View allAll Photos Tagged ramsgate
This is the rather grand concourse at Ramsgate Station in Thanet, Kent. It was built in the early 1920s and is today Grade II listed.
An attractive Carnegie library which re-opened in February 2009, after over four years of closure.
The building's exterior was carefully rebuilt after the major fire of 13th August 2004, two months short of its 100th anniversary, while the inside was re-fashioned and became open-plan.
Read more: www.thisiskent.co.uk/Ramsgate-Library-8217-s-rebirth/stor...
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The Great British Carnival presents with the local community Ramsgate illuminated Lantern Parade Dec 22nd 2022
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Hand-colored photograph from the Library of Congress showing Ramsgate New Road in England. This image reminds me of parts of Tokyo I've seen with multiple layers of transportation networks intersecting...
A vista que temos da janela do quarto. Um pouco mais pra esquerda tem a escola, onde fica a biblioteca e o social club, onde a gente compra as passagens pra viajar e onde sao as reunioes. Logo na rua de tras, em um outro predio, ficam as nossas salas de aula.
Now open to the public, Ramsgate's hidden tunnel network is starting to become a popular tourist attraction.
Saturday, 14 November 2012
1001 stands at Ramsgate on the return leg of the Canterbury Trail railtour from Dungeness to Hastings via London Blackfriars.
© Finbarr O'Neill
Ramsgate Royal Harbour, 5 September 2020. In the 14th Century, Ramsgate was a 'Limb' of the defensive Confederation of the Cinque Ports, being established as a subsidiary of Sandwich, one of the five Cinque Ports. The Harbour played a vital role in WWII when the RN Coastal Forces base of HMS Fervant was established here for Motor Torpedo Boats, Motor Gun Boats and armed Motor Launches to operate in the English Channel and North Sea. In addition, the harbour contributed large numbers of the famed civilian 'little ships' which evacuated the British Expeditionary Force from Dunkirk in 1940, aswell as large numbers of French troops (half of which later returned to Occupied France, however). Note the RNLI Lifeboat station.
Keep seeing lots of these old street signs in Hackney, anyone able to date these? they are pre-postcode.
Ramsgate station, built in 1926, was operated by Connex South Eastern when photographed on September 21st, 2001.
The Grange was built on the clifftops at Ramsgate in the early 1840s by the gothic revival architect Augustus Pugin as his family home.
After institutional use for much of the twentieth century the house was restored by the Landmark Trust and is now let out by them as holiday accommodation. I visited when it was part of the Heritage Open Days scheme.