DWP Estates Proposals 26.01.2017 V1.0
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The Rainhill Trials The people who owned the Liverpool and Manchester railway didn’t know what sort of engines to use on their new railway so they decided to hold a competition where the winning locomotive would win £500 and if it was good enough, it would be used on the new railway. The competition was held at Rainhill in October 1829. The locomotives would have to run up and down the track at Rainhill twenty times and because the owners were afraid that heavy locomotives would break the rails, no heavy engines would be allowed. Ten locomotives entered the competition but only five turned up and two of those broke down. The rocket, built by George Stephenson and his son Robert, won the competition and it was decided that the Rocket would be used on the new Liverpool and Manchester Railway. The Liverpool and Manchester railway opened in September 1830. Many important people were at the opening ceremony and there was a procession of eight locomotives including The Northumbrian, The Rocket, The North Star and The Phoenix. After the group of special visitors were given a ride on the Northumbrian, William Huskisson, one of Liverpool’s MPs crossed from his own carriage to speak to the Duke of Wellington. People shouted to warn him when they realised that the Rocket which was being driven by Joseph Locke, was about to pass the Northumbrian. Huskisson was unable to escape and was knocked down by Rocket and one of his legs was badly injured and torn. A doctor tried to stop the bleeding but couldn’t so George Stephenson, Robert Stephenson’s father used the Northumbrian to take him to hospital. -
Normanhurst and the Brassey Family
NORMANHURST AND THE BRASSEY FAMILY Today, perhaps, it is only architects whose names live with their engineered creations. Those who build bridges, roads and railways are hidden within the corporations responsible, but in the nineteenth century they could be national heroes. They could certainly amass considerable wealth, even if they faced remarkable risks in obtaining it. One of the – perhaps the greatest – was the first Thomas Brassey. Brassey was probably the most successful of the contractors, was called a European power, through whose accounts more flowed in a year than through the treasuries of a dozen duchies and principalities, but he was such a power only with his navvies. Brassey's work took him and his railway business across the world, from France to Spain, Italy, Norway, what is now Poland, the Crimea, Canada, Australia, India and South America, quite apart from major works in the UK. His non-railway work was also impressive: docks, factories and part of Bazalgette's colossal sewerage and embankment project in London that gave us, among more important things, the Victoria and Albert Embankments, new streets and to some extent the District and Circle Lines. By 1870 he had built one mile in every twenty across the world, and in every inhabited continent. When he died at the (Royal) Victoria Hotel at St Leonards on 8 December 1870 Brassey left close to £3,200,000, a quite enormous sum that in today's terms would probably have been over a thousand million. He had been through some serious scares when his contracts had not yielded what he had expected, and in the bank crisis of 1866, but he had survived Thomas Brassey, contractor (or probably it his son Thomas) to build the colossal country house of Normanhurst Court in the parish of Catsfield. -
Who Is Council Housing For?
‘We thought it was Buckingham Palace’ ‘Homes for Heroes’ Cottage Estates Dover House Estate, Putney, LCC (1919) Cottage Estates Alfred and Ada Salter Wilson Grove Estate, Bermondsey Metropolitan Borough Council (1924) Tenements White City Estate, LCC (1938) Mixed Development Somerford Grove, Hackney Metropolitan Borough Council (1949) Neighbourhood Units The Lansbury Estate, Poplar, LCC (1951) Post-War Flats Spa Green Estate, Finsbury Metropolitan Borough Council (1949) Berthold Lubetkin Post-War Flats Churchill Gardens Estate, City of Westminster (1951) Architectural Wars Alton East, Roehampton, LCC (1951) Alton West, Roehampton, LCC (1953) Multi-Storey Housing Dawson’s Heights, Southwark Borough Council (1972) Kate Macintosh The Small Estate Chinbrook Estate, Lewisham, LCC (1965) Low-Rise, High Density Lambeth Borough Council Central Hill (1974) Cressingham Gardens (1978) Camden Borough Council Low-Rise, High Density Branch Hill Estate (1978) Alexandra Road Estate (1979) Whittington Estate (1981) Goldsmith Street, Norwich City Council (2018) Passivhaus Mixed Communities ‘The key to successful communities is a good mix of people: tenants, leaseholders and freeholders. The Pepys Estate was a monolithic concentration of public housing and it makes sense to break that up a bit and bring in a different mix of incomes and people with spending power.’ Pat Hayes, LB Lewisham, Director of Regeneration You have castrated communities. You have colonies of low income people, living in houses provided by the local authorities, and you have the higher income groups living in their own colonies. This segregation of the different income groups is a wholly evil thing, from a civilised point of view… We should try to introduce what was always the lovely feature of English and Welsh villages, where the doctor, the grocer, the butcher and the farm labourer all lived in the same street – the living tapestry of a mixed community. -
6 5 2 1 3 7 9 8Q Y T U R E W I O G J H K F D S
i s 8 7q a 3 CITY 5 e TOWER HAMLETS k p 4 1 u rf 6w y 2 9 g j t do h RADICAL HOUSING LOCATIONS Virtual Radical Housing Tour for Open House Hope you enjoyed the virtual tour. Here’s a list of the sites we visited on the tour with some hopefully useful info. Please see the map on the website https://www.londonsights.org.uk/ and https://www.morehousing.co.uk/ ENJOY… No Site Year Address Borough Built VICTORIAN PHILANTHROPISTS Prince Albert’s Model Cottage 1851 Prince Consort Lodge, Lambeth Built for the Great Exhibition 1851 and moved here. Prince Albert = President of Society for Kennington Park, Improving the Condition of the Labouring Classes. Prototype for social housing schemes. Kennington Park Place, 4 self-contained flats with inside WCs. Now HQ for Trees for Cities charity. London SE11 4AS Lambeth’s former workhouse – now the Cinema Museum 1880s The Cinema Museum Lambeth Charlie Chaplin sent here 1896 with mother and brother. Masters Lodge. 2 Dugard Way, Prince's, See website for opening times http://www.cinemamuseum.org.uk/ London SE11 4TH Parnell House 1850 Streatham Street Camden Earliest example of social housing in London. Same architect (Henry Roberts) as Model Cottage in Fitzrovia, London stop 1. Now owned by Peabody housing association (HA). Grade 2 listed. WC1A 1JB George Peabody statue Royal Exchange Avenue, City of London George Peabody - an American financier & philanthropist. Founded Peabody Trust HA with a Cornhill, charitable donation of £500k. London EC3V 3NL First flats built by Peabody HA 1863 Commercial Street Tower Now in private ownership London E1 Hamlets Peabody’s Blackfriars Road estate 1871 Blackfriars Road Southwark More typical ‘Peabody’ design. -
'Twenty-Five' Churches of the Southwark Diocese
THE ‘TWENTY-FIVE’ CHURCHES OF THE SOUTHWARK DIOCESE THE ‘TWENTY-FIVE’ CHURCHES OF THE SOUTHWARK DIOCESE An inter-war campaign of church-building Kenneth Richardson with original illustrations by John Bray The Ecclesiological Society • 2002 ©KennethRichardson,2002.Allrightsreserved. First published 2002 The Ecclesiological Society c/o The Society of Antiquaries of London Burlington House Piccadilly London W1V 0HS www.ecclsoc.org PrintedinGreatBritainbytheAldenPress,OsneyMead,Oxford,UK ISBN 0946823154 CONTENTS Author’s Preface, vii Acknowledgements, ix Map of Southwark Diocese, x INTRODUCTION AND SURVEY, 1 GAZETTEER BELLINGHAM, St Dunstan, 15 CARSHALTON BEECHES, The Good Shepherd, 21 CASTELNAU (Barnes), Estate Church Hall, 26 CHEAM, St Alban the Martyr, 28 St Oswald, 33 COULSDON, St Francis of Assisi, 34 DOWNHAM, St Barnabas, Hall and Church, 36 St Luke, 41 EAST SHEEN, All Saints, 43 EAST WICKHAM, St Michael, 49 ELTHAM, St Barnabas, 53 St Saviour, Mission Hall, 58 and Church, 60 ELTHAM PARK, St Luke, 66 FURZEDOWN (Streatham), St Paul, 72 HACKBRIDGE & NORTH BEDDINGTON, All Saints, 74 MALDEN, St James, 79 MERTON, St James the Apostle, 84 MITCHAM, St Olave, Hall and Church, 86 MORDEN, St George 97 MOTSPUR PARK, Holy Cross, 99 NEW ELTHAM, All Saints, 100 Contents NORTH SHEEN (Kew), St Philip the Apostle & All Saints, 104 OLD MALDEN, proposed new Church, 109 PURLEY, St Swithun, 110 PUTNEY, St Margaret, 112 RIDDLESDOWN, St James, 120 ST HELIER, Church Hall, 125 Bishop Andrewes’s Church, 128 St Peter, 133 SANDERSTEAD, St Mary the Virgin, 140 SOUTH -
Dundee Table 2, 3 & 4 Miss
HISTORIC DUNDEE the archaeological implications of development PART 2 Sylvia J. Stevenson Elizabeth P. D. Torrie SCOTTISH BURGH SURVEY 1988 ------------------------------------------------ Contents The Castle Town Defences Churches, Chapels and Religious Houses Commercial and Institutional Organisation Crafts, Industries and Water Supply Harbour Tables of Appendices 2, 3 & 4 THE CASTLE (Site of) NO 4043 3028 Historical Evidence Dundee Castle was built on a hill of black dolerite jutting into the Tay. Most physical evidence of the site was blasted away in the early 19th century to make way for Castle Street, but St Paul's Episcopal Church, High Street, still clings to a small portion of this dolerite exposure. Its existence is implied in the early 13th century by the name Castle Wynd but the first documentary evidence of the castle is in 1290 when Brian FitzAlan was made custodian of the castles of Forfar and Dundee.1 Lamb argues that the fortification was extensive, and maintained at least 130 knights and horseman within its walls. This may be supported by the details of provisioning of the castle in various records, but in particular from the English Exchequer Rolls of the reign of Edwards I and II, although all provisions would not necessarily be destined solely for the occupants of the castle, but possibly also for retainers nearby.2 Taken by the English at the beginning of the Wars of Independence, the castle was then successfully seized by Sir Alexander Scrymgeour who was, in reward, made hereditary constable of the castle of Dundee in 1298 by William Wallace.3 It has been claimed that the castle was destroyed on the instruction of Wallace. -
The Edinburgh Gazette, May 3, 1864 601
THE EDINBURGH GAZETTE, MAY 3, 1864 601 Jamei Boyton, of 11, Upper Rosoman Street, Clerkenwell, Hugh Denerley, of 12, Egerton Street, and carrying on Middlesex, manufacturing silversmith. business at 32, Renshaw Street, both in Liverpool, Boberf Shean, of New Eoad, Richmond, Surrey, fish* Lancaster, hatter. monger and poulterer. Levi Fewins, formerly of Alphington Street, Saint Thomas- Julius Tata Bower, formerly of 5, Kennington Terrace, the-Apostle, Devon, but now of Preston Street, Exeter, Kennington Lane, now of 5, Alexander Terrace, Stock- grocer and provision dealer. veil, both in Surrey, accountant. • Matthew Cooper, of 1, Burford Place, Saint David, Joseph Locke, of 7, Lessada Street, Twig Folly, Bethnal previously of 5, Colleton Terrace, Holy Trinity, both in Green, previously of Old Ford, Bow,, both in Middlesex, Exeter, accountant and musician, mason and builder, (in forma pauperis). William Semmence, of Town Green, Wymondham, Nor- Junes Grainger, formerly trading in copartnership with folk, bowl and brush wood turner. Alfred Grainger, at 17, Crosby Kow, Walworth Road, John Morris Protheroe, of the Square, Beaufort, Brecon, as grocers and tea dealers, afterwards and late of 6, formerly of Cwm, near Victoria, Monmouth, coal agent, Tower Street) Westminster Road, both in Surrey, shopkeeper, butcher, collier, and farmer. grocer -and cheesemonger, (in form& pauperis). Tames Watkins, of 11, Norfolk Terrace, Saint Martin Charles Edwin Hindley, of Wellington, Salop, grocer. Street, Hereford, builder. Thomas Chnne, now jcf Shrewsbury, Salop, timber mer- John Clark, of the Exeter Inn, Thorverton, Devon, chant, brick maker, and commission agent, previously licensed victualler and coal dealer. „ accountant, clerk to George & Joseph Chuue, of the same place, timber merchants. -
PROBATE & LETTERS of ADMINISTRATION in England With
PROBATE & LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION in England with Irish Probate and Scotch Confirmations Years searched: 1853-2007 Transcribed by Andrew Loudon: [email protected] Note: Coinage was (£ s. d.) until decimalisation on Feb 15 1971. References to 'writer' usually means a solicitor. 'Eik' = codicil. Known relatives highlighted in yellow. Note: this document is searchable using Ctrl+f to find a first name or part of an address. 1853-57 (Wills Proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury) LOUDON Peter Surrey Nov 1854 Ref to Will: 841 LOUDON Robert Middlesex Jun 1854 Ref to Will: 469 LOUDON Jane Pts. Aug 1856 (Administration) 1858 LOUDON Jane 25 Aug The Will of Jane Loudon late of 3 Porchester Terrace, Bayswater in the County of Middlesex Widow deceased who died 13 Jul 1858 at Porchester Terrace aforesaid was proved at the Probate Registry by the oath of Agnes Loudon of 3 Porchester Terrace aforesaid Spinster the Daughter and one of the Executors. Effects under £800. LOUDON John Claudius 18 Dec Letters of Administration (with the Will annexed) of the Personal estate and effects of John Claudius Loudon late of 3 Porchester Terrace, Bayswater in the County of Middlesex deceased who died 14 Dec 1843 at Porchester Terrace aforesaid left unadministered by Jane Loudon Widow the Relict and the Executrix named in the said Will were granted at the Probate Registry to Agnes Loudon of 3 Porchester Terrace aforesaid Spinster the Daughter and the Residuary Legatee for Life (with a power of appointment by Will) substituted in the said Will she having been first sworn. Former Grant Prerogative Court of Canterbury May 1844. -
Dundee Retail Study December 2015
Dundee City Council Dundee Retail Study 2015 December 2015 Roderick MacLean Associates Ltd In association with Ryden 1/2 West Cherrybank, Stanley Road Edinburgh EH6 4SW Tel. 0131 552 4440 Mobile 0775 265 5706 e mail roderick @ rmacleanassociates.com Executive Summary 1. The purpose of the research is to Street. The City Centre has about 87,000 sq m inform preparation of the next Dundee Local gross of comparison and convenience retail Development Plan (LDP2) on key issues floorspace. There is a further 41,600 sq m relating to retailing and town centres. In gross of non-retail services. The vacancy rate Dundee, this covers the network of centres in the City Centre is 17%, which is higher than with a focus on the City Centre, the five District the Scottish average of 10.6% for town Centres and the Commercial Centres (retail centres. Vacant floorspace in the City Centre parks). has increased in recent years. 2. Existing planning policies seek to 8. While there is no known list of protect the vitality and viability of the town multiple retailers with immediate requirements centres and include restrictions on the range of to locate in the City Centre, this is common goods that are sold in the retail parks, together with many other cities, where the market lags with a general presumption against out of behind forecast growth in comparison retail centre retail development. expenditure in the cycle of demand and investment. Prime retail rents in the City 3. A household telephone interview Centre are about £100 per sq ft, which ranks survey covering Dundee and Angus was Dundee at 8th place among rentals in other applied to determine shopping patterns and the town centres/ malls in Scotland. -
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Application No 02/00415/OUT Item 2 Page 6 KEY INFORMATION Ward East Port Proposal Outline application for extension and remodelling of existing shopping centre to create 4680 sq m retail unit adjacent to Victoria Road. Address The Wellgate Shopping Centre The Wellgate Dundee DD1 2DB Applicant Britel Fund Trustees Ltd Lloyds Chambers 1 Portsoken Street London Agent 3D Architects Proposed Extension of Wellgate 11 Stafford Street Edinburgh EH3 7BR Shopping Centre at Victoria Road Registered 29 May 2002 Case Officer C Walker An Outline application for the extension and remodelling of existing shopping centre to create 4680 sq m retail unit adjacent to Victoria Road is RECOMMENDED FOR APPROVAL SUBJECT TO CONDITIONS. Report by Director of Planning and Transportation RECOMMENDATION SUMMARY OF REPORT The proposed • Outline planning permission is sought to extend the Victoria Road end of the Wellgate development complies Centre by 4,680 sq. metres. Taking demolitions into account the net increase would with Development Plan be some 2,590 sq. metres. policy. Subject to the • imposition of appropriate Illustrative plans have been submitted indicating the demolition of the Victoria Road conditions at outline entrance, the furniture retail unit to the west of that entrance and the row of shops at 5- stage, a future detailed 15 Victoria Road and the erection of a 2 storey retail unit with the upper level being at application for the the same level as Victoria Road. proposed extension can • There is a second application to extend the Wellgate Centre by 2,530 sq. metres at enhance the appearance Meadowside Yard, and a report on that application (ref. -
Joseph Iocke Had Never Lost Sight of His Desire to Link His Grandjrmction Line to Carlisle and Beyond
The - JosephIocke Memorial and A Short History of the Exeter and Crediton Railwav Published on the Occasionof the 160thArniversary of the Opning of the I'lxeter and Crediton Railway ' 12thMay 2011 IN'I'RODUC'TION History abounds with exemplary cbaracters who, fol some obscure reason or another, have failed to gain the recognition they desewe. In the field of early railr.tay civil engineering Joseph tocke is the paramount paradign. 'fhis pre-eminent British engineer was responsible {or handing dowrr courtless miles of superbly engircercd railr*ay; building the lirst trunl< lines of foru countries, including Britain; bequeadring to posterity a design of back sdll basically in use, to a gauge universally adopted and which he al- rays championed; building to cost, rnore cheaply than just about anyone else; with no unnecessary cxtavagance; usually to time - sometimes belbre; firrishing olf projecb on which othen had fourdercd; never suffcring that igrominy himsclf. No-one else maraged this. His works, quiedy and effi- ciently man4ged aurdconshrrcted, boasted of nothing but consumnaûo con- hdence, and unassuming compctence: he nevcr really made any bad mis- tahes, :md his name was never bardied about iùnongst those guilq' of the lavish ald thc dramatic, meaning also the cosdy and the unwarranted. Nor did he become embroiled in dcad-end technologies, such as a[nosphcric propulsion, always lending his narne and his effots to the promotion of the locomotive errgine, a policy leamt at the hands of his early menkrr, George Stcphcnson. \4/hilst Gcorgc's son Robeft, a civil engineering giant in his own right, de- veloped the science of the locomotive alongsidc other budding mechanical engineels, Joe concentrated ou building the lines: the characteristic I-ockian practice of around or over, rather than through, exercised the in- creasing power of ûre locomolives of his age, :urd provided Brihin with its most cost-effective pioneer railnays. -
St Andrews Dundee &
Dundee & St Andrews 2020 - 2021 TM V&A Dundee Dandy Statues The Dukes Golf Course Est. 2000 ARTS, CULTURE & TOURISM CAFES, BARS & CLUBS ENTERTAINMENT, HEALTH & LEISURE Lindores Abbey Distillery HOTELS & CONFERENCES RESTAURANTS SHOPPING & RETAIL The Seafood Ristorante RSS Discovery Carnoustie Golf Hotel The Original Guide www.theentertainmentguide.co.uk Golf Place, St Andrews, KY16 9JA 01334 473253 [email protected] www.auchterlonies.com Abbey Road, Newburgh, Fife, KY14 6HH 01337 842547 [email protected] lindoresabbeydistillery.com Golf Place, St Andrews, KY16 9JA 01334 473253 [email protected] www.auchterlonies.com CONTENTS THE ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE TEAM 0006 INTRODUCTION Managing Editor: John Campbell Design & Production: Lorraine Pontello - CPP Design 00008 CAFES,ARTS, CULTURE BARS & CLUBS& TOURISM Senior Journalist: Kai Sedgwick Photography: 00026 ENTERTAINMENTCAFES, BARS & CLUBS & TOURISM Paul Cameron Website and Development: Network IT Raid-10 00050 HEALTH,ENTERTAINMENT, BEAUTY HEALTH& LEISURE & LEISURE Telesales Manager: Sharon Bozkurt Social Media Manager: Dale McLean 78 HOTELS & CONFERENCES The Entertainment Guide Registered Office: Suite One, Dunnswood House, Wardpark South, Cumbernauld, G67 3EN For Enquiries Call: 98 RESTAURANTS 0131 285 1421 Email: [email protected] 100 SCOTTISH MICHELIN WINNERS 2019 Web: www.theentertainmentguide.co.uk The Entertainment Guide is a Registered Trademark. Any attempt to reproduce or alter the trademark without the written permission of the publisher Mr John SHOPPING & RETAIL Campbell will be deemed to be a breach of copyright 000126 law and therefore be subject to legal action. Dundee & St Andrews 2020/21 www.theentertainmentguide.co.uk 5 INTRODUCTION long the east coast of Scotland, where the sun sparkles off the water, you’ll find two of Scotland’s most intriguing spots: the bustling city of Dundee and the historic town of St Andrews.