A cautionary HFF everyone

Signs of all Kinds


Warning signs - shop signs - direction signs - advertising signs. Any sign where the text and or image is legible.

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02 Jul 2018

17 favorites

38 comments

350 visits

A cautionary HFF everyone

Scarborough Harbour Marina

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03 Oct 2010

23 favorites

26 comments

506 visits

Pointing the way to Rubha nam Brathairean (Brothers Point) 2 x PiP's

Rubha nam Brathairean (Brothers Point) is the most easterly point on the Isle of Skye. Nobody seems certain of the origin of the name, but it is most often said to have been a place where monks lived and worshiped in safety more than a thousand years ago. Beyond the point lies the island of Rona and the mainland of Scotland over the Inner Sound. Dinosaur tracks found at Brothers Point 6th April 2016 The rare site was found at Rubha nam Brathairean (or Brothers' Point) on the Isle of Skye, and it contains around 50 beautifully preserved prints from dinosaurs that roamed the island during the Middle Jurassic, about 170 million years ago. Most of them belonged to sauropods - long-necked herbivores such as Brachiosaurus. But there's also a smattering of Theropods - carnivores that walked on their hind legs, such as Tyrannosaurus, gathering around what was once a shallow lagoon. The first picture below shows what is possibly a fireplace in the ruins of a small dwelling by the path to Brothers Point which was occupied into the 19th century. Please excuse fogging on the lens - it was was a VERY damp day! The picture below shows a sign located beside the ruins of the dwelling Possible translation: House of Rodrick (Rory) Donald (O'Donnell) Memorial (Cairn) Best I can do using various internet Scottish Gaelic - English translators. (I would welcome any corrections to the translation)

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29 Apr 2018

10 favorites

18 comments

214 visits

YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!

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24 Mar 2017

15 favorites

10 comments

296 visits

All Saints in the Spring - Helsmley, North Yorkshire

The Church of All Saints is an Anglican parish church serving the town of Helmsley in North Yorkshire, England. Dedicated to All Saints, it has been part of the Church of England since the Reformation. It is one of four churches in the same benefice: Sproxton, Rievaulx, and East Moors. The church was granted Grade II listed building status on 4 January 1955. History There has been a church in Helmsley since before the Norman conquest, the churchyard was used as a market place in Anglo-Saxon times. Another measure of the church's antiquity is the hogback gravestone in the porch. A church was recorded in the Domesday Book in 1086. There was much rebuilding in the 19th century, between 1866 and 1869 funded by the Earl of Feversham by the architects Banks and Barry and the contractors Barton and Smith of Helmsley, at a cost of £16,000 (equivalent to £1,360,000 in 2016). Many changes were made in the rebuilding, and Norman and later features were lost, including the font, which was replaced in 1868; the original medieval font is now in the church at Pockley. However, the church gained some fine stained glass by Hardman & Co. of Birmingham In 1931 a Harrison and Harrison pipe organ was installed on a platform immediately west of the chancel. This organ replaced an existing instrument installed in 1868 by the Walker organ company. Mr Arthur Harrison retained some of the existing pipework and incorporated this in the new instrument. Architecture In the 12th century the church was built in the Norman style and two arches, one over the entrance doorway, the other over the chancel, remain in place. They are rounded arches in the Norman style, as opposed to the Early English in which pointed arches were used in later developments. The church has a three-stage west tower, a four-bay nave, a two-bay chancel, transepts, vestry and south porch. Its 19th-century restoration was in the Gothic Revival style but incorporates work from the old church. It is constructed of sandstone ashlar with a steeply sloping stone slate roof. The tower has 13th-century lancet windows to its west and north faces at the second stage. Its other lancet windows, round-headed belfry windows and octagonal turrets date from the 19th-century restoration. The south porch is entered by a round arch accessing a 12th-century doorway. Windows installed in the 19th century in the north aisle and at the west end have reticulated tracery. The chancel has round-headed and lancet windows. Photographs reveal that the roof was altered in the restoration of 1866–69 and the church had a parapet with battlements on the southern side. The north chapel is dedicated to Aelred, third abbot of the Cistercian monastery at Rievaulx Abbey. It contains a statue of the Virgin Mary and votive candles. The south chapel is dedicated to Columba, a missionary from Ireland who brought Christianity to much of northern England. The chapel contains wall paintings of contemporary events, including depictions of Saint Oswald and a knight slaying a dragon emblazoned with the pagan gods.

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16 Jan 2004

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12 comments

282 visits

Sweet view, The Shambles, York, England

Shambles (also known as 'The Shambles') is a bustling centre piece of historic York. The street today is one of the UK's most visited and has become a wealth of shopping, tourist attractions, restaurants and many other things to see and do, including tours, ghost walks and historic talks. If you want to know York, you need to know Shambles. The way that fifteenth century buildings lean into the middle of the cobbled street means that the roofs almost touch in the middle. Mentioned in the Domesday book (making it date over 900 years), we know Shambles to be York 's oldest street, and Europe's best preserved Medieval street. It really is a very special place. The word Shambles originates from the Medieval word Shamel, which meant booth or bench. It was once also referred to as Flesshammel, a word with meaning around flesh; this is because Shambles was historically a street of butchers shops and houses. Records state that in 1872 there were 26 butchers on the street. The last butcher to trade on Shambles was at number 27 of the name Dewhurst. Livestock was slaughtered on Shambles also, the meat was served over what are now the shop window bottoms, and these were originally the Shamels. It is also interesting to notice the way the pavements on either side of the street are raised up, this was done to create a channel which the butchers would wash away their waste through; offal and blood would gush down Shambles twice weekly.

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12 Oct 2013

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13 comments

386 visits

Heading for the Dog and Gun

Best enlarged Keswick (/ˈkɛzɪk/) is an English market town and civil parish, historically in Cumberland, and since 1974 in the Borough of Allerdale in Cumbria. The town, in the Lake District National Park, just north of Derwentwater, and 4 miles (6.4 km) from Bassenthwaite, had a population of 4,821 at the time of the 2011 census. There is considerable evidence of prehistoric occupation of the Keswick area, but the first recorded mention of the town dates from the 13th century, when Edward I of England granted a charter for Keswick's market, which has maintained a continuous 700-year existence. In Tudor times the town was an important mining area, and from the 18th century onwards it has increasingly been known as a holiday centre; tourism has been its principal industry for more than 150 years. Its features include the Moot Hall; a modern theatre, the Theatre by the Lake; one of Britain's oldest surviving cinemas, the Alhambra; and the Keswick Museum and Art Gallery in the town's largest open space, Fitz Park. Among the town's annual events is the Keswick Convention, an Evangelical gathering attracting visitors from many countries. Keswick became widely known for its association with the poets Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey. Together with their fellow Lake Poet William Wordsworth, based at Grasmere, 12 miles (19 km) away, they made the scenic beauty of the area widely known to readers in Britain and beyond. In the late 19th century and into the 20th, Keswick was the focus of several important initiatives by the growing conservation movement, often led by Hardwicke Rawnsley, vicar of the nearby Crosthwaite parish and co-founder of the National Trust, which has built up extensive holdings in the area.

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18 Mar 2005

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2 comments

336 visits

Waiting for a trolleybus, Leninskiy Prospekt, Moscow

Leninsky Avenue (Russian: Ле́нинский проспе́кт) is a major avenue in Moscow, Russia, that runs in the south-western direction between Kaluzhskaya Square in the central part of the city through Gagarin Square to the Moscow Ring Road. The location of the current avenue has been a road since before the 18th century. Only the area between Kaluzhskaya Square and Kaluzhskaya Zastava Square (currently Gagarin Square) was then included into Moscow, and the name of this stretch was Bolshaya Kaluzhskaya Street. Construction was active in that area between the 18th century and the 1940s. It is the second widest street in Moscow after Leningradsky Avenue. Its width varies between 108 and 120 metres.

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28 Mar 2019

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2 comments

247 visits

Narrow Racket (looking towards Liargate) Beverley

Narrow Racket is an alley that runs from Lairgate, to Saturday Market. Its original name was most probably Narrow Lane, first recorded in 1409, that ran between the High Street (which then comprised North Bar Within, Saturday Market, Toll Gavel, Butcher Row and Wednesday Market) and Lairgate. According to The Yorkshire Palette: A racket is an open expanse between passages so called perhaps because these were the haunts of the unsavoury, the unscrupulous, the down right drudge of society that carried out their dodgy deals and “rackets” in these areas.

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26 May 2019

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11 comments

197 visits

Pointing the way in Wales

In 1944, Dylan wrote 'Poem in October' about his birthday walk, to the shoulder of Sir John's hill to the south of the town of Laugharne. Dylan Thomas The poem is simply about his love of Laugharne and getting older. The poem was set on the 27th of October, 1944; his 30th Birthday. The estuary sounds and the memory of the herons awaiting the tide were on his mind. The Dylan Thomas Birthday Walk was created by Bob Stevens to help promote Dylan Thomas's poetry and for more people to while away their own birthdays in the "beguiling island of a town" that is Laugharne. The walk is posted with 'verse' signs as show in the picture above left. It is approximately 2 miles/3.2 km in length and will take you uphill, following the route of the Wales Coast Path in this area. Enjoy the magnificent views of the estuary, Dylan's boathouse, the Gower, north Devon, Caldey Island and Tenby. Dylan Thomas Boathouse View of the River Taf Eastury from the 'Last Verse' Signpost
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