woman
Wybers Wood. Footpath and footbridge over the River Freshney by Wybers Wood housing estate
Wood near Lasham. Photographed from the A339. This is about where the Basingstoke and Alton light railway crossed the road.
Windpump, Moreton Underhill. This windpump is near the western edge of the square beside the footpath leading west from Moreton Underhill Farm. It seems to be non-operational and seized up judging by the lack of movement on the windy day on which the picture was taken.
Water Lane Ford, Great Bradley, Suffolk. the other version is better
View north to Great Widgham Wood. Taken by River Stour, Great Bradley, Suffolk
View from Bradley Green. Looking ENE across the square towards Feckenham. The small wooded hill in the middle distance is The Rough on the eastern edge of the square.
Viaduct (disused) crossing the Huddersfield Broad Canal.
Upper Stour Valley, Great Bradley, Suffolk. The valley of the upper reaches of the River Stour during the flowering of the Rape Seed. Looking East to Kirtling
Travellers Rest Public House, Upper Hopton. The field in the front of the Pub was the original Upper Hopton Cricket Pitch. see http://www.ckcricketheritage.org.uk/northkirklees/upperhopton/docs/hopton_theearlyyears.pdf
Towpath Bridge crossing the River Calder.
Tickley, Bentworth. Looking due north towards Tickley - a wonderfully named house just north of Bentworth.
Thurlow Road, Great Bradley, Suffolk. The road is the B1061
The bend in Paul Lane, Kirkheaton. Here this little lane has a sharp bend as it crosses the valley of a little stream. The driveway leads to a row of houses called Spring Grove Gardens. The lane is unfortunately popular with fly-tippers and with motorists trying in vain to avoid the traffic jams on the main road.
The Yew tree, Lower Wield. This 300 year old building is now a restaurant with a Remy Martin award.
The Three Castles Path, Bradley. Running from Windsor to Winchester via Odiham - each has a castle - the Three Castles Path here runs in front of the row of trees to the left. In the foreground is a belt of set aside left to encourage pheasants.
The Oxdrove Way. There's a bridleway - the Oxdrove Way - running beneath the dead tree. This is a circular 25-mile route designed primarily for horseriders.
The 'Royal and Ancient, Dalton Bank Road, Colne Bridge, Kirkheaton. This replaced the Spinners Arms, which is shown on the 1850 6
Syngenta Chemical Plant. The site manufactures important products such as the herbicide 'Gramoxone' and the insecticide 'Karate'.
Stubble Trouble. Looking NE between Lopham's Wood and Park Tuft
Stock Wood Lodge Farm.
St.Mark's church, Nunsthorpe, Grimsby, Lincs. 1959-61 by E.Vernon Royle, St.Mark's church on Laceby Road is not the most inspiring building !
St.George's church, Bradley, Lincs. Perilously close to Grimsby, Bradley retains its rustic charm and medieval church built of local ironstone. A tower which looks Norman but has 13th century bell openings and Decorated font with the inscription
St. Peter's church, Little Thurlow, Suffolk. This church is mainly 14th century. Notice the unusual circular clerestory north windows, which are 17th century.
St. Mary's church, Great Bradley, Suffolk. St. Mary's was built by the Norman, though the tower is perpendicular. Interesting features are both the south and north Norman doorways.
St. Mary & All Saints, Bradley.
St Mary's Church, Great Bradley, Suffolk. View across the River Stour towards the church, with the village in the background
St Mary's Church, Great Bradley, Suffolk. This shot shows the original Norman style church (left) and the 14th Perpendicular style tower.
St John's Cottages, Great Bradley, Suffolk. The name of the cottages refer to the fact that St John's College, Cambridge used to own most of the land around here.
Sipsey Bridge: Plaque shows the Suffolk-Cambridge Border. WSCC stands for West Suffolk County Council, which was a district council until 1974. It was then incorporated into Suffolk
Sign by Carlton Hall Farm. I love the way it says Carlton Green against the blue sky and the brown fields. This is just east of Carlton Hall Farm on Acre Rd
Shell Brook. photographed from SO 972599
Running from a fish. Doesn't it look like one of the clouds is a biped running from a fish? Looking NE with Dearsley's Farm on the right and Doley Wood on the left
Roundhill Wood. known to conservationists for the variety of rare moths and butterflies that inhabit it.
Roundabout Trigpoint. The view from the Roundabout trigpoint.
Roundabout Trigpoint. Top surface showing the plug.
Robin Hood's Grave, Clifton. The enclosure was built in the 18C in an attempt to stop people from chipping pieces from the gravestone, which were supposed to cure toothache. The iron cage was made by the Birkenshaw Iron Works. Unfortunately at some time in the 20C the grave was badly damaged by vandals using oxy-acetelyne equipment to cut through the iron bars, and toppling two of the decorative corner posts. Why anyone should take the trouble to do this is a mystery, as nothing was taken. The tablet was also made in the 18C and reads, in Chaucerian language, 'Hear Underneath dis laitl stean Laz robert earl of Huntingtun Ne'er arcir ver az hie sa geud An pipl Kauld im robin heud Sick utlawz az hi an iz men Vil england nivr si agen Obiit 24 Kal Dekembris 1247' . Yew trees have been planted around the grave. Note that to see this you need to book a place on the twice-yearly Calderdale Heritage Walk in the Kirklees estate.
Robin Hood's Grave.
Road junction near Lower Wield
Road junction near Bradley. This is the junction of Spain Lane and Red Lane
Recreation Ground, Great Bradley, Suffolk. Looking towards Fox Green
Rape field at Stock Wood.
Rape field at Stock Wood. Just round the corner is a nice old pub, The Bird in Hand.
Priest Bridge. Just out of view behind the trees is the old village school which is now a private house.
Ponies near Moreton Underhill. Two more of the local inhabitants in the fields on the side of the hill.
Park Tuft. Park Tuft wood taken from near the bend in the road above Temple End, Thurlow, Suffolk
Other End. This is looking NE by the footpath sign. The sign reads 'Acre Road'. To see the sign at the other end of the path in Acre Road go to TL6453.
Open Fields near Bentworth. There are lots of open fields around here and not much else!
Old cattle shed near Stockwood lodge Farm.
Morrison's Supermarket. On Laceby Road just outside Grimsby
Mirfield Sewage Incinerator.
Mathews Lane, Great Bradley, Suffolk. Looking down Mathews Lane from beside the ancient farm house
Looking across fields to Bradley Green Church. View across to Bradley Green church from road junction at SO 973585
Little pond near Perry Mill Farm. The heavy clay soil of this area ensures there is always water in this pond even in the driest summers.
Ladgrave Lock on the Huddersfield Broad Canal. Ladgrave Lock No 3 & Joe Kayes Bridge
Laceby Road Methodist Church, Grimsby. Also called St. George's Methodist, this is the third chapel built for the congregation of this chapel-this one in the late 1950's after the chapel of 1847 in George St, Grimsby had been demolished to make way for a new shopping centre.
Kirtling Brook, Great Bradley, Suffolk. Kirtling Brook brings water that has been pumped from The Ouse into the River Stour, so it can get to the reservoirs in Essex
Huddersfield Broad Canal at Deighton. Looking west along the Huddersfield Broad Canal from near the A62 bridge at Deighton.
Huddersfield Broad Canal. Bridge Road B6118 crossing the canal
Huddersfield Broad Canal. One of a series of locks on this stretch of the canal.
Huddersfield Broad Canal. Joe Kayes Bridge and Ladgrave Lock on the Huddersfield Broad Canal, looking south.
Huddersfield Broad Canal. Lock 1 of the Huddersfield Broad Canal, just south of its junction with the Calder and Hebble Navigation at Cooper Bridge.
Houses along Dalton Bank Road, Colne Bridge, Kirkheaton. The old settlement of Colne Bridge was on the Bradley side of the river, and has now disappeared. In the late 19C these houses were built on the road to Huddersfield via Dalton. A single-storey cottage can just be seen, which is probably the oldest of the houses.
Hollin Hall.
Great Widgeham Wood. Taken from where the road ends at Widgeham Green. Like everywhere round here, the fields have horses in.
Great Bradley, southern approach to the village. The B1061 runs through the village from Newmarket to Haverhill
Great Bradley, Suffolk. Village Sign. The sign is by the B1061 which runs through the village. The background shows the River Stour Valley
Great Bradley from East Green. The church tower can just be seen, left middle
Good morning Cows! Looking down Acre Road, Carlton, Cambridgeshire. The van is at the junction with the B1061. Great Bradley is to the right
Freedom Farm, East Green, Great Bradley, Suffolk. The farm is now a successful stud.
Former St Thomas's Church, Bradley, Huddersfield,Yorkshire. This was built in 1863. The spire was added in1865, the north aisle in 1879 and the porch and vestry in 1891. It has been replaced by a new building further north, more convenient for the housing estates of Bradley, and is now used by the Greenhead Gymnastic Club. The tower is over the south transept. Note the large rose window, the effect of which is spoilt by having to be covered by wire netting. The gate-piers were listed in 1976, but one of them has disappeared. For a view from the SE see http://www.imagesofengland.org.uk/images/41/65/L416590.jpg
Footpath to Dearsley's Farm. Looking S along the footpath (kindly shown on the noticeboard). There are even some people using it, if you look just to left of the clump of trees. Near spot height 102m
Finchley Farm. At Carlton Green, Cambridgeshire. Looking NE
Farmland west of Lower Wield
Down Wood, Bradley. Down Wood is on the right. The Three Castles Path runs in its shadow heading from Winchester first to Odiham and ultimately Windsor. All three towns/cities have a castle (in various states of repair).
Deighton Mills (Barntex Ltd) and the A62 Bridge. The Leeds Road crossing the Huddersfield Broad Canal
Dalton Bank Nature Reserve. Dalton Bank LNR is 20 hectares and located on very steep bank, rising from 75-150 metres above sea level in a short distance. The land has been subjected to a wide range of uses in the past including quarrying, forestry and grazing which now supports vegetation.
Cottages, Lower Wield. An old village but with no facilities nowadays. Car - essential.
Cottage in Spain Lane near Burkham. This lane is well used as it represents a rat run from Alton to the A303 at Popham. The cottages may have been associated with the nearby home farm.
Colne Bridge between Bradley and Kirkheaton. This bridge was mentioned in Fountains Abbey records of the 12C. It became a county bridge, indicating the former importance of the route along the ridge from Grange Moor, and has no doubt been rebuilt a few times over the centuries. In the background is a modern industrial unit and an old mill building, now housing a variety of small enterprises but partly derelict.
Carlton Wood. View towards the wood
Car scrapyard and sludge treatment works, Clifton. This modern treatment works was constructed within the Brighouse sewage works, now integrated into the nearby Huddersfield works. The ridge in the background is towards Kirkheaton, with Dalton Bank to the right.
Calder & Hebble Navigation.
Bridleway from Moreton Underhill. Looking west along this well used bridleway with Gannow Wood on the left.
Bradley Roundabout. The junction of Laceby Road with Bradley Road on the western outskirts of Grimsby
Bradley Road / Allandale Road, Bradley. Here there is a pleasant grassy island at the main entrance from Bradley Road into the Bradley council estate.
Bradley Park Golf Course,Bradley.
Bradley Hall.
Bradley Green Church.
Bradley Green. Middle Beanhall Farm seen from the footpath passing Bradley Green.
Bradley Garden Centre.
Bradley Church, Huddersfield (SE169205) This is a modern replacement for the 19C church in Station Road (SE172201), although the OS have not put it on the 1:25000 map yet. It is quite similar in style to the Methodist chapel not far away at SE173204.
Bog Hall.
Beyond Freedom Farm, East Green, Great Bradley, Suffolk. There are only fields round here.
Beside Sipsey Bridge on the Cambridge- Suffolk Border. Photo taken beside Sypsey Bridge on the B1061,looking towards Suffolk (River Stour in foreground). February 2005, 7.30 am, after light snow fall
Ashley Farm near Lower Wield. This farm seems very neat but also has a set of barns Behind the photographer.
Ancient churchyard cross. A medieval (probably 15th century) cross in St.George's churchyard, Bradley.
All Saints Church, Little Bradley, Suffolk. The most westerly of East Anglia's round-towered churches
Across North Moor towards Heaton Hall Wood.
A ford on the Shell Brook. Looking south towards Letts Mill.
A Green Lane near Bradley. This square has just fields and a few roads in it.
River Calder, Clifton / Bradley. Bradley is over the river. The lower end of the canal lock can be seen; this canal is a navigation that uses the river where possible, with cuts around weirs, in this case the weir for Clifton corn mill. The bridge in the background carries the Huddersfield to Brighouse railway line over a farm road; this line was recently reopened for passenger trains..
From the lane to Moreton Underhill. Looking east from the lane with the escarpment beyond and some of the local residents, suitably dressed to keep out the bitingly chilly wind!
Bradford
Bozier 1903
Bonet Unico 1889
Blackhawk Modell L-8 Speedster 4-Passenger 1929
Bjering 1918-1920
Bignan 1919
Scan from historic paper taken by user
berliet__helm_.jpg
This applies to the United States, Australia, the European Union and those countries with a copyright term of life of the author plus 70 years.
Where sheep may safely graze... with the Malvern Hills in the far distance, though indistinguishable on this photo.
Wallhouse Farm on Wallhouse Lane
View from near Upper Berrow Farm. Looking north across the square from the footpath near Upper Berrow Farm.
View from Cruise Hill. Looking SW towards Hanbury from the junction of Burial Lane and Cruisehill lane.
The Mallard. Despite recent events in Germany the England flags are still flying at the Mallard.
The Drum. The Drum, Watch House Lane, Bentley
The Anlaby to Beverley road. Taken at MR: TA02183556 looking NNE.
The A164 Willerby to Beverley Road. A very busy road in the late afternoon - I wonder what the scene will be like in 25 years' time! Taken from the layby at MR: TA02113473 looking northwards.
St.Peter's church, Bentley. By J.Codd of London in 1891 - a tall south porch tower with spire and attractive buttressing to the west front
St.Edmund's church, Town End, Sprotbrough. This part of Sprotbrough is known as Town End, developed on farmland during the industrial growth of the 1920s, St.Edmund's church on Anchorage Lane was formed by converting an old barn. It stands close to the site of the medieval Ancres Chapel and the stone used for the barn may have been robbed from the chapel.
Sign.
Risby Park.
Pylon North of Skidby.
Poplar Farm. Poplar Farm, in the parish of Woodmansey, is a working farm, viewed here from the
Park Farm. Looking SE along the road towards Park Farm. The SE corner of Walkington just cuts across the NW corner of the grid square which is mostly farmland.
Oldgate. The name Oldgate indicates that this is an ancient
Old Barn. At White House Farm, Love Lyne.
Mount Pleasant
Mount Hermon Community Church. Community church on Doncaster Road at Bentley Rise
Mother and infant
Moat near Bentley The old moat in surprisingly good condition. According to the local gamekeeper, the island (accessed via a bridge) was a Sunday afternoon retreat for the local ladies many years ago.
Moat near Bentley The OS map showed an old moat amongst a ring of trees. Was that a gleam of water in the distance past the odd-looking terrace?
Mini Adventure. The red Mini is heading for another adventure on Challenger Drive, a modern housing development west of Doncaster.
Footpath, Upper Bentley Muddy footpath winds its way through the undergrowth.
Field nr. Lower Bentley
Field Boundary at Risby Park.
Farmland North of Bentley. A typical view looking east from the road which runs across the SW corner of the grid square. This area is all farmland with some small woods.
Electricity Pylons. Looking along the electricity pylons between Upper Berrow Farm and Wallhouse Farm
Cur Lane
Crumpfields Lane. Looking along Crumpfields Lane with some of the housing which now forms the outskirts of Redditch on the left.
Crumpfields. New development at Pool Farm on Crumpfields Lane. At this point the road ceases to be a narrow rural lane and enters the outer suburbs of Redditch. The new housing on the left extends the urban coverage.
Cruise Hill. Looking towards Burial Lane at Cruise Hill. This green lane was used to convey the dead from the area to Feckenham, some 2 miles away. http://www.leyhunter.com/archives/fecken.htm
Country cottage
Cattle north of Skidby.
Callow Hill. Another view of the cottages at Callow Hill.
Burn Park. Burn Park, Cottingham, is a working farm in an area known as Cottingham Parks. The pylon carries power lines from an electricity sub-station in the next grid square (0434).
Burial Lane. The signs at the start of Burial Lane in Cruise Hill. The lane's name arises from the time when there was no church in the locality and the dead had to be conveyed to Feckenham for burial. See also 169755.
Bridleway North of Skidby.
Brickhouse Farm, Ham Green. The farm is a mixture of timber framed and brick buildings at the junction of Hamgreen Lane with Brookhouse Lane.
Beverley Bypass. Looking SE from MR: TA03233648.
Bentley Station. Looking south towards Doncaster
Bentley. View across the grid square from TA017353. Bentley is in the top NE corner of the square which is all farmland, this being a typical view.
Ash Tree, Risby. Ash Tree at the corner of Sod Wall Wood, Risby
An audience at Upper Berrow Farm. Curious cattle lining up to have their picture taken from the footpath from Upper Berrow Farm.
Abandoned church, Cruise Hill. Older maps show this building on the inside of the sharp bend in Cruise Hill lane as a church although today it looks forlorn and abandoned.
A164 - A1079. Looking east to the A164 which runs north into Beverley from the slip road off the A1079 into Hull
A1079 layby. The A1079 Beverley Bypass cuts across the top NE corner of the grid square. It's mainly farmland in this area. View looking east towards Hull.
Inwards display site
Photograph of HM The Queen's Bentley State Limousine interior, upholstered in Hield cloth.
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Ivo Peters' Bentley
inflatable Screen airSYSTEC Screen on Bentley Drive In
Emblem Benjamin 1924
Benjamin 1924
Benjamin 1922
Emblem Bellanger 1921
Bellanger 1921
Belga-Rise 1934
luxury car based on French Sizaire Fr??res designs, made in Belgium by St?� Belge des Automobiles Sizaire; side view
luxury car based on French Sizaire Fr??res designs, made in Belgium by St?� Belge des Automobiles Sizaire; right front-side view
luxury car based on French Sizaire Fr??res designs, made in Belgium by St?� Belge des Automobiles Sizaire; left front-side view
BarrГ© 1903
Bambino
Baker Electric (1908)
A vehicle at the Georgetown PowerPlant Museum, Georgetown, Seattle, Washington. I don't know much about this vehicle, and whether it in any way relates to steam technology, or is just being stored at the museum while awaiting restoration. Clearly some sort of heavy equipment, and the name on it says
Baker Electric CoupГ© 1908
BYD at the Central China High-Tech Fair, Shenzhen, November 2009
1950's BSA bike with sidecar, as in use in Pematangsiantar (Indonesia) as public transport vehicle (
Looking for critique comments, if anyone has anything to offer...
BSA Three Wheeler. Powered by aircooled V2 engine with front wheel drive. BSA stands for Birmingham Small Arms.
BSA Scout 1204cc side valve four cylinder engine with a three speed gearbox and front wheel drive.
BSA Scout 1204cc side valve four cylinder engine with a three speed gearbox and front wheel drive.
BSA 1936
BSA 1932
Ticket link: https://ticket.wikimedia.org/otrs/index.pl?Action=AgentTicketZoom&TicketNumber=2007071710013063
BSA 10 1933 The BSA 10 formed the basis of the Lanchester 10. (Lanchester, by this time, had been acquired by the British Daimler Motor company which in turn was acquired by BSA.)
1934 BSA TW33-10
1933 BSA TW33-9 Special Sports
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Togilatti_administration_VAZ.jpg
Conveyor system of AvtoVAZ
AvtoVAZ administration building, Togliatti, Russia
Avolette
Autovia 1938
Autobleu 1955
Autobleu 1954
Photos of Automotive Industry [1-200]
Photos of Automotive Industry [201-400]
Photos of Automotive Industry [401-600]




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