Oakham.
Printable View
Oakham.
One for Keith!
I didn't know that Keith had joined the Royal Family, Rob. :)
Here is the Pelham Arms in Lewes, East Sussex.
Attachment 52424
Rear Admiral Sir Frederick Thomas Pelham was appointed the Second Naval Lord in 1859. Pelham is the Family name of the Earls of Chichester.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_Thomas_Pelham
Newport
Orleans Road Maryland.
Shirehampton.
Tewkesbury
Another Pelham Arms at Portsmouth.
Attachment 52448
Exeter.
A third Pelham Arms at Gravesend in Kent.
Attachment 52474
Southwold
Plymouth.
Queenborough.
Europa Park.
The Enterprise in Holborn, London.
Attachment 52515Attachment 52516
Prymont.
The Flying Enterprise Lounge and Restaurant in Cork, County Cork, Ireland.
Attachment 52522
The Flying Enterprise was a freighter badly damaged in a storm, which sank in 1952 despite attempts to rescue her.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Flying_Enterprise
Attachment 52523
A blast from the past there Dave.
I was nearly 5 and the only Radio broadcasts I remember from that time were over Christmas about Captain Carlson and then the death of King George VI on the 6th of February.
Rob.
Szczecin Poland.
Dover
Middlesbrough
Chelmsford.
Faversham.
Tralee
...
The Bonny Boat in Kingston-upon-Hull, East Yorkshire,
Attachment 52619
The Bonny Boat is nothing to do with a certain 'Young Pretender' but refers to an Inuit kayak. In 1613 the crew of the ship 'Heartsease' from Hull rescued an Inuit in distress off the coast of Greenland. Sadly, the man died but his kayak and equipment may be seen in Trinity House, Hull. In the pub there is a poem about the rescue and a photograph of the kayak containing an effigy of the Inuit.
https://www.hullbid.co.uk/articles/o...-400-years-ago
The Ernest Shackleton Tulse Hill.
Wolviston.
Wokingham.
Whitstable.
Whitby.
Wakefield
Royal George. West Coker.
https://sailsofglory.org/attachment....id=52763&stc=1Newton Eyecliffe Tyneside.
https://sailsofglory.org/attachment....id=52764&stc=1
Turbinia was the first steam turbine-powered steamship. Built as an experimental vessel in 1894, and easily the fastest ship in the world at that time, Turbinia was demonstrated dramatically at the Spithead Navy Review in 1897 and set the standard for the next generation of steamships, the majority of which would be turbine powered. The vessel is currently located at the Discovery Museum in Newcastle upon Tyne, North East England, while her original powerplant is located at the Science Museum in London.
Tyneside.
Ware.
Dolphin Western Super Mare.
Wandsworth.
Wakefield.
Queenbrough.