#1 Historical Landmarks of Southampton FC | St. Mary's Church | The Ugly Inside
In the first of our series of Historical Landmarks of Southampton FC Nick visits the birth place of the club.
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Southampton Rock Choir at St Mary The Virgin Eling Hampshire
Southampton Rock Choir and the Lounge Kittens at St Mary The Virgin Eling Hampshire
Views Around the City of Southampton, Hampshire, England - 30 March, 2019
Views Around the City of Southampton, Hampshire, England - 30 March, 2019 .
I've just added a new film to my Tourism: England: Hampshire playlist, here: of the views on a walk around the city of Southampton.
The film begins at Southampton Central and then features the following locations and features along the journey: Blechynden Terrace Gardens, Blechynden Terrace, Empire Lane, Commercial Road, Cumberland Place, West Park, Isaac Watts Memorial, Cenotaph, Above Bar street, Titanic Engineers Memorial, East Park, Richard Andrews Memorial, East Park Terrace, Charlotte Place Roundabout, Charlotte Place, Jurys Inn, Brunswick Place, Dorset Street, Solent University, The Spark, St. Andrew's Road, Southampton Guildhall, West Marlands Road, Southampton Council Civic Centre, Southampton Clock Tower, Sea City Museum, Southampton City Art Gallery, Scholars Arms, John Hansard Gallery, Bargate Southampton, East Bargate, High Street, RMS Queen Elizabeth 2 Anchor, Holyrood Church, Bernard Street, St. Michael's Street, St. Michael's Church, St. Michael's Square, Tudor House, Bulge Street, St. Joseph's Catholic Church, Westgate Street, Westgate, Western Esplanade, Mayflower Roundabout, Mary Ann Rogers Memorial, Town Quay, Pilgrim Fathers Memorial, Watergate Ruin, Queen's Park, Terminus Terrace, Canute Road, The Admiral Sir Lucius Curtis, Ocean Village, and Ocean Village Marina.
To read about Southampton, click here: .
To see a review of the Jurys Inn, Southampton, click here: .
To see aerial views of Southampton from an aeroplane a landing at Southampton Airport, click here: .
To see a film of Southampton Airport parkway station, click here: .
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PROUD - Southampton and New Forest Rock Choirs perform Proud at St Mary's Church 14.07.2013
Southampton and New Forest Rock choirs perform Proud at St Mary's Church, Southampton in aid of Mission Mexico. Leader Jenny Deacon, Soloist Karen Pearson
Atmosphere @ St Mary's Stadium Southampton Fc - Liverpool Fc 1-0
EFL Cup semi-final first leg on Wednesday 11 January 2017
Entry of the players, atmosphere and fans singing at St Mary's Stadium as Southampton beat Liverpool 1-0
Southampton Football Club is an English football club, nicknamed The Saints, based in the city of Southampton, Hampshire. The Saints' home ground since 2001 has been St Mary's Stadium, before which they were based at The Dell. The club has been nicknamed The Saints since its inception in 1885 due to its history as a church football team, founded as St. Mary's Church of England Young Men's Association (or St. Mary's Y.M.A) and has since generally played in red and white shirts.
Lowering 10 at Southampton St Mary's
Taken as part of the Lilliputter's ringing tour 2017. Shows the lowering on 10 on this very fine ring of 10, lots of humming and the clonky sounds have gone, nearly. Thanks to George Vant for uploading most of my videos which were taken by me.
The Madding Crowd in St. Michael s Church Southampton 30/09/17
St Mary's Church Eversley
St. Mary’s has served the local community as a place of worship for many hundreds of years. Charles Kingsley, the 19th century author, preacher and reformer, was its Rector for 31 years.
Our Church of England services and other activities cater for a wide age range. We try to offer something for everyone, from traditional to modern forms of worship. Our purpose is to praise God and to explore his teaching as revealed by Jesus Christ.
We are a friendly group of people. Why not come along and see for yourself?
Robbie Williams - Let Me Entertain You - St.Marys Southampton- 6.6.17
Southampton & New Forest Rock Choir - All Over The World 14.7.13
Southampton & New Forest Rock Choir - All Over The World 14.7.13
Summer fundraising concert in aid of Mision Mexico UK at St Mary's and Holy Trinity Church.
Brother vahid baptism in LightHouse Church / southampton / england
غسل تمعید برادر وحید در کلیسای لایت هاوس انگلستان
Southampton FC v Portsmouth - FA Cup 5th Round - Welcome to St Mary's great Atmosphere!
(Saints v Skates)
13th February 2010
Holyrood Church, Southampton, England
Top Tourist Attractions in Nottingham: Travel Guide England
Top Tourist Attractions in Nottingham: Travel Guide England
Green's Mill and Science Centre, Mortimer's Hole, Nottingham Castle Museum & Art Gallery, Nottingham Contemporary Art Gallery, Nottingham Playhouse, Old Market Square, St. Mary's Church, The Arboretum, Theatre Royal & Royal Concert Hall, Wollaton Hall and Park
St. Mary's Plain, Norwich, UK
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Saint Mary's Plain is an area of the northern part of the centre of Norwich. Here we can see houses dating back to the sixteenth century and a round towered church - Church of St Mary at Coslany which dates to Saxon times. Round towered churches are associated with East Anglia although they are also found in other places too.
My channel on you tube : is one of the most prolific from Poland. I have produced around 1,800 original films, most in English. My big interest in life is travel and history but I have also placed films on other subjects.
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There are a number of films here on the packaging industry. This is because I am the publisher of Central and Eastern European Packaging -- - the international platform for the packaging industry in this region focusing on the latest innovations, trends, design, branding, legislation and environmental issues with in-depth profiles of major industry achievers.
Most people may think packaging pretty boring but it possibly effects your life more than you really imagine!
Central and Eastern European Packaging examines the packaging industry throughout this region, but in particular in the largest regional economies which are Russia, Germany, Poland, Czech Republic, Ukraine and Austria. That is not to say that the other countries are forgotten, they are not, but obviously there is less going on. However the fact that there are so many travel related films here is not from holidays but from business trips attending trade fairs around the region. Every packaging trade fair is a new excuse to make another film!
St Mary's Church
Merrett Survey Limited laser scans of St Mary's Church Lytchett Matravers
St Mary's Southampton Bells
A few audio clips taken from a quarter peal of Grandsire Caters on Sunday 13th Jan 2013.
Bell of St. Mary the Virgin Church, Sagada and Go Tell It On the Mountain
A new church bell for St. Mary the Virgin Church of Sagada, courtesy of Dr. John and Josephine Alipit. It includes a rendition of the song Go Tell It On The Mountain by different artists. Blessed are the musically talented who use their gifts to spread the good tidings of The Nativity. In that light, may I thank all of the artists (musicians and painters/artists) who, albeit unaware, shared their talents in the rendition of Go Tell It On The Mountain in this short video presentation. LlBS
Southampton's Sea City and Titanic Museum
No single memorial to the Titanic victims was ever contemplated, and most are still un-commemorated.
Sectional memorials in Southampton are as follows:
1) Engineer Officers: Situated in East Park opposite the Cenotaph, it is the largest and probably the most well-known. It is dedicated to the engineer officers, none of whom survived the disaster. It was designed by Messrs. Whitehead and Son and unveiled in April 1914. It is built of grey granite and bronze, and is 30 feet long by 20 feet high. In the centre a winged angel is flanked by relief representations of engineer officers. It is Grade II listed.
2) Titanic Crew: This memorial to the crew of the Titanic (stewards, sailors and firemen) originally stood at the southern end of the Common near the end of Cemetery Road. It is a drinking fountain made of Portland Stone by Garret and Haysom of East Street. It was unveiled in 1915 by Mr. Bullions Moody. It now stands in Holy Rood Church.
3) Musicians: A plaque to the memory of the musicians, who, according to reports, played on almost to the moment the ship sank, was erected in the old Central Library, Cumberland Place, in 1913 by the local branch of the Amalgamated Musicians Union. The building and plaque were destroyed by enemy action during the Blitz in 1940. An exact replica was commissioned in 1990 and placed on the wall of a modern office building in Cumberland Place.
4) Sea-post officers: A bronze tablet set in a pillar in the main post office on the High Street was was erected by members of the postal and telegraph services.
5) Musicians: A further memorial to the musicians, a metal tablet, was erected in St Mary’s Church. It survived the Blitz and was subsequently re-erected on a wall in the Seamen's Chapel.
6) Restaurant staff. A brass plate in St Joseph’s Roman Catholic Church in Bugle Street commemorates the restaurant staff of the Titanic. Many were local men, but about sixty were Italians, and probably attended St Joseph’s when they were in Southampton. Luigi Gatti, who managed one of the restaurants on board, lived in Southampton and also ran a restaurant in the town.
7) A plaque on the wall of Canute Chambers in Canute Road records the fact that this was the headquarters of White Star Line in 1912 and that hundreds of people waited here for news of their loved ones.
8) Two memorials to local victims were erected in local churches, one in St Augustine’s Church in Northam and the other at Holy Trinity, Millbrook. The wooden tablets erected in St Augustine’s were later moved to the Maritime Museum on Town Quay and are now in SeaCity Museum.
9) There are other memorials to individuals in the churchyards of the town.
SOURCE; Sotonopedia
Places to see in ( Rye - UK )
Places to see in ( Rye - UK )
Rye is an English town near the coast in East Sussex. In the centre, cobbled lanes like Mermaid Street are lined with medieval, half-timbered houses. The redbrick Lamb House was once owned by writer Henry James. Nearby, the tower of the Norman St. Mary’s Church overlooks the town. The 14th-century Ypres Tower, which formed part of Rye’s defences, is now Rye Castle Museum, with paintings and displays on local history.
Rye is a small town in the non-metropolitan county of East Sussex, within the historic County of Sussex, England, which stands approximately two miles from the open sea and is at the confluence of three rivers: the Rother, the Tillingham and the Brede. In medieval times, however, as an important member of the Cinque Ports confederation, it was at the head of an embayment of the English Channel and almost entirely surrounded by the sea.
Those historic roots and its charm make Rye a tourist destination, and much of its economy is based on that: there are a number of hotels, guest houses, B&Bs, tea rooms and restaurants, as well as other attractions, catering for the visitor. There is a small fishing fleet, and Rye Harbour has facilities for yachts and other vessels.
Rye, being part of the Cinque Ports Confederation and a bastion against invasion on the Channel Coast, has always had close links with the crown. It was King Edward III and the Black Prince who defeated the Spanish in Rye Bay in 1350 in the battle of Les Espagnols sur Mer. But it was Queen Elizabeth I who gave the town the right to use the title Rye Royal following a visit in 1573. King Charles I described Rye as The cheapest sea-towne for the provision of fish for our house. George I whilst returning from visiting his continental possessions in 1726 was grounded on Camber Sands and spent the next four days in Rye, being accommodated at Lamb House
Rye stands at the point where the sandstone high land of the Weald reaches the coast. The medieval coastline (see map above), with its large bay, enabled ships to come up to the port. The original course of the River Rother then reached the sea at Romney to the northeast. Storms in the English Channel in the thirteenth century, coupled with reclamation of the bay, brought huge quantities of gravel through longshore drift along the coast, blocking the port entrance. The course of the river has also changed over the centuries so that Rye now stands on the river at the point of its confluence with the River Tillingham and the River Brede, whereas the river flows southward into Rye Bay. River Rother and the environs of Rye Harbour are managed and maintained by the Environment Agency.[24] The Rivers Brede and Rother also form part of the Royal Military Canal between Winchelsea and Iden Lock. The town is part of the remotest and least populated area of southeastern England, on the edge of Romney Marsh and within three kilometres of the coast.
A part of the town, but only a minority of the housing stock, lies on the original rocky heights (the Citadel) and contains the historic buildings including St Mary's parish church, the Ypres Tower (part of the Town Wall), Lamb House and many of the houses on Mermaid Street, Watchbell Street, and Church Square. The main road skirts the town to the south after crossing the river; Winchelsea Road leads to New Winchelsea Road, formerly Royal Military Road, which runs parallel to the River Brede before leaving the town boundary. The houses along New Winchelsea Road date from the 1930s, built on the excavations from the Royal Military Canal. The gardens run down to the river, with fishing and boating rights. Most of Rye's inhabitants live outside the Citadel area.
( Rye - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Rye . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Rye - UK
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