Windmills Are Powered by Their Sails. Sails Are Found in Different Designs, from Primitive Common Sails to the Advanced Patent Sails
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Blennerhassett of BLENNERVILLE, Co.Kerry
BLENNERHASSETT family of BLENNERVILLE, CHURCHTOWN, ANNAGHARRY, MOUNT RIVERS, KELLS and BALLYMACPRIOR in Co.KERRY also the BLENNERHASSETT-EAGAR (Eager) family on F 17 - F 21 Blennerhassett Family Tree (BH08_Blennerville_F.xlsx) revised July 2014, copyright © Bill Jehan 1968-2014 Thanks to all who have contributed to these pages - please email additions & corrections to: [email protected] CONTINUED FROM page K 34 of: Blennerhassett of CASTLE CONWAY, KILLORGLIN, Co.Kerry F 01 >>|>> Henry >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>|>>Arthur Augustin Blennerhassett (alias Hassett); eldest son; Blennerhassett | b.c1701 Killarney, Co.Kerry ("...apud Killariam, in Com. Kerry..."); d.bef.1736; edu. TCD (Pensioner 1719); of Gortmasherry | Middle name given in honour of Augustine FitzGerald (son-in-law of Elizabeth Blennerhassett of Ballycarty - p.C 08) Co.Kerry; | who was a "good friend" to Arthur's uncle "Black Jack" Blennerhassett while in prison at Galway (p.K 01) living c1699 | / / | Adopted the RC faith & moved to France, where he became a Doctor of the Faculty of Divinity in Paris (University of the Sorbonne) and son of Capt. Robert | a RC Priest in the diocese of Lyon; he was naturalised as a French citizen in August 1734, at which date, according to his naturalisation Blennerhassett | documents, he had been "...settled for many years in our Kingdom..."; his uncle John "Black Jack" Blennerhassett, writing c1733, (b.est.c1627 prob. | said this Arthur "...Renounced his own and his family's religion and withdrew to France, where he died a Doctor of the Sorbonne..." at Ballycarty, | [HICKSON/OKR vol.1 1872, p.46] Co.Kerry) and | Avice Conway |>>Dorcas >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>|>>Thomas (a.k.a. -
Cambridgeshire Watermills and Windmills at Risk Simon Hudson
Cambridgeshire Watermills and Windmills at Risk Simon Hudson Discovering Mills East of England Building Preservation Trust A project sponsored by 1 1. Introductory essay: A History of Mill Conservation in Cambridgeshire. page 4 2. Aims and Objectives of the study. page 8 3. Register of Cambridgeshire Watermills and Windmills page 10 Grade I mills shown viz. Bourn Mill, Bourn Grade II* mills shown viz. Six Mile Bottom Windmill, Burrough Green Grade II mills shown viz. Newnham Mill, Cambridge Mills currently unlisted shown viz. Coates Windmill 4. Surveys of individual mills: page 85 Bottisham Water Mill at Bottisham Park, Bottisham. Six Mile Bottom Windmill, Burrough Green. Stevens Windmill Burwell. Great Mill Haddenham. Downfield Windmill Soham. Northfield or Shade Windmill Soham. The Mill, Elton. Post Mill, Great Gransden. Sacrewell Mill and Mill House and Stables, Wansford. Barnack Windmill. Hooks Mill and Engine House Guilden Morden. Hinxton Watermill and Millers' Cottage, Hinxton. Bourn Windmill. Little Chishill Mill, Great and Little Chishill. Cattell’s Windmill Willingham. 5. Glossary of terms page 262 2 6. Analysis of the study. page 264 7. Costs. page 268 8. Sources of Information and acknowledgments page 269 9. Index of Cambridgeshire Watermills and Windmills by planning authority page 271 10. Brief C.V. of the report’s author. page 275 3 1. Introductory essay: A History of Mill Conservation in Cambridgeshire. Within the records held by Cambridgeshire County Council’s Shire Hall Archive is what at first glance looks like some large Victorian sales ledgers. These are in fact the day books belonging to Hunts the Millwrights who practised their craft for more than 200 years in Soham near Ely. -
108Spring 1 999
INDUSTRIAL ARCHAEOLOGY 108SPRING 1 999 THE BULLETIN OF THE ASSOCIATION FOR INDUSTRIAL ARCHAEOLOGY 95 pence FREE TO MEMBERS OF AIA Copperas o Devon conference o Arty gasholders o Dubrovnik regional news o current research o Cruquius o limeworks o beer conference tr**tt\ Copperas, the first maior chemical industry in England 4TS Tim Allen Constantinople to the Turks in 1 453, the Genoese INDUSTRIAL returned to ltaly and re-established the industry at From 1995 onward1 an extraotdinary array of Tolfa under Papal monopoly. ARCI{AEOLOGY timber posts set in bright red-orange mortar was The Whitstable copperas industry revolved exposed by marine erosion on the Tankerton around the production of fenous sulphate, known NEWS 108 foreshore atWhitstable, Kent. ln 1997, Canterbury as 'copperas'and 'green vitriol' but confusingly, Spring 1999 Archaeological Trust began a two-year also identified by the generic terms 'alum' and investigation to identify these remains. Some of 'brimstone', the latter denoting sulphur or sulphur- the remains were identified as part of a late rich materials. Copperas was produced from fenous President sixteenth/seventeenth-century copperas works, disulphide (iron pyrite), othenrvise'copperas stones' Dr Michael Harrison 19 Sandles Close, The Ridings, Droitwich Spa WR9 8RB evidence of perhaps the first major chemical or'gold stones'. The pyrite occurs as nodules within industry to be established in England. lt later London Clay, an Eocene deposit ubiquitous in the Vice-President Dr Marilyn Palmer became clear that the southern copperas industry Thames Basin. Copperas works therefore School of Archaeological Studies, The University, Leicester had played a prominent and previously proliferated around the Thames estuary, especially LE1 7RH unsuspected role in the industrialisation of the on the Essex and north Kent coasts, where the Treasurel national economy from the late sixteenth to the nodules are washed out by the action of the sea. -
Proceedings Local Events
OPEN DAYS 2012 – LOCAL EVENTS PROCEEDINGS 2 AUSTRIA/ Carinthia - Lower Austria – Styria – Vienna /BELGIUM/ Brussels Capital Region - European Heat Pump Association in cooperation with local partners (EHPA) - Flanders – German-speaking Community of Belgium – Limburg - Province of Liège – Schaerbeek Municipality - South-East European Federation of Cities and Regions for the Environment (SEEFED) - VITO (Belgium) and Province of Ferrara (Italy), in collaboration with EGEC - Wallonia /BOSNIA-HERZEGOVINA/ Canton of Hercegovina-Neretva - Canton Sarajevo - Republika Srpska /BULGARIA/ City of Dobrich / NAMRB - Sofia – Stara Zagora - Varna /CROATIA/ Association of Small and medium-sized Entrepreneurs - Croatian Pannonia – Dubrovnik-Neretva Region - Istria - Karlovac County – City of Rijeka – Varazdin County /CYPRUS/ The Cyprus Presidency of the European Union Council and the Cyprus State General Laboratory of the Ministry of Health, together with the Consortia of the EU-funded projects “COPHES” (FP-7) and “DEMOCOPHES”(LIFE-Plus) - Nicosia/CZECH REPUBLIC/ EC Representation in the Czech Republic - Olomouc Region – Prague – South Moravian Region /DENMARK/ Central Denmark - North Denmark – Öresund Region – Region of Southern Denmark – City of Vejle - Zealand /ESTONIA/ Rakvere City Government - Tallinn City /FINLAND/ East Finland – City of Helsinki – City of Lahti – North Finland – City of Tampere - West Finland /FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC OF MACEDONIA/ City of Skopje - South-East European Federation of Cities and Regions for the Environment (SEEFED) -
St Peters Windmill Part 1
St. Peter’s Dynevor Windmill A Graphic Recreation of an Early Nineteenth Century Industrial Landmark David Butterfield 2015 Dado St. Peter’s Dynevor Windmill: A Graphic Recreation of a Mid-Nineteenth Century Manitoba Landmark has been developed by Dado Projects, a Manitoba heritage research initiative of Maureen Devanik and David Butterfield. These projects are supported by Heritage Manitoba, an informal coalition of municipal heritage associations dedicated to the appreciation and preservation of Manitoba’s history. The project is part of a series focusing on Manitoba’s early industrial development, especially in small-town or rural situations. Other projects in the series include: The Former Manitou Gas Company Plant The James White Sash and Door Factory of Carberry The Leary Brick Factory John Gunn’s Water Mill Introduction or about 50 years, from 1833 to the mid 1880s, a remarkable community was developed on the banks of the Red River just north of present-day Selkirk. Known at the time as the Indian Settlement, or the Indian Village, this very first Aboriginal agricultural settlement in what would become Manitoba was undertaken by a band of Saulteaux and Cree peoples under the leadership of Chief Peguis. Over the course of these 50 years these pioneering Aboriginal people broke the land, planted crops and sold their surpluses. They built a school and with help from Anglican missionaries educated their children. They constructed sturdy little log houses, erected first a log and then a fine stone church and put up two windmills to grind their grain for flour production. At the community’s height, in the 1850s and 60s, there were approximately 87 families comprising the village, totaling about 500 people. -
Philip Rahtz Slide Collection October 2020 Index of Places Numbers Of
Philip Rahtz slide collection October 2020 Index of places Numbers of up to five digits, with or without prefixes, refer to original 35mm slides kept by the Somerset Archaeological and Natural History Society, Somerset Heritage Centre, Brunel Way, Norton Fitzwarren, Taunton, TA2 6SF, [email protected], www.sanhs.org. (The prefix H is an abbreviation for Harome, and applies to slides numbered at Philip’s home there after his retirement from the University of York. The prefix SH applies to a small collection of images of Sutton Hoo which is kept separately at the end of the main sequences.) Numbers of six digits, commencing with 79, refer to images included in the York Digital Library at http://dlib.york.ac.uk/yodl. Abadiá de Silos, Spain Cloister C11 Ascension (1983), 21077, 21078 Cloister C11 Pentecost (1983), 21079 General view of cloister C11-C12 (1983), 21076 Abdon, Shropshire (1966), 6240.7 Accra, Ghana American embassy (1966), 9372 Ashanti house, Accra Museum (1966), 9460 Avorida Hotel (1966), 9381 Avorida Hotel (?) (1966), 9386 Building near library (1966), 9358, 9370, 9382 Legon department of archaeology (1966), 9379 Legon headquarters building (1966), 9359 Legon house (1966), 9380 Legon student flats (1966), 9377 Library (1966), 9355, 9356 Museum (1966), 9373 Tree, Accra Museum (1966), 9461 Achimota, Ghana Palm (1966), 15021 Acton Burnell, Shropshire Castle, 791865 Wall, 791874 Agadir, Morocco Boat yard, 794058, 794060, 794061 Boat yard and crane, 793991 Camels, 794072 Fish loading, 793986 Fishermen at nets, 793985 Fishing