Mother and child
At the Palace of Versailles
Paris 2009
Rowntree & Co Ltd Fire Brigade 4172277995 o
Sir John Betjeman
Sir Walter Scott Monument
Steel works memorabilia
Steel and iron works museum
The Black Swan
The Buxton Memorial (Victoria Tower Gardens)
Fontaine de la Concorde
The Gatehouse to Rushton Hall, Northants
The Musée d'Orsay
The postman has popped in for a pint;-)
The Protector of Leeds Town Hall !!
The River Ouse, York City
The Settling Rooms, Market Harborough
The Shambles, York
The speed of time
The Spirit of Chartwell
The trusty old mangle
The Yorkshire Farmhouse Range
USAF Memorial
Modern architecture, Leeds
Military vehicle 3788146055 o
Military vehicle
Milestone
Memorial to Dugald Stewart, Princes St Edinburgh
Memorial to Henry Pearson Gates, first Mayor of Pe…
Market House, Winster, Derbyshire
In the 'Shambles' York city
In the 'Shambles' York city
Hudson's Cottage
Henry Pearson Gates, first Mayor of Peterborough 1…
Happiness starts
Greyfriars Bobby
Grafton Underwood , Northants
Giotto Tower, Leeds
Georgian room circa 1780
Georgian room circa 1780
Gate to the City of York
Foggy, wet morning in Paris
Foggy morning in Paris
Antique Ewbank washing machine
Ewbank Sheppee electric washer 1926
See also...
" Ambiance et lumière - Stimmung und Licht - Atmosphere and light - Ambiente e la luce"
" Ambiance et lumière - Stimmung und Licht - Atmosphere and light - Ambiente e la luce"
Keywords
Authorizations, license
-
Visible by: Everyone -
All rights reserved
-
778 visits
More ghostly sightings in the debtor's prison
The Debtors Prison
1701AD - 1705AD
York Castle has a long history as a place where justice and punishment are dispensed. At the turn of the 18th century, its facilities were brought right up to date with a major new prison building, described by Daniel Defoe as ‘the most stately and complete of any in the kingdom, if not in Europe’.
The prison was designed to be ‘an instigator of virtue’, a wholly new concept.
It became known as the Debtors’ Prison after some of its inmates but it also housed some of Yorkshire’s most notorious criminals, such as Dick Turpin.
The architect was possibly William Wakefield; a trained lawyer rather than a professional architect. A native of Yorkshire, Wakefield is known to have designed Duncombe Park and Gilling Castle.
The finished building was a handsome example of English Baroque architecture; built to reflect county pride. It was also modern and functional, with separate areas for men and women. The debtors, people imprisoned because they owed money, were also housed in a different area to the other criminals.
There is a tower which has a clock with a single hand, installed in 1716 by John Terry a York clockmaker.
The prison institution expanded later in the same century when the Female Prison was built and again in the 19th century when a Victorian Prison was built on the site.
Text courtesy of History of York
1701AD - 1705AD
York Castle has a long history as a place where justice and punishment are dispensed. At the turn of the 18th century, its facilities were brought right up to date with a major new prison building, described by Daniel Defoe as ‘the most stately and complete of any in the kingdom, if not in Europe’.
The prison was designed to be ‘an instigator of virtue’, a wholly new concept.
It became known as the Debtors’ Prison after some of its inmates but it also housed some of Yorkshire’s most notorious criminals, such as Dick Turpin.
The architect was possibly William Wakefield; a trained lawyer rather than a professional architect. A native of Yorkshire, Wakefield is known to have designed Duncombe Park and Gilling Castle.
The finished building was a handsome example of English Baroque architecture; built to reflect county pride. It was also modern and functional, with separate areas for men and women. The debtors, people imprisoned because they owed money, were also housed in a different area to the other criminals.
There is a tower which has a clock with a single hand, installed in 1716 by John Terry a York clockmaker.
The prison institution expanded later in the same century when the Female Prison was built and again in the 19th century when a Victorian Prison was built on the site.
Text courtesy of History of York
Fred Fouarge, , , and 7 other people have particularly liked this photo
- Keyboard shortcuts:
Jump to top
RSS feed- Latest comments - Subscribe to the comment feeds of this photo
- ipernity © 2007-2024
- Help & Contact
|
Club news
|
About ipernity
|
History |
ipernity Club & Prices |
Guide of good conduct
Donate | Group guidelines | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Statutes | In memoria -
Facebook
Twitter
Seen on: Living with Multiple Sklerose (MS)
Not only Flickr
Admired in www.ipernity.com/group/i-central.
ADMIRED in
Not only Flickr
Admired in:
www.ipernity.com/group/tolerance
ADMIRED in Macro *Art * News
**International Photo Gallery**
www.ipernity.com/group/336371
vista in
La casa di Nadia e Valerio
Sign-in to write a comment.