St Mary The Virgin Church Denham Village
Exterior Views of Denham Village Church in Buckinghamsire England
St Mary's Church in Conwy
Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
BellRingers
Bell ringers – A team at St Mary and All Saints’ Church, Bingham, ring a full peal of bells, lasting almost three hours, to mark the 700th anniversary of the town’s market charter on Friday last week.
An Introduction to St Mary's Church, Oakley.
Join me in the beautiful village of Oakley in Bedfordshire as I look around the magnificent St Mary's Church which is situated in the heart of the village.
Climb the tower, explore the church, join the volunteers fund raising as they make afternoon cream teas, find out what makes these places look as fantastic today, as when they were first built hundreds of years ago.
I'll be chatting to the excellent team of volunteers, and meeting the vicar to find out the real people behind these special places.
Jessica & Matt
Jessica and Matthew exchanged vows in St Mary's church Conwy and then held a welcoming party and wedding breakfast in Sychnant pass country club in a magical setting marquee.
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A Paranormal Trip Around Nottinghamshire
Pictures and narration of some of the interesting places in Nottinghamshire. You can thank looperman.com for the annoying background.
A Quick Tour of Rye
Why? Because I've got time on my hands, that's why.
This is the beautiful metropolis of Rye in East Sussex on a sunny autumn morning filmed using my phone, attached to a windscreen-holdy-thing attached to my wife's car, so forgive the wonkiness of it all.
Just a bit of fun/high speed tourism.
Our weekend in Tenby, 8/8/2015
via YouTube Capture
Londres - St Bartholomew the Great
Londres - Iglesia St Bartholomew the Great
Choral Mass Epiphany 2017 Cathedral Choir
11:15 am Choral Mass at Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Charleston, SC Missa Brevis St. Joannis De Deo- Franz Josef Haydn
High Wycombe BID
HWBIDco, High Wycombe's town centre management company asks local businesses and stakeholders about their BID proposal
Walsingham late 1960s / early 1970s
A further short clip from my late father in law, John Collins, part of which I suspect may be from the same trip as on my previous upload as there is a brief look at what looks like the same coaches. However part of the film shows a late evening torchlight procession, so that throws my previous guess of it being a day trip into doubt.
This is certainly Walsingham again, and this clip includes some very clear views of St Mary's and All Saints Church in Little Walsingham which is not far from the shrine.
Once again, please do let me know if you spot any detail which could narrow the date down further.
NEWTON VILLAGE CHURCH AND DOVECOTE Near CORBY NORTHANTS
NEWTON CHURCH & DOVECOTE
Bingham Ridin' High - Washington Adventist University
Washington Adventist University's Kevin Hippolyte proposes a new major to James Bingham, the Chair of the WAU Music Dept. CUC Communication Banquet 2007 Show Opener. Written and Produced by Kevin Hippolyte. Directed and edited by Adonijah Thomas.
“The Last Sunday Service,” @St Aidans Kirk....Galashiels 1880 - 2019 ????????????????????????????
A look at the demolition process on maybe the last Sunday service 10th March 2019.
The church was built by the Edinburgh firm of Thornton Shiells and Thomson, a large domestic practice, as the South United Presbyterian Church at a cost of £5000. The designs were exhibited twice at the Royal Academy (1880 and 1885). St Aidans is thought to have been designed by Robert Thornton Shiells (1833-1902), primarily a church architect, who trained under David Bryce. Shiells is known to have designed a good number of churches for the United Presbyterian Church, of which St. Aidans is seen as a fine example.
The church was consecrated in August 1880 and has remained in ecclesiastical use since then. It was renamed St Aidan's in 1981.
The later halls were requisitioned by the military for use as a canteen during the war. (Historic Environment Scotland List Entry)
All my vids on St Aidan’s
Help fuel ⛽️ the Mace
Of the Father's Heart Begotten - Lycoming College Choir - 2017 Christmas Candlelight Service
The 2017-2018 Lycoming College Choir performs the Processional, Of the Father's Heart Begotten, during the Christmas Candlelight Service at Lycoming College on December 10, 2017. For more on the choir, visit
Of the Father's Heart Begotten was arranged by David Willcocks. The choir is directed by Dr. Daniel Hall. The organist is Jeff Johnson.
The Christmas Candlelight Service, or Festival of Lessons and Carols, is held annually at Clarke Chapel on the Lycoming College campus. Performances by the choir and hymns sung by the congregation are interspersed with nine lessons summarizing key point from the Bible as well as opening and closing prayers. The Festival of Lessons and Carols dates to England in the late nineteenth century, and one of the most well-known services has been held at King's College in Cambridge every year since 1923.
The Lycoming College Choir is the largest of three choral groups at Lycoming College, a historically Methodist four-year private college in Wiilliamsport, Pennsylvania. It is the college's full choir and supplies music for every major school event on campus. It is open to students from all academic fields and to every student who loves to sing.
The choir's repertoire consists of both sacred and secular music ranging from classical standards to new works by contemporary composers, as well as folk, world music, and modern styles.
In its seven decades, the Lycoming College Choir has performed hundreds of concerts including appearances at the National Cathedral, the Washington Shrine, the Crystal Cathedral, Coral Ridge, and New York City's St. John the Divine and St. Patrick's Cathedral. The Choir also gives frequent performances during Sunday services at Williamsport-area churches, including First United Methodist, Pine Street United Methodist, St. Mark's Lutheran, and St. John's United Methodist. In addition, the Choir often hosts and performs with visiting college choirs, such as various friendship choirs from Europe, and with local orchestras.
Approximately 40 students are chosen annually from the Lycoming College Choir to perform with the Tour Choir, which has a long history of quality performances throughout the United States and the world. Since its inception in 1947 by Walter McIver, the Lycoming College Tour Choir has presented concerts in every state east of the Mississippi River, Texas, California, Canada, Puerto Rico, Argentina, China, and throughout Europe. The choir tours nationally each year and internationally every three years. Most recently, in May 2016, the Tour Choir traveled to China for the first time, performing concerts in Shanghai and Beijing and holding workshops with a number of secondary schools' choirs.
Lycoming's third and smallest choral ensemble is the Chamber Choir, which performs a diverse repertoire ranging from vocal jazz to major works. The Chamber Choir has been featured twice in the Holiday Celebrations at the White House, and the ensemble has sung with the Gregg Smith Singers, the Chieftains, and Barry Manilow.
Lycoming College is an independent coeducational college of 1,400 students enrolled in 36 majors. The College is ranked by U.S. News and World Report as a national liberal arts college. Located in Williamsport, PA, the college is affiliated with the United Methodist Church.
South Africa Tour: 2012
Amazing Grace preformed by the New England Youth Ensemble, and the Colombia Collegial Choral, at Saint Georges Cathedral in Cape Town South Africa.
Conducted by: Dr. James Bingham
Edited by: Daniel Shetler
Ghost Box Session From Bedford Cemetery Pt 1
Ghost Box Session
John Rutter - Anthem: This is the Day which the Lord hath Made
John Rutter was commissioned by the Dean and Chapter of Westminster Abbey to compose this work for the occasion of the Royal Wedding of Prince William and Catherine Kate Middleton, which took place on 29 April 2011. I found this piece a most winning work for the wedding, and judging by the smiling faces of the couple as it was sung in the Abbey, they did too.
The words consist of verses from Psalms 118:24; 148:1-3, 5a; 91:4a, 11; 121:5-8 and 27:16b.
This is the day which the Lord hath made: we will rejoice and be glad in it.
O praise the Lord of heav'n: praise him in the height.
Praise him, all ye angels of his: praise him, all his host.
Praise him, sun and moon: praise him, all ye stars and light.
Let them praise the Name of the Lord.
For he shall give his angels charge over thee: to keep thee in all thy ways.
The Lord himself is thy keeper: the Lord is thy defence upon thy right hand;
so that the sun shall not burn thee by day: neither the moon by night.
The Lord shall preserve thee from all evil: yea, it is even he that shall keep thy soul.
The Lord shall preserve thy going out and thy coming in: from this time forth for evermore.
He shall defend thee under his wings.
Be strong, and he shall comfort thine heart, and put thou thy trust in the Lord.
I took these pictures the other day at the Church of SS Mary and Barlock at Norbury, Derbyshire; and near Parwich in the Derbyshire Peak District National Park (some 9 miles NNE of Norbury). And it was a day that the Lord hath made.
In the words of Sir Nikolaus Pevsner: Norbury Church is one of the most rewarding of Derbyshire, because of it wooded position, because of the variety of its parts, and because of the noble grandeur of its chancel.
For me, the church and adjacent manor house together form an ensemble which is particularly special, and as a bonus, along the old lanes thereabouts are surviving fingerposts - signposts from the 1950's in cast iron. It's as if one has entered an unmolested, secret corner of England, far from the Madding Crowd. I must go there again soon.
The present church of St Mary and St Barlock was built piecemeal over a period of about 200 years. The chancel is the earliest part of the church, and is unusually large in relation to the rest of the fabric. It is 46 feet (14 m) long, and is both wider and higher than the nave (which at 49 feet (15 m) is slightly longer). The design of the chancel windows' tracery indicates a building date of c. 1300-1310, as does the contemporary armorial glass. Two of the arms depicted are those of Otton de Grandson who left England in 1307, and Robert the Bruce, at war with England from 1306. The roof of the chancel is a later 15th century wooden construction; external buttresses and internal shafts running up to the roof line indicate that the original design may have intended a fan vault, never built.
The south tower, nave and chapel east of the tower were built by Nicholas Fitzherbert (d. 1473), he or his son Ralph (d. 1483) built the north aisle, and his grandson John Fitzherbert (d. 1513) built the south-west chapel, which was finished in 1517. Much of the stained glass added by the Fitzherberts survives; these are for the most part figures painted in grisaille. In the south-east chapel there is a window showing the donor and his family.
There are a number of memorials to the Fitzherbert family in the church, including Sir Henry (d. 1315) depicted as a cross-legged knight, Nicholas (d. 1473) carved in alabaster with attendant mourners, and Sir Ralph Fitzherbert (d. 1483) and his wife, again in alabaster.
The crossed legs of Henry, 6th Lord of Norbury c. 1275- c. 1315 indicate his profession of Christian faith and not participation in a Crusade; although his year of death is uncertain it is known that he was not a Crusader.
The great east window of the chapel originally held 14th century glass depicting a large scene with full-sized figures. By 1770 the glass was in very bad condition. At that time the rectors of parishes were personally responsible for the financing of repairs to their churches- so the rector of Norbury, the Rev. S. Mills, had the window bricked up with the glass remaining in situ. In 1830 the then rector, the Rev. Thomas Bingham,[21] was approached by a Roman Catholic family of Yorkshire with a view to purchasing the glass. Whether the glass was removed and sold, or stolen (as happened at Haddon Hall), or had disintegrated is not known, but it had disappeared by 1842 when the window was opened up again and filled with 15th century glass taken from the rest of the church windows. (Adapted from, and courtesy of The Buildings of England (Derbyshire), by Sir Nikolaus Pevsner, and Wikipedia).
First performed on Friday 29 April 2011 by the Choirs of Westminster Abbey, and Her Majesty's Chapel Royal, St James's Palace
Conductor & Choirmaster: James O'Donnell