Cape Pembroke Lighthouse, Falkland Islands 1997
Trinity House Lighthouse Service in Britain used to look after several lights abroad, one of which was Cape Pembroke in the Falkland Islands. This lighthouse is now under the control of the Falkland Island Government, but because it used to have Keepers from here (a long time ago) I managed to get to go and video it. The lighthouse was manned, by local Keepers up until the war in 1982, when it was discontinued. When I got to see it, it was an empty shell with a badly damaged lens. So this is my visit with lots of Island and the wildlife thrown in. This visit was only made possible thanks to the kindness of the Governor & the Falkland Island Government.
Falklands Finest Athletes Go Head to Head in The Annual Cape Pembroke Half Marathon
The annual Cape Pembroke Half Marathon took place on Sunday 17th February 2019 and saw over 40 competitors take on the 13 mile route from Stanley to the Cape Pembroke lighthouse, and back again. The mixed terrain challenging track took runners on tarmac, gravel, sand and peat.
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51º South : Charlie the Lightkeeper [Falkland Islands]
No.5 Charlie the Lightkeeper
Sharp, and charmingly mischievous, Charlie MacKenzie was keeper at Cape Pembroke Lighthouse isolated on the easternmost point of the Falkland archipelago. Revisiting the site, the white bearded, coverall clad Charlie vividly recalls passing time with HAM Radio, hiding contraband and eventually the day they came when he found himself at the apex of an invasion. Today, both the beacon and its keeper are in their own rights, true landmarks of these islands.
Cape Pembroke Lighthouse, standing at 56ft tall was built in 1855 and rebuilt in 1906. The light operated continuously up until the invasion of 1982 when it was put out of operation and subsequently fell into years of disrepair, mostly at the hands of vandals . The lighthouse was officially restored in 1990 and is now a historical listed building.
See '51º South: A Prologue' here: vimeo.com/43976860
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A Collaboration by : Vern Cummins & Jamie Gallant
Ass. Edited by: Caleb Hepler / Travis Hockswender
Motion GFX: Caleb Hepler
Post Supervision: JoJo Scheerer
Title Design: Eric Lee
Colorist: Fred Keller
Sound Design & Mix: Dan Kenyon
Original Music: 'Some Days' by Matt Sharp courtesy of Beta Petrol
Music Direction: Eric 'DJ Bunny Ears' Johnson
Archive audio courtesy of FIRS
A very special thank you to:
Charlie Mckenzie, Mark Spruce, Stacey Bragger, FIRS, FITV, Lisa Long & Dan Walsh @ Filmworkers Club Chicago, The Whitehouse Post
Our Partners: The North Face®, Redrock Micro®, Carl Zeiss Lenses® and Land Rover - Chicago®
The World's Most Southerly Park Run in The Falkland Islands
Parkrun is a global phenomenon that has seen more than 2 million people across 20 different countries take part in weekly 5km runs in their local area.
The 26th October marked the first Park Run in the Falklands at the iconic Cape Pembroke lighthouse. The track was jam packed with people running, walking and strolling their way to 5k.
FITV decided to brave the cold and windy weather to see how the ‘parkrunners’ got on.
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Athletes Take On The Gruelling Falkland Islands Standard Chartered Stanley Marathon 2019
The Standard Chartered Stanley Marathon is the southernmost AIMS-certified marathon in the world. Run annually since 2005, and internationally accredited since 2006, it is considered difficult due to the infamous variable weather and strong prevailing winds in the Falkland Islands.
Races are “open” with no sub-categories based on age, experience, nationality. Teams may be made up of 4 men, 4 women or combinations in between. The men’s, women’s and team races are run together.
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Liberation Day 2019
37 years since the 1982 conflict, and the people of the falklands came out to pay their respects and to give thanks to those who liberated them.
Regiments of the FIDF, Royal Air Force, Royal Marines and the Royal Navy took part in the annual parade through Stanley. The Govenor of the Falkland Islands and invited guests then laid wreaths to commemorate the lives lost in the conflict.
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The Wreck of the John R Kelley - FALKLANDS WRECKS
Join local historian David Bailey, from the Historic Dockyard Museum, as he takes you on a brief journey through the history of the 'John R Kelley' and how her legacy in the Falkland Islands remains prominent to this day.
From Cape Horn's gales to the lighthouse at Cape Pembroke join David as he explores how one of the largest wooden sailing ships ever built found herself in the Falklands.
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Falkland Islands 1983 Port Stanley
1983/84 Port Stanley and surrounding areas. I worked in the British Military Hospital.
Sgt Neil Smith (Smudge) And Pete!Where are you now?
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To the Lighthouse | Columbia Expedition #04.2
A shipboard brawl leads to murderous threats between Captain Kendrick and his junior officer, 19 year-old Robert Haswell. Demoted and kicked out of his cabin, the former Revolutionary War Loyalist licks his wounds and bides his time until his last chance to leave the Columbia Expedition at the Falkland Islands. The crew of Hit and Run History recounts these dramatic events while traversing the bitter, raw and windswept dunes leading to the Cape Pembroke Lighthouse in on East Falkland Island.
© Thunderball Entertainment Group 2014. Hit and Run History™ and the Columbia Expedition™ are trademarks of Thunderball Entertainment Group. Hit and Run History is a production of Thunderball Entertainment Group, the Cape Cod Community Media Center, a 501c3 nonprofit, and WGBH-Boston.
Motocross Falkland Islands (FIMA): Last of Season 2013/14
Here at the Ponds Track on the last motocross of 2013/14, we look at the days races and have a look back at the season.
Shot and edited by Caroline Scott for Falkland Islands Television.
Pre-Midwinter Swim in the Falkland Islands 2019
As the community gathered their spirits ahead of the annual Midwinter Swim here in the Falklands islands, FITV's new recruit Kyle Knappett thought he had avoided the plunge due to a lack of reporters available on the day...
However, here at FITV we take tradition very seriously and Mr Knappett was ... encouraged ... to take a dip a week ahead of time.
FITV brings you the latest news and content from the Falkland Islands.
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Sheep Farming in the Falklands (V2)
Provided to YouTube by Believe SAS
Sheep Farming in the Falklands (V2) · Crass
Best Before 1984 (Remastered)
℗ Crass Records
Released on: 1986-04-27
Music Publisher: Copyright Control / Rough Trade
Author: Eve Libertine
Composer: Eve Libertine
Author: Gee Vaucher
Composer: Gee Vaucher
Author: Joy De Vivre
Composer: Joy De Vivre
Author: Steve Ignorant
Composer: Steve Ignorant
Auto-generated by YouTube.
The Falkland Islands War - A Battlefield Study - Part 2
Part 2
This 4-part presentation was created just one year after the war. It pieces together a chronological analysis from British troops who were there during the battle.
© 1983
This production is for viewing purposes only and should not be reproduced without prior consent.
This film is part of a comprehensive collection of contemporary Military Training programmes and supporting documentation including scripts, storyboards and cue sheets.
All material is stored and archived. World War II and post-war material along with all original film material is held by the Imperial War Museum Film and Video Archive.
Stanley, Falkland Island, South America
The Capital
Stanley is the most southerly capital in the world. It is home to approximately 2,500 people and over 60 nationalities. It has everything you would expect a town to have, including two schools, a hospital, sports facilities, shops, restaurants, pubs, bars and supermarkets.
THE FALKLAND ISLANDS ACCENT | FALKLANDER ACCENT | ACENTO DE LAS MALVINAS | Verbale Mondo
FALKLANDER ACCENT
ACENTO DE LAS MALVINAS (INGLÉS)
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Alright lads and lasses! This video is offensive AF but I don't care. Today, you'll hear the accent the people who live in the Falkland islands have. Enjoy it!
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AUDIO USED:
FITV (2018, November 12) Public Health in the Falkland Islands. Retrieved from:
SOURCES:
BBC (2018, May 14) Falkland Islands profile. Retrieved from:
MUSIC USED:
Shetland- iMovie music
FLAG FROM: theflagshop.co.uk
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#Falklands #British #Brexit
Like my video please.
Verbale Mondo.
Liberation day ceremony marks 31 years since end of war
AP TELEVISION
1. Various of Falkland Island Voluntary Defence Force (FIDF) members parading along main road toward Port Stanley
2. Mid of Royal Air Force members
3. Mid of onlookers
4. Mid of Reverend Richard Hines leading Liberation Day commemoration service
5. Wide of service held in front of Liberation Monument
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Jan Cheek, Member of Legislative Assembly, Falkland Islands Government:
Liberation day means to us the peace, the freedom that you see around you now and a day to remember those who made huge sacrifices to make that possible. A day to feel gratitude to the British government for its continuing support to our right to self-determination. And it's become our national day. It's a day of huge importance.
7. Various of military Captain Peter Biggs
8. Mid of Nigel Haywood, Governor of Falkland Islands (left), arriving at ceremony
9. Mid of crowd, UPSOUND: (English) We will remember them... We will remember them
10. SOUNDBITE: (English) Gary Clement MBE, Falklands war veteran:
The significance really is lots of things. It's the freedom of the Islands, it's memory of lost friends. It's just something that seems to gather more and more each year as I go on. It gets more and more to the heart.
11. Wide of ceremony, AUDIO: British national anthem
12. Close-up of Haywood and other officials saluting
13. Wide of Haywood laying wreath in front of Liberation Monument
14. SOUNDBITE (English) Brian Aldridge, Falkland Islands resident:
Liberation to us you know is just so important because we certainly didn't want to live under the dictatorship we were under for 74 days in 1982, so yeah, really, really important.
15. Various of war veterans marking Liberation Day in front of monument
STORYLINE
Falkland Islanders on Friday marked the 31st anniversary of the end of the war with Argentina.
Residents followed a military parade to Liberation Monument, in Port Stanley, where a special service was held to remember Britain's liberation of the South Atlantic archipelago from Argentine occupation on 14 June 1982.
Liberation day means to us the peace, the freedom that you see around you now and a day to remember those who made huge sacrifices to make that possible, said Jan Cheek, a member of the Falkland Islands' Legislative Assembly.
It's become our national day. It's a day of huge importance.
The cluster of islands, 8-thousand miles (12-thousand kilometres) from Britain, was home to 1,800 people in 1982, when Argentina attempted to take sovereignty of the islands.
They had been under British rule for 150 years.
A 74-day war left 649 Argentine soldiers dead, along with 255 British military personnel and three residents.
On Friday, the Islands' British Governor, Nigel Haywood, laid a wreath at the base of the Liberation Monument.
British veterans paid tribute to their fellow soldiers who lost their lives in the short but bloody war.
Gary Clement, who was a member of the 45 commando of the British Royal Marines during the war, said the anniversary was a moment for reflection.
The significance really is lots of things. It's the freedom of the Islands, it's memory of lost friends. It's just something that seems to gather more and more each year as I go on. It gets more and more to the heart, he said.
Brian Aldridge, who lived through the war added: Liberation to us you know is just so important because we certainly didn't want to live under the dictatorship we were under for 74 days in 1982, so yeah, really, really important.
Argentina, which calls the Falklands Las Malvinas, is continuing to call for talks with Britain over sovereignty, but Prime Minister David Cameron's coalition government has said that residents alone must determine their future.
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Argentina ready to ramp up claim to Falkland Islands ‘Fight to defend!’ - News 247
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For any copyright, please send me a message. Malvinas, Antarctica and South Atlantic secretary Daniel Filmus expressed his anger that Argentina’s quest for the Falklands diminished before adding more aggression was needed from Argentina to win the land from the UK. He told a conference given at the headquarters of the Federation of University Teachers (FADUN) that the intensity of the claim for sovereignty decreased greatly”. He then said Argentina “needs a very active presence to claim the start of negotiations” with the UK over the sovereignty of the archipelago. He added: “We believe that the Malvinas issue should be a mandatory issue in all disciplines. “It is linked to foreign policy, but also to legal issues, fishing, energy, and a whole set of aspects that our universities must consider.” He said that “the fight to defend natural resources such as hydrocarbons, fisheries, biodiversity and mining was put aside”. He added: “A good part of our university graduates must leave not only with knowledge of the Antarctic and the Argentine sovereignty over the Falklands, but we must also generate new knowledge on all these issues.” The war over the Falkland Islands took place in 1982. Up to 255 British servicemen were killed and 650 Argentine soldiers. Argentine forces invaded the Falklands – known in Spanish as Islas Malvinas – and so Margaret Thatcher led British military to defend the British Overseas Territory. Britain won, but tensions have remained over the Islands’s sovereignty ever since. Commentators fear the newly elected President, Alberto Fernandez, and his Vice-President, Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner (a former President herself), will act on their electoral promise to renew claims over the islands. However, a deal was once almost struck between the UK and Argentina to share the archipelago according to an unearthed article. Writing in The Telegraph in March 2012, Barney Henderson revealed: “The deal was accepted in 1974 by President Juan Domingo Peron with ‘euphoria’ but was never conclude because he died three weeks after the offer was made.” Mr Peron was the founder of the Peronism movement, which both Mr Fernandez and Ms Fernandez de Kirchner are keen followers of. Trending The document itself was seen by the Argentina newspaper La Nacion, and was a “non-official document” from the British Foreign Office, relied in an attempt to settle the dispute. The document explained: “The British and Argentine flags would fly side by side and the official languages would be English and Spanish. All ‘belongers’ of the island would possess dual nationality. “Before final agreement, the Islands would have to be formally consulted and their acceptance sought by some form of popular representation. “On this
Falkland Islands Tourism Representatives Promote Islands Tourism Industry in Sao Paulo
A delegation of legislative assembly members, business leaders and tourism industry officials from the Falklands visited Sao Paulo last week to mark the inaugural second commercial air link from Sao Paulo to the Falkland Islands.
Members of the delegation took the opportunity to promote the Islands through engagement with local Brazilian tourism agencies. They hope to build long term working relationships that will benefit both the Falkland Islands and Brazil’s tourism industry.
Hannah Newton reports...
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Is Falkland Islands a good country?