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The Wessex Cave Club Journal Volume 24 Number 261 August 1998
THE WESSEX CAVE CLUB JOURNAL VOLUME 24 NUMBER 261 AUGUST 1998 PRESIDENT RICHARD KENNEY VICE PRESIDENTS PAUL DOLPHIN Contents GRAHAM BALCOMBE JACK SHEPPARD Club News 182 CHAIRMAN DAVE MORRISON Windrush 42/45 Upper Bristol Rd Caving News 182 Clutton BS18 4RH 01761 452437 Swildon’s Mud Sump 183 SECRETARY MARK KELLAWAY Ceram Expedition 183 5 Brunswick Close Twickenham Middlesex NCA Caver’s Fair 184 TW2 5ND 0181 943 2206 [email protected] Library Acquisitions 185 TREASURER & MARK HELMORE A Fathers Day To Remember 186 MRO CO-ORDINATOR 01761 416631 EDITOR ROSIE FREEMAN The Rescue of Malc Foyle 33 Alton Rd and His Tin Fish 187 Fleet Hants GU13 9HW Things To Do Around The Hut 189 01252 629621 [email protected] Observations in the MEMBERSHIP DAVE COOKE St Dunstans Well and SECRETARY 33 Laverstoke Gardens Ashwick Drainage Basins 190 Roehampton London SW15 4JB Editorial 196 0181 788 9955 [email protected] St Patrick’s Weekend 197 CAVING SECRETARY LES WILLIAMS TRAINING OFFICER & 01749 679839 Letter To The Membership 198 C&A OFFICER [email protected] NORTHERN CAVING KEITH SANDERSON A Different Perspective 198 SECRETARY 015242 51662 GEAR CURATOR ANDY MORSE Logbook Extracts 199 HUT ADMIN. OFFICER DAVE MEREDITH Caving Events 200 HUT WARDEN ANDYLADELL COMMITTEE MEMBER MIKE DEWDNEY-YORK & LIBRARIAN WCC Headquarters, Upper Pitts, Eastwater Lane SALES OFFICER DEBORAH Priddy, Somerset, BA5 3AX MORGENSTERN Telephone 01749 672310 COMMITTEE MEMBER SIMON RICHARDSON © Wessex Cave Club 1998. All rights reserved ISSN 0083-811X SURVEY SALES MAURICE HEWINS Opinions expressed in the Journal are not necessarily those of the Club or the Editor Club News Caving News Full details of the library contents are being Swildon’s Forty - What was the significance of the painstakingly entered by the Librarian onto the 10th July this year? WCC database. -
DOCUMENT RESUME RC 021 689 AUTHOR Many Nations
DOCUMENT RESUME ED 424 046 RC 021 689 AUTHOR Frazier, Patrick, Ed. TITLE Many Nations: A Library of Congress Resource Guide for the Study of Indian and Alaska Native Peoples of the United States. INSTITUTION Library of Congress, Washington, DC. ISBN ISBN-0-8444-0904-9 PUB DATE 1996-00-00 NOTE 357p.; Photographs and illustrations may not reproduce adequately. AVAILABLE FROM Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, DC 20402. PUB TYPE Books (010) Guides Non-Classroom (055) -- Reference Materials Directories/Catalogs (132) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC15 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS *Alaska Natives; American Indian Culture; *American Indian History; American Indian Languages; *American Indian Studies; *American Indians; Annotated Bibliographies; Federal Indian Relationship; *Library Collections; *Resource Materials; Tribes; United States History IDENTIFIERS *Library of Congress ABSTRACT The Library of Congress has a wealth of information on North American Indian people but does not have a separate collection or section devoted to them. The nature of the Librarv's broad subject divisions, variety of formats, and methods of acquisition have dispersed relevant material among a number of divisions. This guide aims to help the researcher to encounter Indian people through the Library's collections and to enhance the Library staff's own ability to assist with that encounter. The guide is arranged by collections or divisions within the Library and focuses on American Indian and Alaska Native peoples within the United States. Each -
The Royal Scottish Academy of Painting', Sculpture Nd
-z CONTENTS Vo1ue One Contents page 2 Acknowledgements Abstract Abbreviations 7 Introduction 9 Chapter One: Beginnings: Education and Taste 14 Chapter Two: 'A little Artistic Society' 37 Chapter Three: 'External Nature or Imaginary Spirits' IL' Chapter Four: Spirits of the enaissance 124 Chapter Five: 'Books Beautiful or Sublime' 154 Chapter Six: 'Little Lyrics' 199 Chapter Seven: Commissions 237 Conclusion 275 Footnotes 260 Bibliography 313 Appendix: Summary Catalogue of Work by Phoebe Traquair Section A: Mural Decorations 322 Section : Painted Furniture; House, Garden and Church Decorations 323 Section C: Paintings, Drawings and Sculpture Section D: Designs for Mural and Furniture Decorations, Embroideries, Illuminated Manuscripts and Enamelwork 337 Section B: EmbroiderIes 3415 Section F: Enamels and Metalwork Section G: Manuscript Illuminations S-fl Section E: Published Designs for Book Covers and Illustrations L'L. Section J: Bookbindings 333 Volumes Two and Three Plates 3 ACKOWLEDGEXE!TS This thesis could not have been researched or written without the willing help of many people. My supervisors, Professor Glies Robertson, who first suggested that I turn my interest in Phoebe Traquair into a university dissertation, and Dr Duncan Macmillan have both been supportive and encouraging at all stages. Members of the Traquair and Moss families have provided warm hospitality and given generously of their time to provide access to their collections and to answer questions which must have seemed endless: in particular I am deeply indebted to the grandchildren of Phoebe Traquair, Ramsay Traquair, Mrs Margaret Anderson, and Mrs Margaret Bartholomew. Francis S Nobbs and his sister, Mrs Phoebe Hyde, Phcebe Traquair's godddaughter, have furnished me with copies of letters written to their father and helped on numerous matters, Without exception owners and. -
Long, W, Dedications of the Somersetshire Churches, Vol 17
116 TWENTY-THIKD ANNUAL MEETING. (l[ki[rk^. BY W, LONG, ESQ. ELIEVING that a Classified List of the Dedications jl:> of the Somersetshire Churches would be interesting and useful to the members of the Society, I have arranged them under the names of the several Patron Saints as given by Ecton in his “ Thesaurus Kerum Ecclesiasticarum,^^ 1742 Aldhelm, St. Broadway, Douiting. All Saints Alford, Ashcot, Asholt, Ashton Long, Camel West, Castle Cary, Chipstaple, Closworth, Corston, Curry Mallet, Downhead, Dulverton, Dun- kerton, Farmborough, Hinton Blewitt, Huntspill, He Brewers, Kingsdon, King Weston, Kingston Pitney in Yeovil, Kingston] Seymour, Langport, Martock, Merriot, Monksilver, Nine- head Flory, Norton Fitzwarren, Nunney, Pennard East, PoLntington, Selworthy, Telsford, Weston near Bath, Wolley, Wotton Courtney, Wraxhall, Wrington. DEDICATION OF THE SOMERSET CHURCHES. 117 Andrew, St. Aller, Almsford, Backwell, Banwell, Blagdon, Brimpton, Burnham, Ched- dar, Chewstoke, Cleeve Old, Cleve- don, Compton Dundon, Congresbury, Corton Dinham, Curry Rivel, Dowlish Wake, High Ham, Holcombe, Loxton, Mells, Northover, Stoke Courcy, Stoke under Hambdon, Thorn Coffin, Trent, Wells Cathedral, White Staunton, Withypool, Wiveliscombe. Andrew, St. and St. Mary Pitminster. Augustine, St. Clutton, Locking, Monkton West. Barnabas, St. Queen’s Camel. Bartholomew, St. Cranmore West, Ling, Ubley, Yeovilton. Bridget, St. Brean, Chelvy. Catherine, St. Drayton, Montacute, Swell. Christopher, St. Lympsham. CONGAR, St. Badgworth. Culborne, St. Culbone. David, St. Barton St. David. Dennis, St. Stock Dennis. Dubritius, St. Porlock. Dun STAN, St. Baltonsbury. Edward, St. Goathurst. Etheldred, St. Quantoxhead West. George, St. Beckington, Dunster, Easton in Gordano, Hinton St. George, Sand- ford Bret, Wembdon, Whatley. Giles, St. Bradford, Cleeve Old Chapel, Knowle St. Giles, Thurloxton. -
Map Referred to in the District of Mendip
SHEET 3, MAP 3 Mendip District. Wards and parish wards in St Cuthbert Out and Shepton Mallet Emborough Quarries Shooter's Bottom Farm d n NE U A Emborough Grove L AY W CHEWTON MENDIP CP RT PO Green Ore B 3 1U 3n 5d Portway Downside Bridge CHILCOMPTON CP D ef CHEWTON MENDIP AND STON EASTON WARD E N A L T R Dalleston U O C 'S R E EMBOROUGH CP N R BINEGAR CP U T Binegar Green Gurney Slade Quarry Binegar VC, CE (Stone) Primary School Gurney Slade Hillgrove Farm Binegar Binegar Quarry (disused) T'other Side the Hill NE Tape Hill LA T'S ET NN BE Def Kingscombe D ef KEY Highcroft Quarry (disused) WARD BOUNDARY PARISH BOUNDARY PARISH BOUNDARY COINCIDENT WITH OTHER BOUNDARIES PARISH WARD BOUNDARY COINCIDENT WITH WARD BOUNDARY PW Ashwick R O E Cemetery ME A Scale : 1cm = 0.10000 km D Gladstone Villas L A N Grid interval 1km E Haydon f e D Horrington Hill D ef Reservoirs (covered) d n ASHWICK, CHILCOMPTON AND STRATTON WARD U Poultry Houses Recreation Ground ASHWICK CP West Horrington ST CUTHBERT OUT NORTH WARD Oakhill Little London Oakhill Manor Oakhill CE (V.C.) Oakhill CE (V.C.) Primary SchoolPrimary School All Saints' Church ST CUTHBERT OUT EAST All Saints' Church PARISH WARD Golf Course d n U Horrington County Nursery Primary School O LD FR O D M ef E R O De A f D D ef D i s East Horrington m a n t l e E ST CUTHBERT OUT CP Washingpool d f N e R A D a L i l E w P a U y f R e D H T D ef D D R South Horrington N A A P C W D L R E E A High Ridge B O H F M C I E O M L C T S O L D E C r O iv E K in N g A H O L R T a L n L S g e E N Beacon Hill P A -
48 5127 A.S.E.N. 53 5137 Abbott, Marie Louisa 21 October 10 1907
48 5127 A.S.E.N. 53 5137 Abbott, Marie Louisa 21 October 10 1907 53 5137 Abbott, Thomas 11 January 1 1885 48 0060 Adams, Thomas Maxwell 8 October 10 1806 47 5134 Addiscott, Mary Ann 6 March 3 1894 47 5134 Addiscott, Mary Ann 6 March 3 1894 47 4137 Ady, Emilia Mary 18 January 1 1890 52 2135 Alderoft, Thomas 9 December 12 1868 49 9135 Allan, Mary Agnes 6 June 6 1908 49 9135 Allan, Robert Halliday 12 October 10 1886 54 9119 Allen, Adrian Veitch 24 August 8 1905 54 9119 Allen, Frederick Quiten 2 October 10 1902 48 2092 Allen, John 3 April 4 1872 48 2092 Allen, Margaret 28 February 2 1871 54 9119 Allen, Sarah Alice 11 October 10 1920 47 9139 Amand, Louisa Ann 16 March 3 1902 51 5082 Anderson, Harriet 22 January 1 1877 51 5082 Anderson, John 21 May 5 1885 47 5135 Andrews, John Frederick 26 October 10 1887 53 8081 Annisley, Elizabeth Frances 7 November 11 1834 48 9125 Anshee, Hannah 5 August 8 1866 47 8147 Anthony, Amelia 20 December 12 1899 45 9136 Armytage, William 11 January 1 1872 51 5110 Ash, Benjamin 12 May 5 1850 53 3130 Ash, Charlotte 3 September 9 1886 51 5110 Ash, Edward 18 August 8 1851 53 3130 Ash, George 15 December 12 1870 51 5111 Ash, James 17 January 1 1870 51 5110 Ash, Mary 8 July 7 1866 51 5111 Ash, Mary 24 August 8 1878 49 8120 Ashby, Arthur 25 October 10 1882 49 8120 Ashby, Sarah 17 December 12 1862 47 5122 Ashwood, Eliza 7 August 8 1912 46 6121 Ashwood, Jane 9 March 3 1900 47 5122 Ashwood, Louisa 22 January 1 1903 46 6121 Ashwood, Mary 9 May 5 1900 51 0141 Austin, John 16 November 11 1876 54 6084 Austin, Joshua 6 April 4 1878 54 6084 Austin, Martha 10 June 6 1891 54 6084 Austin, Meshach 29 November 11 1858 54 6085 Austin,Shadrach 8 December 12 1854 53 3134 Avery, Maria G. -
The Barrington Papers the Barrington Papers
The Barrington Papers The Barrington Papers Delia Barrington’s notes on Binegar’s history 1 The Barrington Papers Introduction to Delia Barrington, 1912-1991 Delia Barrington (née Parker) was born in 1912 in Kensington, London and the family then moved to Ealing where she spent the early years of her life. She was of Huguenot descent through her father's side of the family and a member of the Huguenot Society of London for most of her life. Sometime between 1934 and '37, when she was in her mid-twenties, she enjoyed working, along with a number of other volunteers, for the archaeologist Sir Mortimer Wheeler who was excavating the site of the Iron Age Hill Fort at Maiden Castle in Dorset. This was the start of her interest in archaeology and a development of her interest and involvement in local history: something that was to remain with her throughout her life. She joined the Women's Land Army during the Second World War, working on a farm in Buckinghamshire. The hours were long and the work hard but she found it rewarding and made many friends. In 1941, she met the chauffeur of exiled King Zog of Albania who was living nearby. The story goes that she was courted by him, not with flowers but with kippers, which were left for her by the farm gates! These tactics were obviously successful because at the end of the war she and the chauffeur (William Barrington) were married. In the late 1940s, Delia and William went to Holsworthy in Devon where they ran a farm together but after a few years decided that it was not the life for them and they moved to Bristol where William was employed, once again, as a chauffeur until his retirement. -
638 Far Somersetshire
638 FAR SOMERSETSHIRE. [ KELLY's! FARMERS continued. Cox Hubert, Burtle, Bridgwater Creighton S.Downhead,Shepton Mallet Corp Alfred, Redlake, North Wootton, Cox Hugh, Chew Stoke, Bristol Crew Arthur, St. Catherine, Bath Shepton Mallet Cox Isaac, Egford, Whatley, Frome Crick Brothers, Great Ash, Winsford, Corp Alfd. West Pennard, Glastonbury Cox James, High Littleton, Bristol Dulverton R.S.O Corp A.Hen,. Lower Godney, Wells Cox Jeffery, Brean, Bridgwater Crick Jn. Devonscombe, Exfrd.Tauntn Corp Arthur Jn. Ham, Shepton Mallet Cox Jesse, Catcott Burtle, Bridgwater Crick Wm. Holtball,Luccombe,Tauntn Corp A. J. Lovington, CastleCary 8.0 Cox John, Lamyatt, Bath Griddle John, Higher Oatley, Canning- Carp Edwin, Witbam Friary, Bath Cox J. R. Oharlton, Radstock, Bath ton, Bridgwater Corp George, Wick, Glastonbury Cox Joseph, Burrington, Bristol Criddle Richard, Loc'king, Weston- Corp Henry, Ham, Wells Cox Joseph, Midsomer Norton, Bath super-Mare Corp Levi, Baltonsborough, Glastonbry Oox Joseph, Westbury, Wells Criddle Richard, Westleigh, Lydeard Gorp T. E. Thrupe, Crosoombe,Wells Cox Joseph James, Portishead S. 0 St. Lawrence, Taunton Corp William, Lamyatt, Bath Cox Mark, Nempnett Thrubwell, Cridge Edwin, Lopen, llminster Corpe John, Sutton, Bath Wrington R.S.O Cridge Thomas, West Hatch, Taunton Corpe Thos. S. Bickenhall, Taunton Cox Mark William, Skinner's hill, East Cridland E.R.S.Milton,Martock R.S.O Corpe William, J.amyatt, Bath Coker, Yeovil Oridland Vile Board, Milton, Martock Cosh Henry, Knapp Hill farm, Leigh- Cox Robert, Combe Hay, Bath R.S.O upon-Mendip, Bath Cox Robert, Frome Crisp John, Allowenshay, Kingstone, Cosh W. Highcroft, Ashwick, Bath Oox Robert, Mount Pleasant, Farm- Ilminster Cossey W. -
Ashwick, Oakhill & Binegar News
The Beacon Ashwick, Oakhill & Binegar News JULY 2021 Cover photo: © Richard Venn Church Services – July 2021 Sunday, 4th July 10am Communion St. James, Ashwick Sunday, 11th July 10am Family Worship All Saints, Oakhill with baptism Sunday, 18th July 10am Communion St. James, Ashwick Sunday, 25th July 10am Communion Holy Trinity, Binegar 4pm 4th@4 Outdoors Simbriss Farm, Ashwick Would you like to support the churches in our parish? Please scan the QR code and make a donation online. Thank you. Please visit www.beacontrinity.church or: Follow us on Instagram! facebook.com/beacontrinity instagram.com/beacontrinity View from the Hill July 15th is St. Swithin’s Day, so Encyclopaedia Britannica says! St. Swithin’s Day, (July 15), a day on which, according to folklore, the weather for a subsequent period is dictated. In popular belief, if it rains on St. Swithin’s Day, it will rain for 40 days, but if it is fair, 40 days of fair weather will follow. St. Swithin was Bishop of Winchester from 852 to 862. At his request he was buried in the churchyard, where rain and the steps of passers by might fall on his grave. According to legend, after his body was moved inside the cathedral on July 15, 971, a great storm ensued. The first textual evidence for the weather prophecy appears to have come from a 13th- or 14th-century entry in a manuscript at Emmanuel College, Cambridge. You can find lots more history about him, but he is perhaps one of the more commonly heard of saints, even if its only the legend about the weather. -
07 July 2014 Website PN
PARISH NEWS St Cuthberts, Wells and St Mary Magdalene, Wookey Hole July 2014 St Mary Magdalene, Wookey Hole (By courtesy of Chris Lee) Au Revoir by Alistair Glanvile By the time you read this we will have said There will be new challenges for us all in the Goodbye to Elizabeth at her final service as she next few months and I hope that we will all rise to finishes her contract with us. During her time them and that our church will continue to with us she has been a breath of fresh air, with prosper. new ideas and a different way of looking at things. Her particular skills are in visiting our Alistair G older parishioners and encouraging young people both in the schools and in the preparation she has done for marriage and baptism. When I Sunday 6th July go round on my visits I am always told how much people enjoy her visits and how interested she is We are all invited to in the people she visits. A great skill for a parish Join with the congregation of priest. St Thomas’s Wells at 10am The sight of her riding her bicycle at great speed around the parish without a helmet sometimes to celebrate their Patronal Festival has filled me with dread but she has been a very public representative of St Cuthbert’s. Sharing There will NOT be a 10am service at services with her has never been boring and her St Cuthbert’s that morning, although dancing skills which were on show at the last All there will be the usual 8am Communion there, Age service were amazing! and 11am Holy Communion at Wookey Hole. -
GEOMORPHOLOGY and HYDROLOGY of the CENTRAL MENDIPS Steady Gradient of About I in 90 to Crook Peak (628 Ft.) and with Only Slightly Less Regularity to 400 Ft
Geomorphology and Hydrology or the Central Mendips. Proc. Univ. Brist. Spe1. Soc., 1969, 12 (I), 63-74. Jubilee Contribution University ofBristol Spel.eological Society Geomorphologyand Hydrology of the Central Mendips By D. T. DONOVAN, D.Se. Only in the last few years has the Society carried out and published work on cave geomorphology and hydrology. This article attempts to relate this work to the geomorphological problems of the Mendip Hills. These will be reviewed first. The first question which must be settled is the degree to which the relief of the Palreozoic rocks is an exhumed relief dating from Triassic times, revealed by the removal ofMesozoic rocks. Some authors, perhaps in spired by Lloyd Morgan (Morgan 1888 p. 250; Morgan & Reynolds 1909, p. 24), have thought Triassic erosion an important factor in determining details ofpresent relief. While the broad reliefofnorth Somerset certainly reflects that of the late Trias, when the Coal Measures vales between the Carboniferous Limestone uplands had already been eroded to their present level or lower, I question whether the relationship holds in any detail. Some of the marginal slopes of Mendip may be little more than old Carboniferous Limestone slopes exhumed by removal of Trias, but along the southern limit of the Mendips the characteristic steep, regular marginal slope is, in fact, largely cut in the Triassic Dolomitic Conglo merate which has an exceedingly irregular contact with the Carboniferous Limestone. Similarly, the summit plateau cuts indiscriminately across Carboniferous and Triassic. All the anticlinal cores were exposed by erosion in Triassic times, but except west of Rowberrow, where the Old Red Sandstone core ofthe Blackdown anticline was already eroded down to a low level in the Trias, I conclude, with Ford and Stanton (1969) that the Triassic landscape is unimportant in controlling present relief. -
Care and Share Food Bank for Southern Colorado 2012-13 Financial Supporters
Care and Share Food Bank for Southern Colorado 2012-13 Financial Supporters 12 Volt Tavern Ms. Sandra Achord Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Addington 1st Bank Mr. and Mrs. Edward Achtenberg Ms. Linda Addington 1st Place for Memories Ms. Cheryl Ackerman Adesa Colorado Springs 2013 Winter in Widefield Ice Bowl Ackley’s Rocks Adesa Great Lakes 4 Bits 4 H Club Ms. Wanda Ackor Adesa Minneapolis 4 MRS Booster Club Mr. Ivan Acosta Ms. Beth Adeson 56 Spirit Committee Mr. and Mrs. George Acree Ms. Janet Adessa A Brit and 3 Yanks Mr. and Mrs. Terry Acree Mr. Tony Adkison A Plus Properties Rosie Adair and Alfred Coxe Ms. Carol Adkisson A to Z Realty Ms. Sally Adame Mr. Douglas Adler A. Bookkeeping and Consulting Service Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Adams Ms. Louise Adler AA “Accurate and Affordable” Striping, Inc Mr. Dale Adams Ms. Margaret Adler AAHS Cheerleaders Mr. and Mrs. David Adams Ms. Kristie Adler Hawkins Ms. Renee Abbe Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Adams Mr. and Mrs. James Adley Mr. and Mrs. James Abbott Mr. and Mrs. Gary Adams Ms. Ann Adnet Ms. Janet Abbott Mr. John Adams II Mr. and Mrs. Dana Adoretti Ms. Marjory Abbott Mr. and Mrs. John Adams Adrian Leroy Hall Trust Mr. and Mrs. Donald Abdallah Mr. and Mrs. John Adams Advanced Auto Detail, LLC Mr. and Mrs. William Abel Maj Kenneth Adams Advisers Investment Management, Inc. Mr. and Mrs. Scott Abell Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Adams Jr. Aerospace Sams Ms. Jennifer Abernathey Mr. and Mrs. Leo Adams Affiliated Business Consultants, Inc. Ms. Mary Lou Abernathy Mr.