmonger; 1867, George Gould, grocer; 1877 Grantham and Godson, grocers; 1881-1899, J W Ruddock, insurance agent and printer/publisher; 1913-1950s, Crossley, house furnishers; 1961 Lincoln Cooperative Society baby wear shop.
The front building was removed, and the rest of the building was restored and given a brick and glass shop front in 1963; during the work a corbel was recovered, (possibly from the property to the south). Opened as Lincoln Cooperative Society jewellers 4 December 1964 trading until 1979; 1980-2005 Roseby fabric shop; 2005-Spring 2006 Oggie Oggie Cornish pasty restaurant and shop. November 2006-Uniform, school clothes shop.
Information Sources:
britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101388593-333-high-street-li...
www.heritageconnectlincoln.com/character-area/st-peter-at...
The Grade II Listed Whitefriars House/Arkills Court, an elaborate timber framed range behind a normal plane brick shop front, dating from 1450, off Lincoln High Street, Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
1800-1850s William Akrill, baker, was owner; 1857, Mary Akrill (widow), confectioner and baker; 1860 Thomas Simpson, ironmonger; 1867, George Gould, grocer; 1877 Grantham and Godson, grocers; 1881-1899, J W Ruddock, insurance agent and printer/publisher; 1913-1950s, Crossley, house furnishers; 1961 Lincoln Cooperative Society baby wear shop.
The front building was removed and the rest of the building was restored and given a brick and glass shop front in 1963; during the work a corbel was recovered, (possibly from the property to the south). Opened as Lincoln Cooperative Society jewellers 4 December 1964 trading until 1979; 1980-2005 Roseby fabric shop; 2005-Spring 2006 Oggie Oggie Cornish pasty restaurant and shop. November 2006-Uniform, school clothes shop.
[There are 5 images in this set] This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.
The Colonial Theater in South Hill, Virginia, dates from 1925, when the town had a population of around 1400. Originally constructed for musical performances and vaudeville, it was remodeled as a movie theater in 1933 with new lighting and sound systems. It had retail and office space (e.g. lawyers and insurance agents) on the second floor and a Masonic meeting hall on the top floor. For a period of time the building also housed the post office with its entrance on the clipped corner. During the 1930s it encouraged clean-up campaigns, offering “Tin Can Movies” with free admittance to children who brought in 25 tin cans; it supported the war efforts in the early 1940s by offering free admission for bringing in scrap iron. It closed down in the 1970s. In 2001 it was purchased by a civic group and in 2011, after some renovations, became a cultural center and a site for performing arts—the 400-seat theater on the bottom level, an art gallery and offices on the second, and a ball room on the third.
The 3-story red brick structure with 14,571 square feet is the tallest building in the town of South Hill. The style is commercial. It’s most noticeable feature may be the clipped corner, a design element often used for buildings with street corner entrances. One of the major repairs was replacing a deteriorated roof with one of standing seam metal, similar to the original. The walls of the front and right facades culminate in a parapet, subtly ornamented in brick panels; the theater section has solid walls. Below the parapetted portion is a wide overhang supported by brackets of brick between which is a series of stone tablets. These panels are framed in brick with white stones at each corner. The use of stone also accents each 2-story window section with white stones again at the corners. Separating the ground level from the upper two stories is a stone ledge. On the front façade are 1/1 double-hung sash windows in groups of two and threes, each with its own transom; they extend around the clipped corner onto the side façade. At street level there are large display windows with vertically segmented transoms. The corner entrance is a double-leaf wood door, each leaf with a single vertical pane; above is a transom which provides continuity with the design of the larger windows. The lobby entrance consists of two pairs of wood doors, each with an upper vertical pane and 6 smaller panes below. Aside from changes made to the lobby entrance, the structure possesses architectural integrity, maintaining the original design and use of materials.
I had no opportunity to go inside to see the floors of ceramic tile and the pressed tin ceilings. More on the interior design is at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources (VDHR) site in the National Register nomination form, to which I’m indebted for much of this information. The theater was placed on the National Register of Historic Places May 19, 2003 with reference ID #03000448
The theater’s internet site is www.colonialcenterva.org/
The VDHR link to the pdf nomination file is
www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/Mecklenburg/301-5...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
1 Castle Hill (formerly 1-2), a Grade II* Listed Building which was built in 1760 as a house of three storeys, since this photo was taken it has become One Castle Hill Patisserie and a self-catering apartment. In Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
Over the years it has been used in a wide variety of uses such as by a physician J C Torry from 1867, the recruiting office of W H H West from 1877, by the RMLI from 1883, by H Hiscock, fish, game and poultry dealer, insurance agent and Registry for Servants from 1899, Mrs Towle's boarding house from 1904, C S Brookhouse from 1913, a dental surgeon from 1919, a Thompsons shop from 1952 and Brown and Buttrick architects from 1975.
The Grade II Listed Whitefriars House/Arkills Court, an elaborate timber framed range behind a normal plane brick shop front, dating from 1450, off Lincoln High Street, Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
1800-1850s William Akrill, baker, was owner; 1857, Mary Akrill (widow), confectioner and baker; 1860 Thomas Simpson, ironmonger; 1867, George Gould, grocer; 1877 Grantham and Godson, grocers; 1881-1899, J W Ruddock, insurance agent and printer/publisher; 1913-1950s, Crossley, house furnishers; 1961 Lincoln Cooperative Society baby wear shop.
The front building was removed and the rest of the building was restored and given a brick and glass shop front in 1963; during the work a corbel was recovered, (possibly from the property to the south). Opened as Lincoln Cooperative Society jewellers 4 December 1964 trading until 1979; 1980-2005 Roseby fabric shop; 2005-Spring 2006 Oggie Oggie Cornish pasty restaurant and shop. November 2006-Uniform, school clothes shop.
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[There are 5 images in this set] This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.
The Colonial Theater in South Hill, Virginia, dates from 1925, when the town had a population of around 1400. Originally constructed for musical performances and vaudeville, it was remodeled as a movie theater in 1933 with new lighting and sound systems. It had retail and office space (e.g. lawyers and insurance agents) on the second floor and a Masonic meeting hall on the top floor. For a period of time the building also housed the post office with its entrance on the clipped corner. During the 1930s it encouraged clean-up campaigns, offering “Tin Can Movies” with free admittance to children who brought in 25 tin cans; it supported the war efforts in the early 1940s by offering free admission for bringing in scrap iron. It closed down in the 1970s. In 2001 it was purchased by a civic group and in 2011, after some renovations, became a cultural center and a site for performing arts—the 400-seat theater on the bottom level, an art gallery and offices on the second, and a ball room on the third.
The 3-story red brick structure with 14,571 square feet is the tallest building in the town of South Hill. The style is commercial. It’s most noticeable feature may be the clipped corner, a design element often used for buildings with street corner entrances. One of the major repairs was replacing a deteriorated roof with one of standing seam metal, similar to the original. The walls of the front and right facades culminate in a parapet, subtly ornamented in brick panels; the theater section has solid walls. Below the parapetted portion is a wide overhang supported by brackets of brick between which is a series of stone tablets. These panels are framed in brick with white stones at each corner. The use of stone also accents each 2-story window section with white stones again at the corners. Separating the ground level from the upper two stories is a stone ledge. On the front façade are 1/1 double-hung sash windows in groups of two and threes, each with its own transom; they extend around the clipped corner onto the side façade. At street level there are large display windows with vertically segmented transoms. The corner entrance is a double-leaf wood door, each leaf with a single vertical pane; above is a transom which provides continuity with the design of the larger windows. The lobby entrance consists of two pairs of wood doors, each with an upper vertical pane and 6 smaller panes below. Aside from changes made to the lobby entrance, the structure possesses architectural integrity, maintaining the original design and use of materials.
I had no opportunity to go inside to see the floors of ceramic tile and the pressed tin ceilings. More on the interior design is at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources (VDHR) site in the National Register nomination form, to which I’m indebted for much of this information. The theater was placed on the National Register of Historic Places May 19, 2003 with reference ID #03000448
The theater’s internet site is www.colonialcenterva.org/
The VDHR link to the pdf nomination file is
www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/Mecklenburg/301-5...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
This is a great site to learn about business insurance. Business insurance can help protect you from huge financial loss. www.farmers.com/business_insurance.html
Scott Helmer
President & CEO
Energy and Construction Insurance Experts
Scott Helmer outside of his Phoenix, AZ office building.
file #07-0602_4876
Camera: Nikon D70
Exposure: 1/500th @ f/9.0, ISO 200
Learn how to light at Strobist.
Strobist info:
Lighting: (3) Dyna-lites
Main light: Medium Chimera, camera left, 1,000 ws pack
4' x 8' Matthews flag (gobo) to keep subject in the shade
Edge lights / Back lights: (2) bare heads, each getting 2,000 ws, both aimed from behind at the fountain - one placed off frame, camera right. The other placed on the other side of the fountain, and the subject is blocking the light from the Camera's view. The 2 backlights also add a nice subtle edge light on the subject for seperation.
Water needs to be lit from behind. Ever drive down the road and see a lawn sprinkler? It always looks great backlit with the sun light coming through it.
Photoshop work:
Defog (unsharp mask on midtones and shadows) and saturation overall. Added density back into the fountain (reprocess the file in Adobe Bridge > File > Place). Added some contrast to the sky and grass areas (all the work done on the background copy and layer adjustments, etc.)
Phoenix Arizona AZ Corporate Photographer
Flickr Explore #453 on Oct 3, 2007
The Grade II Listed Whitefriars House/Arkills Court, an elaborate timber framed range behind a normal plane brick shop front, dating from 1450, off Lincoln High Street, Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
1800-1850s William Akrill, baker, was owner; 1857, Mary Akrill (widow), confectioner and baker; 1860 Thomas Simpson, ironmonger; 1867, George Gould, grocer; 1877 Grantham and Godson, grocers; 1881-1899, J W Ruddock, insurance agent and printer/publisher; 1913-1950s, Crossley, house furnishers; 1961 Lincoln Cooperative Society baby wear shop.
The front building was removed and the rest of the building was restored and given a brick and glass shop front in 1963; during the work a corbel was recovered, (possibly from the property to the south). Opened as Lincoln Cooperative Society jewellers 4 December 1964 trading until 1979; 1980-2005 Roseby fabric shop; 2005-Spring 2006 Oggie Oggie Cornish pasty restaurant and shop. November 2006-Uniform, school clothes shop.
[There are 5 images in this set] This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.
The Colonial Theater in South Hill, Virginia, dates from 1925, when the town had a population of around 1400. Originally constructed for musical performances and vaudeville, it was remodeled as a movie theater in 1933 with new lighting and sound systems. It had retail and office space (e.g. lawyers and insurance agents) on the second floor and a Masonic meeting hall on the top floor. For a period of time the building also housed the post office with its entrance on the clipped corner. During the 1930s it encouraged clean-up campaigns, offering “Tin Can Movies” with free admittance to children who brought in 25 tin cans; it supported the war efforts in the early 1940s by offering free admission for bringing in scrap iron. It closed down in the 1970s. In 2001 it was purchased by a civic group and in 2011, after some renovations, became a cultural center and a site for performing arts—the 400-seat theater on the bottom level, an art gallery and offices on the second, and a ball room on the third.
The 3-story red brick structure with 14,571 square feet is the tallest building in the town of South Hill. The style is commercial. It’s most noticeable feature may be the clipped corner, a design element often used for buildings with street corner entrances. One of the major repairs was replacing a deteriorated roof with one of standing seam metal, similar to the original. The walls of the front and right facades culminate in a parapet, subtly ornamented in brick panels; the theater section has solid walls. Below the parapetted portion is a wide overhang supported by brackets of brick between which is a series of stone tablets. These panels are framed in brick with white stones at each corner. The use of stone also accents each 2-story window section with white stones again at the corners. Separating the ground level from the upper two stories is a stone ledge. On the front façade are 1/1 double-hung sash windows in groups of two and threes, each with its own transom; they extend around the clipped corner onto the side façade. At street level there are large display windows with vertically segmented transoms. The corner entrance is a double-leaf wood door, each leaf with a single vertical pane; above is a transom which provides continuity with the design of the larger windows. The lobby entrance consists of two pairs of wood doors, each with an upper vertical pane and 6 smaller panes below. Aside from changes made to the lobby entrance, the structure possesses architectural integrity, maintaining the original design and use of materials.
I had no opportunity to go inside to see the floors of ceramic tile and the pressed tin ceilings. More on the interior design is at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources (VDHR) site in the National Register nomination form, to which I’m indebted for much of this information. The theater was placed on the National Register of Historic Places May 19, 2003 with reference ID #03000448
The theater’s internet site is www.colonialcenterva.org/
The VDHR link to the pdf nomination file is
www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/Mecklenburg/301-5...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
[There are 5 images in this set] This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.
The Colonial Theater in South Hill, Virginia, dates from 1925, when the town had a population of around 1400. Originally constructed for musical performances and vaudeville, it was remodeled as a movie theater in 1933 with new lighting and sound systems. It had retail and office space (e.g. lawyers and insurance agents) on the second floor and a Masonic meeting hall on the top floor. For a period of time the building also housed the post office with its entrance on the clipped corner. During the 1930s it encouraged clean-up campaigns, offering “Tin Can Movies” with free admittance to children who brought in 25 tin cans; it supported the war efforts in the early 1940s by offering free admission for bringing in scrap iron. It closed down in the 1970s. In 2001 it was purchased by a civic group and in 2011, after some renovations, became a cultural center and a site for performing arts—the 400-seat theater on the bottom level, an art gallery and offices on the second, and a ball room on the third.
The 3-story red brick structure with 14,571 square feet is the tallest building in the town of South Hill. The style is commercial. It’s most noticeable feature may be the clipped corner, a design element often used for buildings with street corner entrances. One of the major repairs was replacing a deteriorated roof with one of standing seam metal, similar to the original. The walls of the front and right facades culminate in a parapet, subtly ornamented in brick panels; the theater section has solid walls. Below the parapetted portion is a wide overhang supported by brackets of brick between which is a series of stone tablets. These panels are framed in brick with white stones at each corner. The use of stone also accents each 2-story window section with white stones again at the corners. Separating the ground level from the upper two stories is a stone ledge. On the front façade are 1/1 double-hung sash windows in groups of two and threes, each with its own transom; they extend around the clipped corner onto the side façade. At street level there are large display windows with vertically segmented transoms. The corner entrance is a double-leaf wood door, each leaf with a single vertical pane; above is a transom which provides continuity with the design of the larger windows. The lobby entrance consists of two pairs of wood doors, each with an upper vertical pane and 6 smaller panes below. Aside from changes made to the lobby entrance, the structure possesses architectural integrity, maintaining the original design and use of materials.
I had no opportunity to go inside to see the floors of ceramic tile and the pressed tin ceilings. More on the interior design is at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources (VDHR) site in the National Register nomination form, to which I’m indebted for much of this information. The theater was placed on the National Register of Historic Places May 19, 2003 with reference ID #03000448
The theater’s internet site is www.colonialcenterva.org/
The VDHR link to the pdf nomination file is
www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/Mecklenburg/301-5...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
[There are 5 images in this set] This is a creative commons image, which you may freely use by linking to this page. Please respect the photographer and his work.
The Colonial Theater in South Hill, Virginia, dates from 1925, when the town had a population of around 1400. Originally constructed for musical performances and vaudeville, it was remodeled as a movie theater in 1933 with new lighting and sound systems. It had retail and office space (e.g. lawyers and insurance agents) on the second floor and a Masonic meeting hall on the top floor. For a period of time the building also housed the post office with its entrance on the clipped corner. During the 1930s it encouraged clean-up campaigns, offering “Tin Can Movies” with free admittance to children who brought in 25 tin cans; it supported the war efforts in the early 1940s by offering free admission for bringing in scrap iron. It closed down in the 1970s. In 2001 it was purchased by a civic group and in 2011, after some renovations, became a cultural center and a site for performing arts—the 400-seat theater on the bottom level, an art gallery and offices on the second, and a ball room on the third.
The 3-story red brick structure with 14,571 square feet is the tallest building in the town of South Hill. The style is commercial. It’s most noticeable feature may be the clipped corner, a design element often used for buildings with street corner entrances. One of the major repairs was replacing a deteriorated roof with one of standing seam metal, similar to the original. The walls of the front and right facades culminate in a parapet, subtly ornamented in brick panels; the theater section has solid walls. Below the parapetted portion is a wide overhang supported by brackets of brick between which is a series of stone tablets. These panels are framed in brick with white stones at each corner. The use of stone also accents each 2-story window section with white stones again at the corners. Separating the ground level from the upper two stories is a stone ledge. On the front façade are 1/1 double-hung sash windows in groups of two and threes, each with its own transom; they extend around the clipped corner onto the side façade. At street level there are large display windows with vertically segmented transoms. The corner entrance is a double-leaf wood door, each leaf with a single vertical pane; above is a transom which provides continuity with the design of the larger windows. The lobby entrance consists of two pairs of wood doors, each with an upper vertical pane and 6 smaller panes below. Aside from changes made to the lobby entrance, the structure possesses architectural integrity, maintaining the original design and use of materials.
I had no opportunity to go inside to see the floors of ceramic tile and the pressed tin ceilings. More on the interior design is at the Virginia Department of Historic Resources (VDHR) site in the National Register nomination form, to which I’m indebted for much of this information. The theater was placed on the National Register of Historic Places May 19, 2003 with reference ID #03000448
The theater’s internet site is www.colonialcenterva.org/
The VDHR link to the pdf nomination file is
www.dhr.virginia.gov/registers/Counties/Mecklenburg/301-5...
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Young adults with kids sitting in the living room and talking to the financial advisor.
[url=http://www.istockphoto.com/search/lightbox/9786778][img]http://dl.dropbox.com/u/40117171/family.jpg[/img][/url]
[url=http://www.istockphoto.com/search/lightbox/9786622][img]http://dl.dropbox.com/u/40117171/business.jpg[/img][/url]
ALWAYS USE
THE PROPER
SAFETY DEVICE
INSURANCE
PROTECTS
BLAINE E. COLE
AGENT
WESTERN & SOUTHERN
LIFE INSURANCE CO.
Phone HO 2-1980
VALPARAISO, IND.
MORTGAGE
RETIREMENT INCOME
EDUCATIONAL PLANS
HOSPITALIZATION
INCOME REPLACEMENT
CATASTROPHIC
Source Type: Matchcover
Publisher, Printer, Photographer: Unknown
Collection: Steven R. Shook
Copyright 2014. Some rights reserved. The associated text may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without prior written permission of Steven R. Shook.
Learn everything you need to know about Homeowners insurance here sites.google.com/site/autoinsurancequotes9/home/automobil...
. You can learn about all of the other types of insurance out there too.
In Castle Hill looking towards the Magna Carta public house and 1 Castle Hill, in Lincoln Lincolnshire.
The Magna Carta was built in 1880 as a private house, in 1920 it was converted into E Rose Music Shop, 1939-1950s Castle café run by E Vernon, 1950s-1960s Minster Café and Bakers shop, 1972-1975 Cathedral Restaurant, 1980s-1990s Harveys Restaurant and since 1993 it has been Magna Carta public house run by Mansfield Breweries. In Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
1 Castle Hill (formerly 1-2) is a Grade II* Listed Building built in 1760 as a house of three storeys and the location of One Castle Hill Patisserie and a self-catering apartment. Over the years it has been used in a wide variety of uses such as by a physician J C Torry from 1867, the recruiting office of W H H West from 1877, by the RMLI from 1883, by H Hiscock, fish, game and poultry dealer, insurance agent and Registry for Servants from 1899, Mrs Towle's boarding house from 1904, C S Brookhouse from 1913, a dental surgeon from 1919, a Thompsons shop from 1952 and Brown and Buttrick architects from 1975.
1 Castle Hill (formerly 1-2), a Grade II* Listed Building which was built in 1760 as a house of three storeys, since this photo was taken it has become One Castle Hill Patisserie and a self-catering apartment. In Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
Over the years it has been used in a wide variety of uses such as by a physician J C Torry from 1867, the recruiting office of W H H West from 1877, by the RMLI from 1883, by H Hiscock, fish, game and poultry dealer, insurance agent and Registry for Servants from 1899, Mrs Towle's boarding house from 1904, C S Brookhouse from 1913, a dental surgeon from 1919, a Thompsons shop from 1952 and Brown and Buttrick architects from 1975.
Christmas Post Card to Winifred Mabel George, Penventon Terrace, Redruth, Cornwall dated 23rd December 1907. Sent from an E Irwin?, Jerrettspass, Newry.
Nuneaton Local Military Tribunal Meeting of 27th June 1916. Part I.
The Bedworth Observer 30 June 1916
Tribunal Members:
Mayor, Councillor H.C. Jones, Deputy Mayor, Alderman W.T Bates, JP, Councilors W. French, W. Buckler, Mr. Jim Edge, Mr. F.S. Clay, Clerk, Mr. Albert Ward, Military Representative.
Appellants:
Percy Harold Howe, 27 Electrician, Nuneaton, John Albert Cartwright, Auctioneer, Cecil Cartwright, Cecil George Bradder, Nuneaton, Binder’s Tenterer, Conscientious Objector, Robert W. Moreton, Hairdresser and Bait and Tackle Dealer, Nuneaton, Robert James Cross, General Dealer, Abbey Green, Ernest Poynton, Insurance Agent, Nuneaton, Frederick Flemans, Insurance Agent, Nuneaton, George E Moreton, Coal Carrier, Heath End Road, Alfred Smith, Partner, Undertakers, Stratford Street
Learn information about Reverse Mortgage Interest Rates at our website. Seniors First is the leading reverse mortgage broker in Australia provides the loan for pensioners and aged people in Australia. @ www.seniorsfirst.com.au/how-reverse-mortgages-work/
1 Castle Hill (formerly 1-2), a Grade II* Listed Building and 3 Castle Hill, a Grade II Listed Building, in Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
1 Castle Hill was built in 1760 as a house of three storeys and the location of One Castle Hill Patisserie and a self-catering apartment. Over the years it has been used in a wide variety of uses such as by a physician J C Torry from 1867, the recruiting office of W H H West from 1877, by the RMLI from 1883, by H Hiscock, fish, game and poultry dealer, insurance agent and Registry for Servants from 1899, Mrs Towle's boarding house from 1904, C S Brookhouse from 1913, a dental surgeon from 1919, a Thompsons shop from 1952 and Brown and Buttrick architects from 1975. It is currently used by One Castle Hill Patisserie and a self-catering apartment.
3 Castle Hill was built in the early 18th Century as a house of three storeys and is now the location of Olivares Tapas Bar. The original house was remodelled in 1855 when the new route of Drury Lane was inserted. It seems to have remained residential until 1950. 1852-1855 Mrs Watson, milliner and dressmaker; 1880s-1900 Joseph and Mrs Brown; 1903 Mrs Davies; change of use of ground floor to a beauty parlour in 1950. 1990s-2013 Lincolnshire and Humberside Trust for Nature Conservation and RSPB. 2013 Olivares Tapas Bar.
Photojournalism is a captured instance that frames a precise candid moment which tells the whole story.
Series 4 of 8
Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) lay over 250 driving charges over Holiday Easter Weekend.
flickr today
Photojournalism means being at the wrong place at the right time.
Series 6 of 8
Photojournalism is also defined as an empathic visual encounter with powerful realism.
A picture that is capable of accentuating the textured fabric of the human condition; a
captured instance that frames a precise candid moment which tells the story with compassion, dignity and grace.
Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) lay over 250 driving charges over Holiday Easter Weekend.
Copyright © 2009 - 2015 Tomitheos Photojournalism - All Rights Reserved
Toronto, CANADA
Photojournalism is defined as an empathic visual encounter with powerful realism.
Series 5 of 8
Ontario Provincial Police (OPP) lay over 250 driving charges over Holiday Easter Weekend.
flickr today
The Grade II Listed Whitefriars House/Arkills Court, an elaborate timber framed range behind a normal plane brick shop front, dating from 1450, off Lincoln High Street, Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
1800-1850s William Akrill, baker, was owner; 1857, Mary Akrill (widow), confectioner and baker; 1860 Thomas Simpson, ironmonger; 1867, George Gould, grocer; 1877 Grantham and Godson, grocers; 1881-1899, J W Ruddock, insurance agent and printer/publisher; 1913-1950s, Crossley, house furnishers; 1961 Lincoln Cooperative Society baby wear shop.
The front building was removed and the rest of the building was restored and given a brick and glass shop front in 1963; during the work a corbel was recovered, (possibly from the property to the south). Opened as Lincoln Cooperative Society jewellers 4 December 1964 trading until 1979; 1980-2005 Roseby fabric shop; 2005-Spring 2006 Oggie Oggie Cornish pasty restaurant and shop. November 2006-Uniform, school clothes shop.
Homeowners, renters and landlords can find solutions to their insurance needs at Johnson & Associates Insurance Agency in Burlington NC.
Whitefriars, an elaborate timber framed range behind a normal plane brick shop front, dating from 1450, off Lincoln High Street, Lincoln, Lincolnshire.
1 Castle Hill (formerly 1-2), a Grade II* Listed Building which was built in 1760 as a house of three storeys, now One Castle Hill Patisserie and a self-catering apartment.
Over the years it has been used in a wide variety of uses such as by a physician J C Torry from 1867, the recruiting office of W H H West from 1877, by the RMLI from 1883, by H Hiscock, fish, game and poultry dealer, insurance agent and Registry for Servants from 1899, Mrs Towle's boarding house from 1904, C S Brookhouse from 1913, a dental surgeon from 1919, a Thompsons shop from 1952 and Brown and Buttrick architects from 1975.
In Lincoln, Lincolnshire.