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The Sinclair Castle, aka Castle Sinclair Girnigoe, is located on the east coast of Caithness, Scotland. Built in the late 1400s or early 1500s, it is considered to be one of the earliest seats of Clan Sinclair. More info on the castle can be found at www.castlesinclairgirnigoe.org/index.html
Sinclair Community College’s founder, David A. Sinclair, was part of Clan Sinclair. Several Sinclair employees, including the college’s current president Steven Johnson, have visited the castle during a trip to Scotland.
This photo was taken by a Sinclair employee during a recent trip to Scotland.
This series will chronicle the construction of the new interstate bridge carrying highways MN 43/WI 54 across the Mississippi river between Winona, Minnesota and Buffalo County, Wisconsin. The project began in July 2014 with plans to build a new bridge next to the existing (circa 1941) span, which will remain in use after completion.
February 19th, 2015: Among the businesses being displaced by the project is this Sinclair station at 2nd and Huff streets, still in operation back in August 2014 (above) and today (below). It closed for business in December 2014.
UNITED KINGDOM - APRIL 04: Clive Sinclair introduced the ZX Spectrum into the marketplace in August, 1982. Sinclair's aim was to provide an upgraded version of his original ZX81, which would be able to compete with the colour graphics of the recently introduced Atari, Commodore and Acorn computers. The ZX Spectrum was the company's most significant commercial success and enabled Sinclair Research to achieve market dominance in the UK in the early 1980s. The model shown has 48K of RAM. (Photo by SSPL/Getty Images)
Women's International friendly
CAN v ENG
7 April 2013, Rotherham, England - New York Stadium
©CanadaSoccer / by Ville Vuorinen
Christine Sinclair
2013 road trip, day 7, Casper, Wyoming. Sanford's Grub and Pub. We stopped for gas and saw this place next door! If we lived here, I think we would eat at this place all the time!
Located in the grounds of the Dumfries Museum, this is a memorial to Dr John Sinclair, an assistant naval surgeon, who died in 1840.
This shot illustrates the plaster and wainscoting wall finish and the 18th century doors. There is relatively modern floor covering and through the open door, you can see glass floor panels that allow you to see the type of floor and foundation construction.
See set here: www.flickr.com/photos/whitebeard/sets/72157623540225813/
This 1985 Sinclair C5 (if you've never heard of it, Wikipedia it - and you still won't believe it!) was bought from a Cornish junk shop in 1992 just before the launch of UK local radio station, Pirate FM102. It was liveried as one of the fleet of radio station cars as a joke played on one of the station DJs.