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Finding the right Kitchen cabinets Prince George could be a daunting task. Every so often, it is so overwhelming and you might be one of those people who keep on searching for some reasons to put i…
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Things You Need To Know About Kitchen Cabinet Design
Low quality cabinets are often put together with glue or with nails or staples. This is not a good idea (if you have the choice) because under the heavy use of kitchen cabinets and drawers, they will not last. High quality cabinets will be joined with dove tail construction. This is one of the most important aspects of kitchen cabinet design. When you buy kitchen cabinets wholesale you will be able to buy them only in standard sizes. You will not be able to buy special sizes to fit your kitchen design. You will have only limited access, as well, to cabinetry with special features, accessories, and so forth. You can, however, buy cabinets in the size closest to your needs and try to find someone who can customize them for you. A powerful addition to your home would be custom cabinets and if you can get hold of them without spending a fortune, nothing can be better than that! You can enjoy the feel, beauty and the functionality of customized cabinetry all at half the price that you would have had to incur for purchasing new sets of cabinets. Compared to the entire changing of your existing set of cabinets, remodeling is a much cheaper option and yields great results. Once you understand the many options available to you when planning kitchen cabinet storage, it becomes much easier to plan a kitchen in the style and design you most want while also ensuring that you will have the type and amount of storage space you need. A little imagination and some creative planning will result in the kitchen of your dreams. But most people simply want to buy kitchen cabinets cheap. In other words, they want reasonable quality in materials and workmanship, but at a very low price. They do not really want cheap cabinets. When you use a kitchen for family gatherings and for time spent together, kitchen cabinets are often used to store other items than you might ordinarily expect to find. For example, there might be a cabinet for board games or video games; a place where art supplies are stored; there might be a set of cabinets, shelves and drawers where homework supplies and resources are stored when children do their homework at the kitchen table. In working on the design, you have to understand that it is not easy. It is an intricate and systematic procedure. All the measurements, dimensions and specifications must be accurate. Any calculation mistake will be costly. This is where the value of the software is really appreciated. Without cabinet design software, the job of designing will take a lot longer and will be more vulnerable to mistakes and alterations as the work progresses.
#Kitchen cabinets Prince George#cabinets shop in prince george#Cabinets in prince george#pantry cabinets in prince george#Custom cabinets in Prince George#Cabinet makers in Prince George
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Rosenborg
3/10/2019: It's the last full day in Copenhagen today. We slept in with no alarm and had toast, salami, tea and juice for breakfast. We didn't leave the apartment until well after eleven and headed up Nytorv, trying to keep out the way of the bicycles and into the pedestrian friendly mall, Nygade. This time we turned right when we should have turned right. Lego was a couple of blocks down, on the corner with the junction of Hyskenstræde and Klosterstræde, straight across from Zara.
This store had some good but expensive stuff, London Bridge, life size R2D2 and stormtroopers, scale model of Nyhavn. Very impressive but somewhat overpriced. We looked around, bought some trinkets and moved on. One disappointing thing that we found was naked women posters on the power boxes out the front of the store in full view of the kids as they went in.
Something about Ekko by Aksel Hansen
Rosenborg Castle came about after the ascension to the throne of Christian IV when he formed the view that his castle of the time, Copenhagen Castle had outlived its welcome. In 1606 the king bought forty lots outside of the Nørrevold wall where he would build his new residence, Rosenborg. Going through four iterations of development, what you see now was completed in 1633.
Used as a royal residence until 1710, Frederik IV was more akin to more modern residences and as such dedicated the palace to the royal collections and moved on. The original royal collection consisted of Christian IV’s riding trappings and parade arms transferred from Frederiksborg in 1658, followed by his costumes, then heirlooms and precious artefacts. The Regalia were transferred to Rosenborg from Copenhagen Castle during Christian V’s reign. During the reign of Frederik IV, the collection of glass and porcelain arrived as well as the art collections belonging to the Dukes of Schleswig-Holstein-Gottorp, ceded to him during the Great Northern War. In 1838 the castle was opened to the public and following the abolishment of Absolutism in 1849, the royal castles and palaces became property of the state. Within five years Frederik VII agreed with the state that the collection was to become entailed property passed on from king to king.
One of the makers of the famous clock in Strasbourg Cathedral made this in 1594. The astronomical clock has a carillon to play music and moving figures. It shows days, months and years as well as lunar phases, an hour hand for both twelve and twenty four hour clocks but no minute hand as technology was not that advanced. The introduction of the pendulum sorted that out.
A room to the side of the Winter Room was Christian IV's Writing Room where the king carried out his correspondence. Again, covered in paintings, this room was largely original. At some point Christian installed a staircase for direct access to the basement. Frederik III was a bit lazier and pulled the staircase out, replacing it with an ascenseur, ascending chair. This linked the first and second floors.
On his death bed 1648. Apparently he loved the place so much that when he knew he was on his last legs at Frederiksborg, he commanded that he be dragged to Rosenborg by sleigh so he could drop off the perch there
Then to the Royal bog. Formerly known as "The Secret", it was one of three which conveniently dropped all of their contents into the moat. Each had a water cistern for flushing but when the moat was dry or low, they used to pong. Somewhat original but redecorated over time by his descendants.
The Royal Bog
The next room was the Dark Room, which was also a bit eerie. Once used as a common bedroom for Frederik IV and his missus, the room now contained wax busts of Frederik III, Queen Sophie Amalie and their son Prince George. Contained within glass cabinets gave the feel of what you'd expect in an archaic penny arcade. The room also contained some interesting furniture. The adjacent room was the garden room which actually had windows and was a lot brighter.
Frederik III must have been a bit of a prankster, his Trouser Watering Chair was designed to trap a guest in the chair after sitting in it by wire prongs hidden in the armrests curling around their arms and holding them down. Then water would be released from containers in the backrest down into the seat cushion, giving the impression that the guest had pissed themselves. Good one Frederik. Once the victim was released and stood up, a trumpet hidden in the seat wood toot.
The next room was the Marble Room decorated in a pompous Baroque style to celebrate Absolutism by Frederik III in 1668. The furnishings and exhibits reflected this period. Then past the hall and onto the Stone Corridor, the other half of the divide antechamber with the Dark Room.
This room was interesting as it was dominated by a large panel displaying Christian IV’s family tree. The tree ends with his father, Frederik II who took the throne in 1559 and held it to his death in 1588. At that time Christian was only eleven when he succeeded to the throne and required chancellor Niels Kaas and the Rigsraadet council to serve as trustees of the royal power for a few years. In 1596, when eighteen years old, he ascended to the throne. The genealogical table started with many ancestors around the late fourteen hundreds.
Also in the corridor were bronze busts, jewellery boxes and more paintings.
The Rose. This large walnut music cabinet houses a mechanical orchestra. Recent renovations enabled it to play the original music of the day
It was then back up the stair tower and up to the Great Hall, and some equally great rooms leading off it. There were a heap of school kids right behind us so we made a point of keeping our distance.
To our left were three silver lions and the monarch's thrones, all cordoned off. Above us was a magnificent stucco, vaulted ceiling with the Danish coat of arms in the centre. Adorning the walls were a dozen large tapestries depicting King Christian V's victories over Sweden during the Scanian War. Three very small but impressive rooms led off of the hall. The first was the Glass Cabinet containing a large collection of Venetian glass that Frederik IV brought back from Venice, supplemented by more glass from other parts. At the other end the Porcelain Cabinet full of you guessed it, porcelain and straight across from the stair tower door, the Regalia Room where Christian V kept his crown and stuff.
After a monarch's death and whilst lying in state, the casket was shown to the public at Christiansborg Palace Chapel in the days prior to the funeral. These three silver lions stood guard. Otherwise they guard the King's and Queen's narwhal tusk and silver thrones
It was then back to ground level and down to the basement lying, you guessed it, below ground level and then further down to a lower basement which held the nation's treasures. As we got further down and our altitude decreased, the security and their weapons increased.
Upon entering the basement we found ourselves in a room of Christian V in his childhood days. To the right were three rooms, two of which contained categorised weapons namely, ceremonial, tournament, military and hunting as well as plenty of wine. Rosenborg wine. The third room held the turned and carved ivory and amber so favoured by the monarchy. At the other end of the basement lied the Green Cabinet displaying bejewelled riding gear from coronations and weddings of the Christians IV and V. The final room was Ole Rømer's Room containing contraptions that were part of his planetarium and eclipsarium.
This seventeenth century wine cooler is made of limestone with corals. It contains Rosenborg wine
Then down to the final stop, the vaulted sub basement holding the treasury. Through a large, thick steel door, the room was set out in three pentagonal levels. Everything behind glass.
The first level contained Christian III's sword of state from 1551, used in coronations. Along with it was the Oldenburg Horn from around 1400 as well as what is believed to be the oldest British Order of the Garter in existence, belonging to Christian IV.
The second level displayed Christian IV's crown from 1596 along with other gold items including the baptismal basin, pitcher and candlesticks that have been used in royal christenings since 1671.
The bottom level were a couple of crowns from the absolute monarchy of 1671 and 1731. These were used for the coronations of all monarchs from Christian V until Christian VIII. The level was full of gold and gems.
Christian IV's crown from 1596
The entire room was spectacular but it was time to move on. After leaving Rosenborg, we headed back to TorvehallerneKBH where we had seen some great looking smørrebrød when on the food tour. We had targeted them after finding the sandwiches on the internet as traditional foods and had to have one. We thought that we ticked the box a couple of days ago at Nahvyn but doing the food tour told us otherwise. The smørrebrød at Hyttefaddet Pub was not a sandwich but a meal with bread on the side. Maybe a modern variation.
Walking through both halls, we admired the food until we reached Hallernes Smørrebrød. The display cabinet complicated the ordering process as they all looked good. Not cheap though. Between 65 and 110 kronor. We ordered one with smoked salmon and scrambled eggs and another with crumbed plaice fillet, capers and Danish Rémoulade sauce. A beer and a mistakenly ordered rose set us back three hundred. Jo found a small table off to the side where we relaxed and enjoyed the meal, commenting that she could have had the salmon and eggs at home and should have been a bit more adventurous.
A bit of a letdown after lunch
Tomorrow we catch the S train to Stockholm. A high speed tilt train first class.
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MORE CELEBRITIES THAT DIED BECAUSE OF WHAT HAPPENED TO LESLIE WOFFORD AND HER KIDS AND HER FAMILY AND WITH PAGAN’S DYING IT WILL TAKE OUT ANY DEMON THAT HATED OR CONSPRIRED AGAINST LUCIFER. APPLY’S TO DEVIL’S TOO, UNLESS LUCIFER WAS LESLIE’S RUINER, AND THOSE ONES WERE TRYING TO KILL HIM TO STOP HIM FROM HURTING LESLIE’S CHILDREN OR KILLING OFF HER FAMILY.
July 2002[edit source]
Unknown date - Catmando, 7, British Cat and Politician and joint Leader of the Monster Raving Looney Party
2 – Earle Brown, 75, American composer.
2 – Ray Brown, 75, American bassist.
3 – Michel Henry, 80, French philosopher.
4 – Kenneth Ross MacKenzie, 90, American physicist.
4 – Sir Jake Saunders, 84, British banker.
4 – Winnifred Van Tongerloo, 98, oldest living survivor of the Titanic.
4 – Benjamin O. Davis Jr., 89, African-American General.
5 – Ted Williams, 83, American baseball player (Boston Red Sox) and member of the MLB Hall of Fame.
5 – Katy Jurado, 68, Mexican actress.
6 – Dhirubhai Ambani, 69, Indian businessman.
6 – John Frankenheimer, 74, American film director.
6 – Kenneth Koch, 77, American poet and playwright.
6 – Stuart Shorter, 33, British homeless activist.
7 – Decherd Turner, 79, American librarian and book collector.
8 – Sir Robert Bellinger, 92, former Lord Mayor of London.
8 – Ward Kimball, 88, Disney animator.
8 – Patrick Rodger, 81, British Anglican prelate, former Bishop of Oxford.
9 – Laurence Janifer, 69, science fiction writer.
9 – William Robinson, 85, Canadian Anglican prelate, Bishop of Ottawa.
9 – Ron Scarlett, 91, New Zealand paleozoologist.
9 – Dave Sorenson, 54, former NBA and Ohio State University basketball player.
9 – Rod Steiger, 77, American actor, kidney failure.
10 – John Wallach, 59, journalist and philanthropist.
11 – Roy Orrock, 81, British World War II pilot.
12 – Edward Lee Howard, 51, American CIA agent who defected to the Soviet Union.
12 – Mani Krishnaswami, 72, Indian vocalist.
13 – Yousuf Karsh, 93, celebrity portrait photographer as "Karsh of Ottawa".
13 – Eric Price, 83, English cricketer.
14 – Joaquín Balaguer, 95, former President of the Dominican Republic.
15 – Gavin Muir, 50. British actor and musician.
15 – Camillus Perera, 64, Sri Lankan cricket umpire.
16 – Alan Charles Clark, 82, British Roman Catholic prelate.
16 – John Cocke, 77, American computer scientist, key figure in the development of RISC architecture.
16 – Cletus Madsen, 96, American Roman Catholic priest.
16 – Jack Olsen, 77, American "True crime" writer.
17 – Charles I. Krause, 90, American labor leader.
18 – Metin Toker, 78, Turkish journalist and one time politician
19 – Dave Carter, 49, American singer-songwriter.
19 – Alexander Ginzburg, 65, leading Soviet dissident.
19 – Alan Lomax, 87, American documenter of blues and folk songs.
21 – John Cunningham, 84, British World War II fighter pilot.
21 – Antti Koivumäki, 25, Finnish poet and keyboardist (Aavikko)
22 – Joyce Cooper, 93, British Olympic swimmer.
22 – Marion Montgomery, 67, American jazz singer.
22 – Giuseppe Corradi, 70, Italian footballer.
22 – Prince Ahmed bin Salman, member of the Saudi Arabian royal family.
22 – Chuck Traynor, 64, American pornographer.
23 – Bill Bell, 70, New Zealand cricketer.
23 – Alberto Castillo, 87, Argentine tango singer and actor.
23 – Leo McKern, 82, Australian actor.
23 – William Pierce, American neo-Nazi, author of The Turner Diaries.
23 – Chaim Potok, 73, American author.
24 – Maurice Denham, 92, British actor.
24 – Mike Clark, 61, former NFL kicker.
25 – Abdur Rahman Badawi, Egyptian existentialist philosopher.
27 – Krishan Kant, 75, Indian politician, Vice-President (1997��2002).
29 – Peter Bayliss, 80, British actor.
30 – Fred Jordan, 80, British folk singer.
31 – Pauline Chan Bo-Lin, 29, Hong Kong actress, suicide.
31 – Sir Maldwyn Thomas, 84, Welsh businessman and politician.
August 2002[edit source]
1 – Theo Bruce, 79, Australian long jumper.
1 – Jack Tighe, 88, American baseball coach.
3 – Kathleen Hughes-Hallett, 84, Canadian Olympic fencer.
3 – Peter Miles, 64, American actor.
3 – Carmen Silvera, 80, UK television and theatre actress (Dad's Army, 'Allo 'Allo!).
5 – Josh Ryan Evans, 20, American actor ("Timmy" on Passions).
5 – Chick Hearn, 85, television and radio announcer for the Los Angeles Lakers basketball team since 1960.
5 – Franco Lucentini, 82, Italian writer (The Sunday Woman).
5 – Darrell Porter, 50, American baseball player.
6 – Jim Crawford, 54, Scottish motor racing driver.
6 – Edsger Dijkstra, 72, computer scientist.
7 – Dominick Browne, 4th Baron Oranmore and Browne, 100, British aristocrat.
9 – George Alfred Barnard, 86, British statistician.
10 – Doris Wishman, 90, American film director, producer and screenwriter.
12 – Sir John Rennie, 85, British diplomat.
12 – Enos Slaughter, 86, American baseball player (St. Louis Cardinals) and member of the MLB Hall of Fame.
12 – Dame Marjorie Williamson, 89, British university administrator.
14 – Peter R. Hunt, 77, British film editor.
14 – Larry Rivers, 78, American painter.
14 – Dave Williams, 30, singer of Drowning Pool.
15 – Jesse Brown, 58, United States Secretary of Veterans Affairs.
15 – George Agbazika Innih, 63, Nigerian army general and politician.
15 – Haim Yosef Zadok, 88, Israeli jurist and politician.
16 – Abu Nidal, 65, terrorist.
16 – Ola Belle Reed, 85, American singer.
16 – Johnny Roseboro, 69, American baseball player.
18 – Dame Elizabeth Chesterton, 86, British architect and town planner.
18 – Edward Crew, 84, British air marshal.
18 – David Keynes Hill, 87, British biophysicist.
19 – Sunday Silence, 16, thoroughbred race horse, winner of the Kentucky Derby and the Preakness Stakes.
20 – Augustine Geve, Solomon Islands Cabinet Minister, assassinated.
22 – Allan George Bromley, 55, computer scientist, historian of computing.
22 – Bruce Duncan Guimaraens, 66, Portuguese wine maker.
23 – Emily Genauer, 91, American art critic.
23 – Hoyt Wilhelm, 80, American baseball player who played for nine different teams and a member of the MLB Hall of Fame.
24 – Wayne Simmons, 32, American Football player.
25 – Per Anger, 88, Swedish diplomat.
25 – Dorothy Hewett, 79, Australian poet, playwright and novelist.
27 – Edwin Sill Fussell, 80, American scholar of English literature.
27 – George Mitchell, 85, Scottish musician (The Black and White Minstrel Show).
27 – John S. Wilson, 89, American music critic.
29 – Elizabeth Forbes, 85, New Zealand athlete.
29 – Paul Tripp, 91, American musician and TV host.
30 – Thomas J. Anderson, 91, American publisher and politician.
30 – Maia Berzina, 91, Russian geographer, cartographer and ethnologer.
30 – Roy Wright, 73, Austrian rules football player.
31 – Lionel Hampton, 94, American jazz musician.
31 – Martin Kamen, 89, American scientist.
31 – George Porter, Baron Porter of Luddenham, 81, British Nobel Prize winner in chemistry.
September 2002[edit source]
1 – Peter Ramsden, 68, British rugby league player.
2 – Sir Robert Wilson, 75, British astronomer.
3 – Kenneth Hare, 83, Canadian scientist.
3 – Ted Ross, 68, American actor.
3 – Len Wilkinson, 85, British cricketer.
4 – Frankie Albert, 82, American National Football League star.
4 – Jerome Biffle, 74, American Olympic long jumper.
5 – Robert W. Brooks, 49, American mathematician.
5 – William Cooper, 92, English novelist.
5 – Cliff Gorman, 65, American actor.
5 – David Todd Wilkinson, 67, American cosmologist.
7 - Eugenio Coșeriu, 81, linguist specialized in Romance languages
7 – Uziel Gal, 78, designer of the Uzi submachine gun.
7 – Don Smith, 73, Canadian ice hockey player.
8 – Marco Siffredi, 23, French snowboarder (last seen on this date).
9 – Geoffrey Dummer, 92, British engineer.
11 – Johnny Unitas, 69, American football player (Baltimore Colts) and a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
12 – Kim Hunter, 79, American stage, television and Oscar-winning film actress (played "Stella Kowalski" in the original Broadway and film versions of A Streetcar Named Desire).
13 – Charles Herbert Lowe, 82, American biologist.
13 – George Stanley, 95, Canadian historian and public servant.
14 – Paul Williams, 87, American saxophonist.
15 – Robert William Pope, 86, British Anglican prelate, Dean of Gibraltar.
16 – Archibald Hall, 78, British criminal.
16 – Nguyễn Văn Thuận, 74, Vietnamese Roman Catholic prelate.
17 – Denys Fisher, 84, British inventor of the Spirograph.
18 – Bob Hayes, 59, American football player Dallas Cowboys and a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
19 – Sergei Bodrov Jr., 30, Russian movie star, Kolka-Karmadon rock ice slide.
19 – James Macdonald, 83, Scottish-born Australian ornithologist.
20 – Necdet Kent, 91, Turkish diplomat and humanitarian.
20 – Bob Wallace, 53, American computer scientist.
21 – Henry Pybus Bell-Irving, 89, Canadian Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia.
21 – Angelo Buono, Jr., 67, the "Hillside Strangler".
21 – Robert L. Forward, 70, physicist and science fiction author.
22 – Joseph Nathan Kane, 103, American historian and author.
22 – Jan de Hartog, 88, novelist and playwright.
22 – Anthony Milner, 77, British musician.
23 – Vernon Corea, 75, Sri Lankan-born British radio broadcaster.
24 – Mike Webster, 50, American football player (Pittsburgh Steelers) and a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame).
24 – George Wilson, 86, British cricketer.
25 – Arnold Ross, 96, American mathematician.
26 – Thomas S. Smith, 84, American politician, member of the New Jersey General Assembly.
27 – David Granger, 99, American bobsledder.
27 – Bill Pearson, 80, New Zealand writer.
30 – Robert Battersby, 77, British soldier and politician.
30 – Arthur Hazlerigg, 2nd Baron Hazlerigg, 92, British cricketer and soldier.
30 – Meinhard Michael Moser, 78, Swiss mycologist.
30 – Ewart Oakeshott, 86, British illustrator.
30 – Sir Jock Taylor, 78, British diplomat.
October 2002[edit source]
1 – Walter Annenberg, 94, American publisher and philanthropist.
1 – Ted Serong, 86, Australian soldier.
2 – Norman O. Brown, 89, American classicist.
2 – Heinz von Foerster, 90, Austrian-born American physicist and philosopher, one of the founders of constructivism.
2 – Alexander Sinclair, 91, Canadian ice hockey player.
3 – John Erritt, 71, British civil servant.
3 – Bruce Paltrow, 58, American television and film producer.
4 – Alphonse Chapanis, a founder of ergonomics.
4 – Barbara Fawkes, 87, British nurse.
4 – Ahmad Mahmoud, 70, Iranian novelist.
5 – Sir Reginald Hibbert, 80, British diplomat.
5 – Morag Hood, 59, Scottish actress.
6 – Chuck Rayner, 82, Canadian ice hockey player.
6 – Claus von Amsberg, 76, Dutch diplomat; husband of Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands.
8 – Phyllis Calvert, 87, British actress.
9 – Jim Martin, 78, American football player.
9 – Aileen Wuornos, 46, convicted of killing six men, lethal injection.
10 – Joe Wood, 86, American baseball player.
11 – William J. Field, 93, British politician.
12 – Sir Desmond Fitzpatrick, 89. British general.
12 – Audrey Mestre, 28, French world record-setting free diver.
12 – Nozomi Momoi, 24, Japanese AV idol, murdered.
12 – Sidney W. Pink, 86, American movie director and producer.
13 – Stephen Ambrose, 66, historian and author of "Band of Brothers".
13 – Keene Curtis, 79, American actor.
13 – Jim Higgins, 71, British politician.
14 – S. William Green, 72, American politician.
15 – Jack Lee, 89, British film director.
15 – Ze'ev, 79, Israeli caricaturist and illustrator.
16 – William Macmillan, 75, Scottish minister, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland.
17 – Derek Bell, 66, member of The Chieftains, harpist.
17 – Henri Renaud, 67, French jazz pianist and record company executive.
18 – Sir Cecil Blacker, 86, British army general.
18 – Roman Tam, 52, Hong Kong canto-pop singer.
19 – Manuel Alvarez Bravo, 100, Mexican photographer.
20 – Barbara Berjer, 82, American actress.
20 – Elisabeth Furse, 92, German-born British war-time agent.
20 – Mel Harder, 93, American baseball player.
21 – Beatrice Serota, Baroness Serota, 83, British politician.
22 – Richard Helms, 89, American former CIA director.
23 – David Henry Lewis, 85, New Zealand sailor and adventurer.
24 – Winton M. Blount, 81, last United States Postmaster General to have served in a Presidential Cabinet.
24 – Adolph Green, 87, American lyricist and playwright.
24 – Harry Hay, 90, American gay rights activist and Mattachine Society founder.
25 – Richard Harris, 72, Irish actor.
25 – René Thom, 79, French mathematician.
25 – Paul Wellstone, 58, United States Senator (D-MN).
28 – Margaret Booth, 104, Academy Award-winning film editor.
28 – Erling Persson, 85, Swedish businessman, founder of H&M.
28 – Sir Patrick Russell, 76, British jurist.
29 – Chang-Lin Tien, educator, 7th Chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley.
29 – Richard Jenkin, 77, Cornish nationalist politician.
29 – Glenn McQueen, 41, Canadian film animator.
30 – Jam Master Jay, 37, DJ of Run DMC, murdered.
30 – Sir William Mitchell, 77, British physicist.
31 – Yuri Ahronovitch, 70, Russian conductor.
31 – Sir Napier Crookenden, 87, British Army general.
31 – Baroness Hylton-Foster, 94, British peer.
November 2002[edit source]
1 – Edward Brooke, 85, Canadian Olympic fencer.
1 – Sir Charles Wilson, 93, British political scientist.
2 – Brian Behan, 75, Irish writer, younger brother of Brendan Behan.
2 – Robert Haslam, Baron Haslam, 79, British industrialist and life peer.
2 – Lo Lieh, 63, Hong King actor.
2 – Dame Felicity Peake, 89, British Director of the Women's Royal Air Force.
2 – Tonio Selwart, 106, Bavarian actor and Broadway performer.
2 – Charles Sheffield, 67, science fiction author and physicist.
3 – Lonnie Donegan, 71, British skiffle musician.
3 – Sir John Habakkuk, 87, British economic historian.
3 – Jonathan Harris, 87, American actor, TV's "Dr. Smith" on Lost in Space.
3 – William Packard, 69, American poet and author.
3 – Sir Rex Roe, 77, British air force officer.
4 – Antonio Margheriti, 72, Italian filmmaker, heart attack.
5 – Billy Guy, 66, American singer.
5 – Mushtaq Qadri, 35, Pakistani religious poet.
6 – Brian James, 61, English cricketer.
6 – Sid Sackson, 82, board game designer.
7 – Rudolf Augstein, 79, founder and chief editorialist of the German newsweekly Der Spiegel.
8 – Dorothy Mackie Low, 86, British novelist.
9 – Dick Johnson, 85, American test pilot.
9 – Merlin Santana, 26, actor.
9 – William Schutz, 76, American psychologist.
10 – Steve Durbano, 50, ice hockey player, lung cancer.
11 – Sir Michael Clapham, 90, British industrialist.
11 – David Steel, 92, Scottish minister.
13 – Kaloji Narayana Rao, 88, Indian poet and political activist.
13 – Irv Rubin, 57, Canadian chairman of the Jewish Defence League.
14 – Eddie Bracken, 87, actor.
14 – Mir Qazi, 38, Pakistani convicted criminal, executed by lethal injection in Virginia.
15 – Myra Hindley, 60, the Moors murderess.
15 – John Joseph Stewart,79, New Zealand rugby coach.
16 – Rupert E. Billingham, 81, British biologist.
16 – Sir George Gardiner, 67, British politician.
17 – Abba Eban, 88, Israeli foreign affair minister.
18 – James Coburn, 74, Oscar-winning actor, heart attack.
18 – Pasquale Vivolo, 74, Italian footballer.
19 – Prince Alexandre de Merode, 68, International Olympic Committee member, lung cancer.
19 – George Fullerton, 79, South African cricketer.
20 – George Guest, 78, British organist and choirmaster.
20 – Ben Webb, 45, Canadian journalist.
20 – Zhang Shuguang, 82, Chinese politician
21 – Prince Takamado, 47, Japanese prince
21 – Hadda Brooks, 86, American jazz singer, pianist and composer.
21 – Arturo Guzman Decena founder of Los Zetas
21 – J. Roger Pichette, 81, Canadian politician.
22 – Joan Barclay, 88, American actress.
22 – Christine Marion Fraser, 64, Scottish novelist.
23 – Roberto Matta, 91 Chilean artist.
24 – Philip B. Meggs, 60, American graphic designer.
24 – John Rawls, 81, political theorist.
25 – Gordon Davidson, 87, Australian politician.
25 – David Drummond, 8th Earl of Perth, 95, British politician and aristocrat.
26 – Verne Winchell, 87, founder of Winchell's Donuts (nicknamed "The Donut King").
27 – Stanley Black, 89, British musician.
27 – Ronald Gerard Connors, 87, American Roman Catholic bishop in the Dominican Republic.
28 – Billy Pearson, 82, American jockey.
29 – David Weiss, 93, American novelist.
30 – Tim Woods, 68, professional wrestler who wrestled as Mr. Wrestling, heart attack.
December 2002[edit source]
1 – Dave McNally, 60, American baseball player.
1 – José Chávez Morado, 93, Mexican artist.
1 – Michael Oliver, 65, British classical music broadcaster and writer.
2 – Jim Mitchell, 56, Irish politician.
2 – Vjenceslav Richter, 85, Croatian architect.
2 – Derek Robinson, 61, British nuclear physicist.
2 – Fay Gillis Wells, 94, American pioneer aviator.
3 – Glenn Quinn, 32, Irish actor (Roseanne, Angel).
5 – Roone Arledge, 71, American television producer and executive (Monday Night Football and Nightline).
5 – Ne Win, 91, Burmese dictator.
6 – Father Philip Berrigan, 79, American priest and political activist.
6 – Charles Rosen, 85, pioneer in artificial intelligence.
7 – Barbara Howard, 76, Canadian artist.
7 – Paddy Tunney, 81, Irish traditional artist.
8 – Bobby Joe Hill, 59, American basketball player.
8 – Charles Rosen, 85, American computer scientist.
9 – Stan Rice, 60, painter, educator, poet, husband of author Anne Rice, cancer.
9 – To Huu, 82, Vietnamese poet and politician.
10 – Desmond Keith Carter, 35, convicted murderer, executed by lethal injection in North Carolina.
10 – Earl Henry, 85, American baseball player.
10 – Andres Küng, 57, Swedish journalist, writer, entrepreneur and politician of Estonian origin.
10 – Steve Llewellyn, 78, Welsh rugby league player.
10 – Ian MacNaughton, 76, director of most episodes of Monty Python's Flying Circus.
11 – Kay Rose, 80, American Oscar-winning sound editor.
12 – Dee Brown, 94, author (Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee).
12 – Edward Harrison, 92, English cricketer and squash player.
12 – Jay Wesley Neill, 37. convicted murderer, executed by lethal injection in Oklahoma.
13 – Ronald Butt, 82, British journalist.
13 – Zal Yanofsky, 57, Canadian member of The Lovin' Spoonful music group.
14 – Jack Bradley, 86, English footballer.
15 – Arthur Jeph Parker, 79, American set decorator.
15 – Dick Stuart, 70, American baseball player.
17 – John Aubrey Davis, Sr., 90, American civil rights activist.
17 – Hank Luisetti, 86, basketball star and innovator.
18 – Lucy Grealy, 39, Irish-born American poet and memoirist.
18 – Ramon John Hnatyshyn, 68, former Governor-General of Canada, pancreatitis.
18 – Sir Bert Millichip, 88, British football administrator.
18 – Wayne Owens, 65, U.S. Congressman (D-UT), heart attack.
19 – Guy Bordelon, 80, American Korean War flying ace.
19 – Stephen Fleck, 90, American psychiatrist.
19 – Jim Flower, 79, British admiral.
19 – Arthur Rowley, 76, English footballer, holder of the record for most career league goals scored.
19 – Lewis B. Smedes, 81, American theologian.
20 – Joanne Campbell, 38, British actress who starred in the comedy series, Me and My Girl (1980s).
20 – James Richard Ham, 91, American Roman Catholic prelate.
22 – Desmond Hoyte, 73, President of Guyana from 1985 to 1992.
22 – Joe Morgan, 57, New Zealand rugby union player.
22 – Joe Strummer, 50, former singer for The Clash.
22 – Kenneth Tobey, 85, prolific character actor (appeared in about 100 films including: Twelve O'Clock High, Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, The Thing from Another World and Airplane!).
23 – Jimmy Osborne, 94, Australian soccer player.
24 – James Ferman, 72, American film censor.
24 – Tita Merello, 98, Argentinian actress and singer.
24 – V.K. Ramasamy, 76, Indian actor.
24 – Jake Thackray, 64, English singer-songwriter, heart failure.
25 – Gabriel Almond, 91, American political scientist.
25 – William T. Orr, 85, television executive (brought Maverick, F-Troop and 77 Sunset Strip to TV).
25 – Davina Whitehouse, 90, British-born New Zealand actress.
26 – Herb Ritts, 50, celebrity photographer.
26 – Armand Zildjian, 81, cymbals manufacturer.
27 – George Roy Hill, 81, film director (Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, The Sting).
28 – Meri Wilson, 53, American singer.
29 – Don Clarke, 69, New Zealand rugby player.
29 – Sir Paul Hawkins, 90, British politician.
30 – Mary Wesley, 90, novelist, author of The Camomile Lawn.
31 – Billy Morris, 84, Welsh footballer.
31 – Kevin MacMichael, 51, Canadian guitarist and singer-songwriter (Cutting Crew).
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New world news from Time: Dubai Decrees Itself the A.I. City-State of the Future
There’s no direct flight from Dubai to Detroit. So when the three co-founders of Dubai-based Derq, a traffic-safety startup, need to get to the carmaking capital of the U.S., they take a connecting flight on Air France through Paris or on Emirates through Boston. That typically means a four-leg, 32-hour round-trip for at least one of them once a month.
It would be unthinkable for the startup, which uses artificial intelligence to predict and prevent car accidents, not to have a presence in the Motor City. So after securing a $1.5 million round of funding in October, the company opened a satellite office in Detroit. But although two of Derq’s three co-founders were educated in the U.S., they aren’t interested in basing their whole operation there. After all, Dubai’s government is offering perks to startups that are just too good to give up. Co-founder Georges Aoude, who earned a Ph.D. in aerospace engineering from MIT in 2011, reels off the reasons: government support, access to roads to test Derq’s technology and “an affordable place to launch and incubate.”
Derq is on the receiving end of a deliberate push by the Dubai government in recent years to turn the emirate into a living laboratory for nascent technology. In 2016, its hereditary leader Sheik Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, also Prime Minister and Vice President of the United Arab Emirates, set a goal that 25% of all transportation in the UAE be autonomous by 2030. In 2017, Dubai—one of seven emirates that make up the UAE—vowed that within three years it would have the world’s first government powered by blockchain, the technology underlying cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. And at the World Government Summit in Dubai in February, Sheik Hamdan bin Mohammed bin Rashid al-Maktoum, Dubai’s crown prince, launched 26 government-led projects under the 10x initiative, which aims to make its eponymous capital city the world’s most innovative within a decade.
The strategy reflects the emirate’s desire for soft power as it seeks to turn itself into a hub for global innovation. But it’s also a test of whether a benign autocracy like Dubai can usher in the next wave of technology—AI—by decree, and if so, what that means for more open, democratic countries that are also trying to incubate technologies intended to reshape the world.
It can feel as if Dubai is constructing the set of a science-fiction movie. Based on the prototypes it has unveiled in recent months, autonomous robocops may someday patrol the Dubai Mall as flying taxis whisk passengers above the gridlock-prone Sheikh Zayed Road. Self-driving buslike pods might drop commuters directly at their doorsteps. At the main airport, a system of hidden cameras disguised as a virtual aquarium tunnel may in the near future scan passengers’ faces and irises as they gawk at digital fish.
These aren’t just futuristic follies intended to look good on press releases. There’s real money behind such ideas. In 2016, Sheik Mohammed put up $270 million for the Dubai-based -Future Endowment Fund, which invests in -innovation. Its Accelerators program accepts startups on the basis of their proposed solutions to government concerns. The Dubai police department, for instance, asked Accelerator applicants to “utilize artificial intelligence … to provide statistics that may support the decision-making process or allow for faster response to emergency situations.”
A leadership reshuffle in October reinforced the government’s commitment as Sheik Mohammed appointed 27-year-old Omar bin Sultan al-Olama as the UAE’s Minister of Artificial Intelligence, creating what is thought to be the world’s first such Cabinet position. “With AI, we cannot afford to be reactive. We must be proactive,” al-Olama tells TIME. “That’s the goal of government: to be proactive and do something about it today.”
The push to attract tech startups and investors to Dubai is consistent with Sheik Mohammed’s reorienting of the emirate’s economy away from dependence on oil revenue after taking over in 2006. The early years of that effort resulted in what Dubai is best known for today: fantastical skyscrapers, ultra-luxury tourist accommodations and global trade. It seems to have paid off; while the price of oil has dropped 37% since 2013, the Dubai stock market is up 155%, according to Bloomberg data from January. Oil once made up about 50% of Dubai’s gross domestic product. Now it accounts for less than 1% of it.
The initial stage changed the face of Dubai as vast infrastructure and commercial projects were built. Now the next stage aims to create an urban environment where flying cabs and robot cops are everyday sights. If the govern-ment intends to construct a thriving playpen for technological guinea pigs, the people who live there are—by one measure—receptive to it. An Accenture study last year found that three-fourths of UAE residents are ready to adopt AI-powered devices and services, compared with a world average of 62%.
It’s not as if they have much choice. The UAE’s leadership may be benevolent, but it is authoritarian. The state ranks 147th out of 167 countries on the Economist Intelligence Unit’s Democracy Index. Political parties are outlawed, and the rulers’ word is absolute. And democracy matters when it comes to technological advancement, argues Loren Graham, an MIT professor emeritus in the history of science. Innovation has historically flourished in open, democratic societies not least because they have legal systems that are not subject to political whims, he says. Disruptive technology can ignite courtroom squabbles, and more repressive societies can’t always guarantee a level legal playing field—plus there’s the risk that a sitting ruler could see an entrepreneur with enough success and wealth as “an implicit, if not explicit, challenge,” Graham says.
Officials in Dubai brush off any suggestion that their type of government has any effect on how the gadgets and AI tested on its roadways and in its airspace are developed and deployed. Dubai is investing in technology that serves the people, says al-Olama. “His Highness Sheik Mohammed says the main goal of government is happiness,” he says. “He made my mandate that, yes, we need to be AI-ready, but in a way that makes people happier.”
Dubai is at least attempting to attract firms and investors from around the world—unlike China, whose autocratic leadership has pursued AI dominance through homegrown technology while laying down hurdles for foreign entrants like Silicon Valley giants Facebook and Google. “Dubai is in an amazing position to welcome great ideas from all over the world,” says Khalfan Juma Belhoul, CEO of the Dubai Future Foundation, touting its proposed “country in residence” program that will help other nations develop new technologies. The type of government behind the initiatives “absolutely” does not matter, he says.
Christopher Davidson, a Middle East politics professor at the U.K.’s Durham University, says Sheik Mohammed’s ability to get his plans “done fast” has been instrumental in diversifying Dubai’s economy. The biggest risk factor is long-term stability, he says. “If we have a ruling family, the weak element is who comes next,” says Davidson. “Can we be sure the next man on top is as good at this as the current one?”
Derq co-founder Amer Abufadel states his view more bluntly. “Probably not being a democracy sometimes helps,” he says. “There’s one decision-maker who says, ‘We want to push forward,’ and everybody follows. There’s little room for debate. Once the leader says it, it needs to happen.”
That top-down approach sounds very much like a corporation, but a lack of democratic oversight can lead to corruption and cronyism. While the UAE ranks relatively high on countries that successfully resist graft—it’s No. 21 on Transparency International’s ranking of 180 nations—its model of governance may at some point turn into a hindrance. In Saudi Arabia, for example, questions about transparency have slowed the initial public offering of a 5% stake in state-controlled Saudi Aramco, the world’s largest oil producer. Although the unprecedented IPO is key to the kingdom’s economic diversification plan, it has yet to happen two years after being unveiled.
And there’s another question for creators themselves: If the unelected rulers of the UAE do gain dominance in AI, are entrepreneurs confident that these world-altering technological advances will be used for fair and egalitarian purposes? Right now, Derq’s co-founders are focused on more immediate issues, like the best route from Dubai to Detroit. They joke that if they get enough business in Detroit, maybe airlines will start flying there directly. They laugh at the suggestion, but who knows? The Dubai government is, after all, the owner of the airline Emirates.
March 12, 2018 at 04:46PM ClusterAssets Inc., https://ClusterAssets.wordpress.com
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Nice Milling Part Manufacturers China photos
Posted from 5 axis machining China blog
Nice Milling Part Manufacturers China photos
A few nice milling part manufacturers china images I found:
BI – BY – Bristol Street Directory 1871
Image by brizzle born and bred Mathews’ Bristol Street Directory 1871
1871 Bindon Place, Blackboy Hill, Redland
1871 Bird Lane, Easton Road
1871 Bishop Street, Portland Square to Milk Street
R. Glover, draper Thomas E. Ditchen Samuel Weare, grocer, etc. Joseph Nickelson T. H. Williams William White, clerk of St. Paul’s Thomas Cook . Jonah J. Kettle M. Sutcliff Thomas Farrell Samuel Butler Joseph Matthews Mrs M. Waters Thomas M. Chard Mrs Cole Samuel Bryant Richard Pearse John Allen George Adlam John Fry Mullett Captain John Perry John F. Stancombe James Smith John V. Luxmore Robert Scott John Phillips Miss King Isaac Genge Robert Liscombe George Gunning Captain Richard Richards William Phillips Miss Phippen, ladies’ school John Jones Matthew Gregory Joseph Peacock Daniel J. Shaw Sindry F. H. Palmer Mrs M. Gregor
1871 Bishop Street, Whitehouse Street, Bedminster
Now demolished
1871 Bishop’s Park, in College Green
1871 Bittons, and Little Bittons, Horfield
1871 Blackbird’s Place near Stapleton Place, Stapleton Road
1871 Black Boy Hill Durdham Down to Whiteladles Road
Thomas Pitcher, greengrocer William Tichbon, butcher Dispensary
The Retreat
John Leat, vict, The Retreat (pub) bristolslostpubs.eu/page277.html
Mount Olive Wesleyan Chapel
Forester’s Arms
George Giles, vict, Forester’s Arms (pub) Whiteladies Road 1849. W. Bridgeman / 1851. George Evans / 1857 – 66. Thomas Selby / 1867 – 78. George Giles / 1879. Frederick Bennett, just above the corner with Worrall Road.
Blackboy Inn
William Tucker, vict, Blackboy Inn (pub) bristolslostpubs.eu/page79.html
Joseph W. Cummins, chimney sweeper George Clarke, butcher ?. Osgood, chimney sweeper John Stapleton, boot maker Robert T. Phillips, cabinet maker, ale and porter stores C. K. Pullin, cricket depot Thomas Wilson William Tongue, plumber & zinc worker Augustus Simmons, cabinet maker Jonas Turner, grocer, tea dealer, etc. William Roberts, greengrocer
Old Ship Tavern
Thomas Painter, vict, Old Ship Tavern (pub) Blackboy Hill 1868 – 77. Thomas Painter
William Hill, painter, glazier, etc.
Kings Arms Hotel
James Bale, vict, Kings Arms Hotel (pub) bristolslostpubs.eu/page80.html
Charles Emanuel Hill, house and sign painter, etc. Down house Jacob Naish, Down Porter House George Lyons, York cottage
Queen’s Arms
Nicholas Cummings Hethrington, vict, Queen’s Arms (pub) 1842. George Rogers / 1847 – 49. John Davies / 1857 – 79. Nicholas Cummins Hetherington / 1881 to 1898. Robert Edwards the Queen’s Arms was on the corner of York Street opposite the King’s Arms.
Francis Owen, china & glass dealer Mrs Hurley, tailoress J . White, boot and shoe maker Harry Walter Call, Durdham cottage
(Back of Blackboy)
John Emerson, plumber, gasfitter John Evans, dairyman Samuel Parsons
Old Oak Tree
William Spray, vict, Old Oak Tree (pub) Highland Square, Back of Blackboy (this is a reference to the Black Boy Inn) 1857 – 59. William Masters / 1860 to 1861. Eliza Masters / 1861 to 1862. Henry Lumber / 1863 – 78. William Spray in the 1841 census a William Spray aged 20 is recorded as servant at the Black Boy Inn. Henry Lumber was a dairyman, beerhouse & shop keeper.
1871 Black Friars, Merchant Street
1871 Black Friars, Lewins Mead
1871 Black Friars Lane, Lower Maudlin Street
1871 Black Friars Building, Hotwell Road
1871 Black Horse Lane, Hotwell Road (South)
William Stowell, carpenter, wheel-wright, etc. ?. Carling, cooper
1871 Black Walk Mina Road, Baptist Mills
1871 Blenheim Square, Marlborough Hill
George Redford James Welch George Robert Lloyd Charles Henry Caple John A. Hensler Edward Couzens Leon Hardy B. Arthur, Woodstock villa George Pitman
1871 Blenheim Street, Stapleton Road
George Webster, grocer Isaac Cole, inland revenue officer William Hill, engraver
1871 Blind Steps, Baldwin Street to Nicholas Street
1871 Blinkers Steps, Milk Street
1871 Bloomsbury Place, Charles Street, St. James
1871 Boar’s Head Yard, College Road to College Place
1871 Bonds Court, Lead House Lane, St. Philips
Simon Wellington, formerly of Temple-street, Licenced Victualler, Lead House-lane
1871 Bond Street, St. James’s Churchyard to James’s Barton
Henry E. Bunce, boot maker G.W. Knell & Co. grocers Isaac Jones, Victoria Wine Vaults Thomas Prescott, second-hand bookseller Edward Sheppard, lever watch maker John W. Evans, greengrocer
1871 Boot Lane, East Street, Bedminster
Frederick J. Howe, carpenter
1871 Boulters Court, Union Road, Dings
1871 Bouverie Street, Twinnel Road, Stapleton Road
1871 Bowdens Court, Cooks Road, Dings
1871 Boyces Avenue, Clifton Down Road to Victoria Square
David G. Catcheside, umbrella maker Frederick S. Tucker, jeweller, etc. Morgan Thomas, baker and confection Elizabeth Smith, tobacconist, etc. Alex Wright Handley, stay warehouse etc.
Albion Tavern
Robert Norman, vict, Albion Tavern bristolslostpubs.eu/page78.html
1871 Boyces Buildings, Regent Road, Clifton
1871 Bragg’s Court, Bedminster
1871 Bragg’s Lane, West Street to St. Jude’s Place
1871 Brain’s Court, Bedminster Place
1871 Brandon Court, St. Georges Road
1871 Brandon Street, St Georges Road to College Street
Dinah Osborne, baker and grocer John Tucker
Duke of York
Henry Gray, vict, Duke of York (pub) 1800 William Williams / 1806 Ann Gadd / 1816 – 28 John Porter / 1830 – 34 George Townsend / 1837 James Fedden 1839 James Martin / 1840 William Searle / 1841 – 44 James Boulting / 1847 William Harris / 1849 – 56 Charles Matthews 1860 John Trager / 1863 – 77 Henry Gray / 1877 – 83 Elizabeth Gray / 1885 – 1904 Charles Mitchell.
Sarah Evans James Gough, butcher L. A. Godwin, shopkeeper George Trebble, grocer Hester Hoare Matthew Brogan, greengrocer W. F. Trimnell & Sons, saddlers & ironmongers William Norman, marble works William Elliott, bootmaker
1871 Brandon Steep, St. Georges Road to Queens Parade
George Howell Emily Henderson, ale & porter stores John O’Neil Mrs Smith, Brandon cottage ?. Batson, Brandon house William Rogers and Co. carriage builders
Prince Albert
Prince Albert St.George’s Road, bristolslostpubs.eu/page53.html
1871 Bread Street, (old) Cheese Lane, to Upper Cheese Lane, St. Philips
Bell
J. J. Scrase, vict, Bell (pub) 1806. Matthew Powell / 1816. Samuel Hallett / 1820 – 34. James Barrington / 1837 – 44. William Crawford / 1847. William Broadbear 1849. Solomon Jefferies / 1851. John Williams / 1853. J. Tossell / 1854 to 1858. Thomas Lloyd / 1859 – 1872. John James Scrase 1874 – 75. John M. Woolcock / 1876 to 1882. George Frederick Cox / 1883. Henry Hickory / 1885 – 87. Henry Stephens 1888. Thomas Henry Davis / 1889 – 94. Andrew McConchie / 1896 – 97. William Murphy / 1899. Thomas Biddle / 1901. Alfred Hole
Charles F. Brasher & Co. general commission agents Elizabeth Smith, baker and grocer John Sims, Free Trade
The Goat
Edward West, vict, The Goat (pub) Goat Alley, Bread Street 1800. John Bishop / 1806. William Hawkins / 1816. Daniel Shortman / 1820 – 23. William Gale / 1828. M. Howe 1830 – 60. Charles Knight / 1861. Ann Long / 1863 – 68. Sarah Winchester / 1869. E. Horrell / 1871. Edward West / 1872. Amelia West 1874 – 76. John Brain / 1877 – 99. Samuel Griffiths / 1901 – 04. Alfred Gazzard / 1906. William Clevely / 1911 – 14. Charles Jones.
H. Sampson, engineer, etc. Mark Priest, chain maker John Fifoot, grocer Archibald D. Brown, Atlas Cabinet Works Bread Street Day School Saml. Harding, butcher & beer retailer
Queen Adelaide
H. Bown, vict, Queen Adelaide (pub) 1832 to 1834. William Nicholls / 1835 to 1840. Daniel Scrase / 1841 to 1852. Harriet Scrase / 1853 – 63. William Bond 1865 – 68. William Smith / 1869. Richard Purnell / 1871. H. Bowm / 1872 to 1875. G. Carpenter / 1876. Robert Deacon 1877. Charles Howell / 1878. G. C. Backs. William Bond was also an engineer and iron & brass founder at the Tower Hill Foundry, St.Philip’s. The Queen Adelaide was previously named the Queen’s Head.
Queen’s Head
Queen’s Head, Bread Street, 1794. William Webb / 1800 – 16. Thomas Howe / 1822 – 30. John Sanders / 1832. William Nicholls Thomas Howe was also a carpenter, The Queen’s Head was later named the Queen Adelaide William Perrott, locksmith.
1871 Bread Street (new), St. Philips
1871 Brecknock Lane, Earl Street, St. James
1871 Brewers Place, East Street, Bedminster
1871 Brices Buildings, St Lukes Road
1871 Brick Fronts, Union Road, Dings
1871 Brick Lane, Old Bread Street, St. Philips
1871 Brick Street, Bragg’s Lane, to Gloster Road
1871 Brick Yard, Redcliff Mead Lane
1871 Bishop Street, Portland Square to Milk Street
1871 Bridewell Street, Nelson Street to St. James’s Churchyard
Arthur & Sons, oil merchants, etc. Henry Harding & Sons, hat makers West of England Engine House – Josiah Williams, superintendent George Collins, billiard table maker William H. Clevely, cigar maker Gas Meter Inspector’s Office – Benjamin Kitt Police Station – Superintendent John Sims Handcock inspector of Weights and Measures – John Clark
White Lion
Robert C. Smart, vict, White Lion (pub) St.James’s Back (Bridewell Street) 1792 – 94 Thomas Morgan / 1800 John Neal / 1806 William Ham / 1816 James Bate / 1820 – 33 William Rennison 1834 – 49 James Baker / 1851 – 58 Daniel Williams / 1860 Richard Cowle / 1863 – 77 Robert Smart / 1878 – 83 Luke Bartlett 1885 – 89 Jesse Whiting. William Ham also traded as a timber dealer & turner. The White Lion was demolished in 1894 for an extension to Bridewell police station.
William Fryer, bookseller and binder George Jones, china ornament maker Willialn Brookman, oil & colorman John Ferris, shopkeeper
Crown & Dove
Thomas Hughes, vict, Crown & Dove (pub) Bridewell Lane (Bridewell Street) 1816 Susannah Hill / 1820 Amelia Bate / 1822 Edward Cambridge / 1826 J. Bayley / 1828 – 31 Richard Griffiths 1832 to 1833 Henry Stanton / 1834 William Thomas / 1837 Mary Robertson / 1839 Thomas Toleman / 1840 – 44 John Bidgood 1847 – 69 Charity Bidgood / 1871 – 88 Thomas Hughes / 1891 – 1917 David Crombie / 1921 Horace Hill / 1925 Ernest Godden 1928 Alfred Peel / 1931 Con Simpson / 1935 – 38 Herbert Watjen / 1944 Leonard Larke / 1950 Patrick Kinsley / 1953 Arthur Jones. rebuilt in 1887 the Crown & Dove closed July 1974 and was demolished August 1976.
Richard Clarke, picture dealer Thomas Elbury, eating house Edwin T. Lewis, cooper & vat maker House of Correction – keeper Richard Ashford
1871 Bridge Parade, Bristol Bridge
Jas. G. Plumley, chemist and dentist Edwin Fear, watch and clock maker
Fear’s, 4 Bristol Bridge (Jewellers and Watchmakers)
In the 1887 newspaper it was advertised ‘special lines in fine gold and silver jewellery, watches and clocks, suitable for presents, now selling at Edwin Fear’s’
William and Francis Boucher, grocers Henry Gillard, attorney Henry Branscombe, india rubber merchant and currier, agent Edward Duncan Jones & Co. printers W. L. Flock, solicitor Henry Schusler, grocer Wedmore & Co., wholesale grocers Wyld and Co., wine merchants Ward & Co., seed merchants James Wintle, linen draper
1871 Bridge Parade, Passage Street, St. Philips
1871 Bridge Street, Bristol Bridge to Dolphin Street
Tea Co. – T. H. Osborne, manager George Wright, printer J . Llewellin, tobacconist, etc. Moss Levy, milliner, etc.
Bank Hotel
R. H. & J. Williams, Bank Hotel bristolslostpubs.eu/page281.html
Copestake & Co, lace merchants D. Hyain and Co, wholesale clothiers T. H. Tripney & Co. auctioneers and accountants J . B. Taylor & Co. printers J . F. Wilson, agent John Salmond, tailor John Radford Bush and Ray, solicitors Blew and Austen, lace merchants John Naish, auctioneer G. Thomas, Western Wagon Co. Lewis Solomon, loan office R. G. Mackay, hat tip printer Follwell Crawford and Clibbett, wholesale warehouse Freemason’s Hall Jones and Gorton, out?tters William Jones, linen draper G. G. Corbould, surgeon J . M. Harris & Co, woollen drapers Thomas P. Peterson, solicitor W. E. Patch, wine vaults, Bristol Hotel Jones & Co. harmonium manufacturers, etc Edward Smith, printer Solomon Brothers, clothiers Sweet and Burroughs, solicitors S. Joyce, Union Finance Co. Scottish Union Assurance Society Union Building and Investment Society James T. Player, woollen draper Charles Shackell, outfitter Albert Smith & Co, confectioners J . Perry, stationer Mrs Smith, school R. C. James & Co. manufacturer’s agents Flynn and Chard, provision and butter merchants Harris, Crook and Harris, linen merchants and warehousemen G. S. Hockey 8: Co. wholesale clothiers Educational Trading Co. G. and S. Wills, wine merchants John Hill, tailor and draper Summers & Co, soda water makers W. R. Chandler, undertaker E. Crawford, scale beam maker George Pearce, trimmings warehouse W. Jelfs, fruiterer J . H. Richards, fruiterer, etc Edward Riley, manufacturer’s agent T. W. Woodall, manufacturer’s agent
Swan Hotel
Swan Hotel Mary-Le-Port Street and Bridge Street 1752. Richard Robbins / 1775. Henry Seldon / 1792. Amelia Cuddeford / 1800 – 06. Philip Huxtable / 1816 – 20. John Evans 1811. Charles Besell / 1822 – 25. Sarah Aplin / 1826 – 28. L. C. & C. Aplin / 1830. Llewellin & Co. /1832 – 39. Edward C. Thomas 1840 – 54. William Gray / 1855. Mary Gray / 1856 – 69. James Prockter / 1871 – 76. Charles Henry Lea / 1877 – 79. Charles Osborne 1881 – 83. George Jewry / 1885. H. Fewson / 1886 – 87. Elizabeth Manning / 1888. Charles Toogood (proprietor) 1891 – 99. Mary Hedges Hall / 1901. Mrs. M. Gaskell / 1904 – 17. Gaskell & Howell / 1925 – 31. Herbert Newton
Boxall Bros. & Co., grocers
John Bull Tavern
John Bull Tavern Bridge Street 1820 William Virrier No.35 Bridge Street, listed under wine merchants from 1820 until about 1920.
1871 Brightbow, East Street, Bedminster
Mason’s Arms
John Sandford Russell, builder, vict, Mason’s Arms (pub) Brightbow (Bedminster Parade) 1794. William Telphord / 1800. Joan Powell / 1806. Richard Northmore / 1847. H. Brewer / 1848 – 65. James Brewer 1867 – 69. Mary Brewer / 1871 to 1876. John Russell / 1877 to 1878. Charles Dewfall / 1879 – 80. Ann Dewfall / 1881. Robert Smith 1882. W. Wallis / 1883. Thomas Bryant / 1886 – 92. Maria Watts / 1896. Emma Francis / 1899 – 1901. Edward Collins 1904 – 06. William Porch.
E. Simons, eating house Cleverdon and Son, Wheelwrights Palmer and Jenkins, drapers William Harry Parsons, beer retailer and potato merchant Charles Keel, greengrocer Thomas Bolt, boot maker Robert Baker, butcher
(Clarendon Terrace)
Charles Biggs, grocer and tea dealer George G. Palmer, green grocer William German, butcher James Old?eld, timber dealer Jas. Carter, saddler and harness maker
New Inn
Hannah Davey, vict, New Inn (pub) Bedminster Causeway 1792. Daniel Miller / 1794. William Day / 1806 – 28. John Davey / 1830 – 60. Robert Davey / 1863 – 72. Hannah Davey 1879. Robert Peters / 1881 – 82. Thomas Mercer / 1885 – 94. Joseph Norton / 1897 – 99. Cornwall Barrisford Bates Robert Davey was also a saddler and harness maker.
1871 Brighton Park, Oakfield Road
1871 Brighton Place, Whiteladies Road
1871 Brighton Place, end of Wilder Street, St. Pauls
1871 Brighton Street, Grosvenor Road to City Road
Mrs George Tapp Thomas Strong Edwin James Pollyblank William Smith Richard Harris George Williaam Parker Haycraft Samuel Brown, tea dealer Robert Neilson John Buscall Robert James, wholesale tea dealer William Rogerson, draper Henry Sircom John S. Williams Samuel White Thomas H. Weston Mrs Millie, ladies school John Whitworth William Smith
1871 Brislington Crescent, Bath Road
1871 Bristol Bridge
Charles Bishop, umbrella manufacturer Francis Parker, family grocer Henry Perry, pie shop William J . Hall, toy warehouse
1871 Bristol Steps, St Michael’s
1871 Britannia Cottages, Ashton Gate
1871 Britannia Place, Pennywell Road
1871 Britannia Place, Victoria Road, Bedminster
Gilbert Babbage grocer Mrs E. Norris Jabez Angell
1871 Britannia Place, Jacob Street, St. Philips
1871 Broad Court, Rosemary Street
1871 Broad Court, Great Ann Street, St. Philips
1871 Broadmead, bottom of Union Street to Old King Street
Cardiff Castle
George Parkins, vict, Cardiff Castle (pub) 1871 George Parkins / 1872 John Blackborrow / 1874 Edwin T. Arman / 1875 Peter Conrad Ramstrom / 1876 Edwin T. Arman 1877 James Welsh / 1878 Timothy Leo.
Samuel Yates, furniture broker William Trigg, Saddler, etc. Edward Phillips, furniture broker
Coach & Horses (Coach and Horses Passage)
Thomas Morris, vict, Coach & Horses (pub) Broadmead / Silver Street 1754 – 55 Christopher Mantle / 1764 Richard Wall / 1775 – 92 Edward Poole / 1794 – 1800 Mary Poole / 1806 Ann Carver 1816 John Hanson / 1820 – 22 John Stafford / 1823 George Sweet / 1828 Abraham Littlejohn / 1830 Michael Nash 1831 Elizabeth Hughes / 1832 to 1847 Richard Hands / 1848 to 1859 Ann Hands / 1860 – 61 Charles Doble 1863 – 65 Samuel Wellsford / 1866 to 1868 George Parry / 1869 William Rogers / 1871 – 72 Thomas Morris / 1874 – 79 Joseph Grimes 1879 Joseph Hodgson / 1881 – 1901 Henry Symes / 1904 Agnes Symes / 1906 Mrs. Philip Gill / 1909 Agnes Gill.
Frederick Cogswell, furniture broker Chamberlain, Pole, & Co. bakers T. N. Ashman, leather cutter, etc.
Herbert Ashman & Co, 1 – 5 Broadmead (Leather Merchants)
Herbert Ashman’s family arrived in Bristol from Yeovil when he was a few months old. He joined his father’s firm at the age of 15, and founded his own business with his brother seven years later, in 1876.
He was created the first Lord Mayor of Bristol in June 1899. Before this time the office was simply that of Mayor. On 15th November of the same year he became Sir Herbert, when he was knighted by Queen Victoria during her visit to the city.
J. Short and Son, artists’ colormen William Howell, druggist Elizabeth Hone, seed dealer Levi Hill, boot maker Broadmead Baptist Chapel – Rev. E. J. Gange Harry Alfred Rogers, furniture broker Frederick Cooper, bootmaker Misses Hutchins, drapers Edward Phillips, furniture broker Wood’s Dining Rooms Lewis Brothers, cheese factors Richard Bevan, brushmaker, etc. George Woolley, jeweller William Pitt, draper and hosier J. D. Williams, tea dealer Edward Joyce, confectioner E. Jenner, ticket writer
Wesley Calvinistic Methodist Church – In 1748 it was extended possibly by the Quaker George Tully because of the stylistic similarities with the Friends’ Meeting House at Quakers Friars of the same period. After Wesley’s death the property passed into the hands of the Welsh Calvinistic Methodists. In 1909 it was given back to the Methodist Church.
John & William G.Twigg, leather cutters Frederick Thomas Graham, pawnbroker James W. Tapson, spirit dealer Frederick Pullin, pork butcher Keeping and Co., tobacconists
The Ship
Edward J. Jones, vict, The Ship (pub) Near the corner with Old King Street, the Armada, previously known as the Ship was pulled down during the 1950’s redevelopment of the area. The tenancy of Stanley Forse commenced on the 21st October 1949, the rent was £40 per annum and the landlords were The Bristol Brewery Georges & Co. Limited. Thomas Richards also traded as a gun maker at No.2 Thomas Street. bristolslostpubs.eu/page14.html
Harry Jones, baker and confectioner
Rose & Crown
John Gough, vict, Rose & Crown (pub) On the corner with Merchant Street. In the early 1930’s the Rose & Crown was demolished for road widening. bristolslostpubs.eu/page59.html
Richard Harford, cabinet maker John Williams, eating house Samuel Osborn Sweatman, cooper James Jacobs, pawnbroker Edwin Fenner, furniture broker Henry Bick, furniture broker Broadmead Rooms J. B. Hatton, tailor
Greyhound Hotel
Edwin Pickwick, vict, Greyhound Hotel (pub) The Greyhound was a large coaching inn dating from 1620, originally two buildings the Birmingham Hotel (previously the Bell) and the smaller Greyhound, these merged to form one hotel named the Greyhound in the early 19th century. In 1958 a large part of the pub was converted into shops and the whole front re-built in replica. Today it serves as an entrance to the Galleries shopping centre and is no longer a pub. bristolslostpubs.eu/page37.html
St. James Hall Robert L. Burrow, stable keeper Mary Ann Hooper, milliner John Hall & Sons, glass merchts Jabez Gay, seedsman John Radford, shoeing smith John Cogan, leather factor Keeping Brothers, ticket writers J. H. Dowson, rag merchant Edwin J. White, furniture broker John Cook, straw plait dealer Rose and Harris, printers Keeping and Co. tobacconists Uriah Alsop, cabinet maker Bland’s yard H. Stone, ale merchant John T. Wright, furniture broker J. T. Wright F. Cogswell, furniture broker Rachel Paddock, tobacco and snuff dealer Elizabeth Evans, beer retailer
1871 Broad Plain, Narrow Plain to Unity Street, St. Philips
Mary A. Holbrook, vict, Rising Sun (pub) 1857 – 83. Mary Ann Holbrook. Robert Ball, butcher Thomas Creed George Weeks Christopher Thomas and Brothers, soap & candle manufacturers James Shaddick, cooper Robert Small William Westlake William Gubb George Fox Susan Day Robert Distin Charles Knight, maltster
Queen’s Head
James Cooper, vict, Queen’s Head (pub) bristolslostpubs.eu/page122.html John Riddle
Bath House
John Britton, vict, Bath House (pub) 1853 – 55. George Hill / 1861 – 63. Henry Watts / 1866. Robert Jones / 1867 to 1868. Edwin Palfrey / 1869 – 72. John Britton 1874 – 76. Mary Ann Howe / 1877 – 78. William Farrow / 1879 – 83. Henry Coombs.
1871 Broad Street, top of High Street to Nelson Street
Council House – The Old Council House is situated at the cross roads of Corn Street and Broad Street. Peter Macliver, Daily Press Office William Brimson, hair dresser J. Wintle, job master George John Hayman, tailor Robert W. Bingham, bookseller Charles England, hair dresser Henry Hodder, druggist (Bank of England Chambers) Hobbs and Peters, solicitors Bank of England – Joshua Saunders, manager
(The Guildhall Chambers)
W. H. Campbell Salmon, Solicitor Thomas Ward, surveyor Popes and Bindon, architects Alex. Hutchison, agent Harold Bolles Bowles, solicitor Jas. P. Petherick, wine & ale retailer Barker and Lane, solicitors James Power, accountant John Andrew Page, stationer James A. Clark, architect William Baynton, Solicitor William A. Scott, tailor Thomas Buckle, tailor Thomas Gillford, stock & share broker Clifton Suspension Bridge Office – R. Coles, secretary Horwood, Son, and Barnes, architects and surveyors John Lavars, lithographer Clarke and Sons, solicitors F. Gilmore Barnett, solicitor E. Phillips and Co. wine merchants P. Hannnond, solicitor A. and F. Nash, solicitors J. Tanner Ray, solicitor
Full Moon
Charles Lewis, vict, Full Moon (pub) On the corner of Broad Street and Bell Lane. bristolslostpubs.eu/page252.html
J. Saunders, glass and frame dealer Joseph Harris, bookbinder Odd Follows’ District Offices G. and C. Somerton, Mercury Office W. T. Crouch, Guildhall Hotel Wathen, Gardiner, & Co. wholesale clothiers James Collins, jun. Benson and Elletson, solicitors Pigeon and Ward, solicitors Bristol Benevolent Institution H. Vowles, tailors’ trimmings dealer Osborne, Ward, Vassall, & Co. solicitors Searle and Fursman, hairdressers F. G. Sherrard, solicitor S. Roper, solicitor Dell & Co. watch makers Alexander, Daniel & Co. auctioneers Henderson and Salmon, solicitors T. T. Ford, barrister William Stevens, wine & ale merchant Henry Walters, music hall
Old Swan Hotel (White Swan, Cider house Passage)
W. Andean, Old Swan Hotel (White Swan, Cider house Passage) 1752 John Barber / 1792 – 94 Richard Linington / 1800 – 11 John Hall / 1816 – 26 William Cottrell / 1828 – 40 James Doughty 1841 Edmund Phillips / 1844 Simeon Perry / 1847 – 49 John Doggett / 1851 – 72 William Andean / 1874 – 78 Edward Barnett 1879 William Parsley / 1882 Blacker Brothers / 1883 Emma Ash / 1885 – 99 Henry Boulton. www.flickr.com/photos/brizzlebornandbred/8688736141/
W. B. Peck, wine & spirit merchant (Lion Chambers) Maurice S. Moseley, solicitor John Gerrish, auctioneer William J. Pountney, land surveyor Burges and Lawrence, solicitors
White Lion Hotel
White Lion Hotel – manager, George Harvey Thompson. 1752 John Lane / 1775 Richard Bowsher / 1792 William Carr / 1794 – 1816 Thomas Luce / 1822 – 55 Isaac Niblett 1856. Niblett & Taylor / 1858 Isaac Niblett / 1860 ? Smith / 1861 – 65 James Hilliar / 1872 George Thompson.
(Lion Buildings)
E. B. Cranfield, refreshment rooms Hurndall & Co. wine & spirit merchants Sovereign Insurance, Wotton & Co William Griffin, insurance agent Chas. H. Bedingfield, tobacconist R. M. Benson, tobacconist Henry Biggs, tailor L. Mosely, dentist J. Rousseau, jeweller George Nichols, surveyor, etc.
1871 Broad Quay, Drawbridge to Narrow Quay
Jas Hopkins & Co, Broad Quay (Marquees and Outdoor Equipment) Trading 1890.
The company had moved from the address by 1900. The premises are now occupied by the Hippodrome Box Office.
Lewis Hutton, 2 and 3 Broad Quay, taxidermist and naturalist
1871 Broad Weir, Merchant Street to Ellbroad Street
Henry Hicks, pawnbroker Edmund Whittard, second-hand clothes dealer Thomas Small, boot maker Henry Denning, pork butcher Thomas Rice & Sons, ironfounders Charles Gillett, refreshment rooms John W. Shorland Herapath & Mullett, leather merchants John Lubin, fishmonger John Foster, baker (Friend’s Meeting House Passage) Robert Henry Skinner, grocer J. Cummings, fishmonger Robert Wall, cabinet maker
Crown Inn
James Henry Williams, vict, Crown Inn Thomas Long, boot maker, cab proprietor and haulier
1871 Broadricks Court, Broad Quay
1871 Broadway, Horfield
1871 Brook Road, Lower Cheltenham Place, Ashley
William Purnell Salmond, Norwood cottage Henry Hall, Camborne house
Star & Garter Hotel
Samuel Havard Jones, vict, Star & Garter Hotel 1871 – 74. Samuel Harvard Jones / 1877 – 79. William Marchant / 1882. Rosina Challenger / 1883 – 87. Henry Challenger 1889. Henry Watkins / 1891. Isabella Bullock / 1892 – 1901. William Lewton / 1904 – 06. Charles Lewton / 1909. Frederick Hunt 1914. Elizabeth Bryant / 1917. Edwin Eastcott / 1921 – 35. Edwin Stevens / 1937. Mary Stevens / 1938. Thomas Holloway 1944. Joseph Fletcher / 1950 – 53. Henry Jarrett.
Thomas Harris Mrs Henry Philip John, grocer Mrs Harriet Suter, greengrocer, Brook house Temperance Davis, grocer, Park house
(Belgrave)
Mrs Young Henry Charles Lawrence Richard Gullick Frederick Gullick Henry Morrish, tea dealer Thomas Harris Joseph Guist Mrs Wingate Edward Plummer
(Gloucester Terrace)
George Smith, stationer, & ink maker Edwin Siderfin John Holmes Robert Spill Edwin Byerley John Wilshire George Hill, Grove house Edwin Lewis Albert Bruton Thomas Granger James Rich Steger, carpenter Edward Davies, Belle Vue house
Gloucester House
Joseph Taylor, vict, Gloucester House (pub) 1869 – 77. Joseph Taylor / 1883. John Smith / 1885 – 89. Charles Sandels / 1891. Francis Chandler / 1892 – 1931. William Appleby 1935. William Jones / 1937. Kate Jones / 1938 – 53. Edith Holley.
1871 Brock’s Court, Rose Street, Great Gardens, Temple
1871 Brooks Buildings, Asher Lane, St. Philip’s
1871 Brookfield Crescent, Horfield
1871 Brown’s Buildings, Whitehouse Street, Bedminster
1871 Brown’s Lane, Clarence Town
1871 Brown’s Row, Bedminster
1871 Browning’s Alley, East Street, Bedminster
1871 Brougham Street, Barton Hill to St. Luke’s Road
1871 Brunswick Place, Hotwells
Thomas H. Jennings, chemist & druggist Mrs. M. M. Weston, watch maker and stationer E. Gage, eating house Abrahan Widgery, newsagent William Thomas, baker Thomas Cook, grocer, etc William Ratcliff David Williams, paper pattern manufacturer George Wort George Ball Thomas Rogers Robert Pearce Charles Johns Charles Gulley Mrs Matilda Miles John Lovering
1871 Brunswick Place, Wilder Street, St. Paul’s
1871 Brunswick Square, Cumberland Street, St Paul’s
Mrs Punfield Henry Scull Capt. William N. Griffiths, R.N. William Cowlin and Son, builders, etc. William Lane Blackie and Son, publishers A.B.Nelson, agent A. Hutchinson Rev. R. P. Clark (Independent) Edward H. Phillips Thomas Chard H. Hodder, museum of art J. Coulthard, draper Unitarian Burying Ground – E. Bunce Brunswick Chapel – Miss Brown, sextoness, 16 Pritchard Street John Cameron, draper Alfred Smith, surgeon Edward Follwell, senr. Edward Follwell & Son, carriage establishment, coachbuilders,etc.
1871 Brunswick Terrace, Wilder Street, St Paul’s
1871 Brunswick Terrace, City Road, Stokes Croft
1871 Brunswick Terrace, Cheltenham Road
1871 Bruton Place, Meridian Place, near Roman Ct. Chapel
Henry Collins, assistant overseer Edward Buswell, fly proprietor William Mogg, hairdresser and perfumer T. Fisher, Bruton house A. B. Merrick
1871 Brinton Place, Horfield
1871 Bryan Place, Windmill Hill
1871 Bryants court, Broad Quay
1871 Bryants Court, Pile Street
1871 Bryant Streeet, Redcliff Hill to Ship Lane
1871 Bucketwell Court, Castle Green
1871 Bucketwell Court, Broadmead
1871 Buckingham Place, Pembroke Road to Victoria Square
Buckingham Chapel, Rev. John Penny Mrs Catherine Jenkins, lodging house George Ley, lodging house Mrs McCaul Miss Lee William Thomas, lodging house Charles Metivier Benjamin G. Burroughs, solicitor Samuel Bradfield, lodging house Joseph Cooper Miss Catherine Elizabeth Fitzherbert Miss Fanny Bourne, lodging house Miss Murray Major Jenkins Miss Ann Leedham George Bowcher Miss Burrow, lodging house Miss Bernard Mrs Tucker Charles Aylmer Mrs Sarah Hawkins, lodging house Joseph Bell, lodging house
1871 Buckingham Villas, Pembroke Road
1871 Buckingham Vale, Pembroke Road, Alma Road
John Bennett Thomas William Dunn Major Henry S. Tireman James Williams George Bunyon Mrs Morse George Taylor Hon. Col. John J. Bourke Mrs E. Wyatt George Riseley, prof. of music James C. Fear Miss Mary Thomas
1871 Buckingham Place, Richmond Road, Montpelier
1871 Bull Lane, Great Georges Street, St Philips
1871 Bull Lane, North Street, Bedminster
1871 Bull Place, Ellbroad Street
1871 Burdett Court, East Street, Bedminster
1871 Burge’s Place, Pennel Street, St. Philips
1871 Burge’s Court, Jacob Street, St Philips
1871 Burlington Buildings, Redland Park
Edmund Cooper Archibald Vickers ?, Kerry William Sweet Capper Pass Edward Nicklin Mrs. Malnwarlng Henry W. Ridgway Mrs Pownall Miss S. Boyce
1871 Burlington Villas, Redland Park
Mrs. James William John Thomas Henry T. Chamberlain Thomas Brooks, jun.
1871 Burnett Place, Cumberland Basin
1871 Burton’s Court, Berkeley Place, Clifton
1871 Bush Street, Dalton Court to Hillgrove Street
James Brown James Parrish John Little Thomas Williams William Cawley James Stinchcombe Thomas Ponting Thomas Wear Edward Bryant James Purnell George Starkey Henry Biddlescombe
1871 Bush Street, Wells Road to Oxford Street, Totterdown
?, Vaughan, fishmonger William Ward, boy’s day school
1871 Bushy Park, Wells Road, Totterdown
Chas. Hill Wilkins, Greenbank villa Thomas Morris, Winton villa William Johnson, boot maker James Crosby, reporter, Truro villa John Townsend, Ashton villa John Giles, Albert villa William Scammell, Ronda villa Chas. Garratt, Wye villa ?, Ross villa ?, Ivy villa Joseph George Parker, Linton villa Alfred Hezekiah Hollyman, Clyde villa Mrs. Mary Townsend, Glyn villa J . H. Jenner Player, Clifton villa Frederick William Finch, Rydall villa ?, Stanley villa Joseph Baster, Etna villa John Weeks, Slico villa Edwin Thorne, Drayton villa ?, Melrose villa ?, Rugby villa Chris. M. E. Ridge, Teme villa ?, Dorset villa Henry Baker, Park villa James B. Hemmings, Bushy lodge
1871 Bushy Park Road, Wells Terrace, Wells Road
1871 Butcher Row, West Street
1871 Butter Alley, Old Bread Street, St Philips
1871 Butter Lane, Avon Street, Great Gardens
1871 Butterfield Court, Callowhill Street
1871 Butts, St. Augustine’s Parade, to Canon’s Marsh
George A. Miller, shipbuilder, Dean’s Marsh dry dock Frederick William Green, shipbuilder, etc. James Preston Capt. Robert Bearne
Ship
Robert May, vict, Ship (pub) 1764 Elizabeth Trippett / 1775 Elizabeth Gardener / 1792 – 94 Elizabeth Bevan / 1800 Elizabeth Babb / 1806 John Gwynn 1816 – 20 George King / 1822 Benjamin Lane / 1823 – 26 William Heywood / 1828 – 32 Eleanor Heywood / 1833 – 34 Thomas Richards 1837 – 39 James Bevan / 1840 – 44 William Hole / 1847 – 48 G. Bishop / 1849 – 54 Jane Powell / 1855 William Martin 1856 Jonathan Carpenter / 1857 to 1859 Robert Grant / 1860 – 72 Robert May / 1874 Anna Greenland / 1876 – 85 Samuel Simmons 1886 – 96 Charles Webb.
Robert Houseley John G. Lovell, stone & coal merchant Butts wharf Walter Howell, timber merchant
Blackbird
T. Harris, vict, Blackbird (pub) 1754 Thomas Watkins / 1755 Moses Harris
1871 Byron Place, Queen’s Road to Berkeley Place
John Parsons, builder, contractor
Byron House
Francis Webber, vict, Byron House (pub) Byron Place, Triangle 1848 – 63 James Putney / 1865 – 69 Harriet Putney / 1871 – 92 Francis Webber / 1899 F. Piper / 1901 – 14 Samuel Jenkins 1917 Elizabeth Jenkins / 1921 – 31 Harry Faux / 1935 Frances Faux / 1937 – 38 Frances Ellen Webber / 1944 – 50 Frederick Pearce 1953 Cameron Henry Chamberlain / 1975 E. J. A. Greening later a restaurant & bar named Baroque.
Wicks & Co. bootmakers Jas. W. Ayre, fishmonger Robert Simmons, grocer Robert Tucker Babbage, butcher George Garland, boot maker ?, Chappell, draper, etc. Thomas Hallam, dairyman Hester Braddick T. G. Fraley John Cuthbert Fox Mrs Scott, school
1871 Byron Place (Upper), Byron Place
George James, The Lodge Mrs R. Hart John Taylor Archibald Morton Lewis Thomas Baker Lewis Alfred John Field
CA – Bristol Street Directory 1871
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How to Choose a Good Custom Cabinet Maker
Kitchen cabinets are more than a purchase-- they are an investment that you want to treasure. If you are remodeling your cabinets in your kitchen, you want to be sure that you're getting a fair price from Kitchen Cabinets Prince George that you can count on. Before you enter any stores, consider these questions and do your purchase.
You should check how long the manufacturers run their business. Not every entrepreneur who gets into this kind of industry bears all the difficulties and the test of time. If the kitchen cabinet makers withdraw their commitment, consumers have to fight for their rights to get what they have remunerated for. Another frequent reason that people decide to go with customized is because they have specific tastes and ideas in how they want things to look. It is not always possible to find readymade counters that are exactly the way you want them. If you are looking for something in particular, you may wish to opt for a cabinet maker to work on it. If the manufacturer pulls their obligation out, consumer suffers from prolonged process receiving the amount of money that they have paid for. Hence, you should put your trust on manufacturers that have a good reputation and are known for their quality service and products. This is an indication that they could go beyond your limits and requirements for a high-quality cabinets and service. When choosing custom Cabinet makers in Prince George, start by defining your personal style and imagining the type of cabinets that you picture yourself living with. What is your general style preference: Old-fashioned, Modern, Intricate or Austere? What are your wood preferences? Do you like light-colored woods that brighten the room, or do you prefer the dignity of darker colors? Let your mind wander. Consult your spouse, partner, or confidant.
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Hiring Cabinet Makers for Custom Kitchens
Finding the right Kitchen cabinets Prince George could be a daunting task. Every so often, it is so overwhelming and you might be one of those people who keep on searching for some reasons to put it off. If you have plans of renovating your kitchen, you might be capable of putting your project on delay until your existing cabinets need some replacement, or find that some parts become worn out and you can't bear to think how much it would cost you if you do some repairs. Finding a broken cabinet or assuming that your kitchen is no longer a functional room in the house might be some reasons to do remodeling, but tight budget and failure to find cabinet makers that you can count on might hold you back to complete the project. In general, a specially designed kitchen is going to be of much higher quality than those you find in the store. This is due to the craftsmanship and materials used. You will pay a bit more, but the end result will be well worth it. You will get exactly what you need for your space and it will be well done, provided you contract the right company or person t do it. Due to these overwhelming options, you are discouraged to continue the kitchen renovations Prince George. You might not continue the reconstruction unless your existing cabinets are worn out and turn to be an ineffectual tool in the kitchen. Tight budget and leading to variable manufacturers are some reasons of putting your refurbishing plan off. Each site will be different from every other as each artisan expresses his individuality. A good site will have a statement of purpose or philosophy. The artisan will tell you how he or she works and feels about the creative process. You can also see a portfolio of previous work. Careful attention to detail is similar to precision, but it also involves the ability to be concerned about the smallest part of the carpentry process. A superior craftsperson will not skip or overlook minor details to complete the job in a hurried manner. Cabinets are a great investment that you make in your home or business. They provide for storage while enhancing the beauty of the area where they are installed.
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Picking the Perfect Details for Your Cabinets
If you have decided that you want custom cabinets and have a budget worked out, your next step is to find a cabinet maker who will make and install your custom cabinets. You will probably find that a local cabinet maker will be able to do the job and save you money. Designing proper custom cabinets actually means proper space utilization. You can also create shelves or drawers in the cabinets to hold your things. For example, you can make provisions in the cabinet to hold your bone china or a set of spoons. Similarly, in the bathroom you can make shelves in the cabinet to hold your towels or cosmetics. Most of the prefabricated cabinets are made of aluminum or steel. These tool cabinets have a number of sliding drawers which can be used for storing a large number of devices of different types. The prefabricated cabinets are available in different sizes. Some of these cabinets can be placed on tables or workbenches. There are different varieties of prefabricated cabinets available in many of the online stores at affordable rates these days. Custom cabinets are the most expensive type of cabinets. A cabinet shop makes custom cabinets for a specific kitchen from a plan designed by an architect or a kitchen designer. The maker of the custom cabinets usually installs and configures them to create an almost unlimited variety of storage and organizational solutions from any wood or color combination and in almost any set of dimensions or style. Take your time and become very familiar with the different types and styles of the cabinets that is currently available in the market. This way you can actually choose the best choice that is available in the market. The most common thing that one needs to consider when they are buying this type of cabinet is the height of the kitchen ceiling and the person's height. You do not want to end up buying a tall cabinet and not being able to reach the top shelf. So make sure you buy a cabinet so that you can use all the shelves and drawers of the cabinet with ease. Apply the paint of choice to your Kitchen cabinets Prince George to complete the refinishing process. There are many different types of paint available on the market and I recommend that you take your time when choosing which paint to go for if you would like to give your cabinets the best refinish possible.
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The Secret to Affordable Kitchen Cabinets
A kitchen unconditionally needs to be sumptuous to field in with heart and soul in to delight. The kitchen cabinets are an essential case of the kitchen where you pull out of the fire stuff and they has a passion for to be pure as the driven snow and simple as they are the pattern that shows off regularly in the kitchen. There are not many tribes in this reality who boot affords to sing different tune their kitchens all year. Appropriately, it is normal to select a well known a study for your kitchen cabinets that could be sumptuous for the eyes for the most part the time. The marvelous way hassle so is to buy the online kitchen cabinets. These cabinets bounce derive you amass a portion of money. If you will purchase the cabinets from the branded stores by the time mentioned they will beyond a shadow of a doubt be a portion expensive.
Most people please to get how essentially preferably law of the land cabinetry will asking price as compared to summer cabinets. This is ready impossible to connect with whole degree of accuracy. The genuine truth of the evidence is that custom Cabinet makers in Prince George are mended to cost in a superior way that the sink lines of identical summer cabinetry.
Analyze your family's arts and science, on a roll habits and kitchen layout. You gave a pink slip do this by plotting what you require to unmask and five and dime shop as readily as the bells and whistles that will file and moderate your kitchen activities. Kitchens are back again felicitous the middle of the road of nation life. This approach kitchens show multiple purposes in the home. The purposes for which each community uses the kitchen suggest antithetical configurations of cabinets and islands and appliances.
Kitchen cabinets attain in a fluctuation of human shapes and sizes, however custom sizes gave a pink slip further be doubtless specified and hyped up - at a price. Standards kitchen council sizes, supported as stock cabinets, are to the end of time much more affordable previously law of the land or semi-custom cabinets and to the end of time have shorter handle times. roughly manufacturers, unless custom built, stock can't get away from sizes so if you have a kitchen designed at supply five and dime shop or by a designer it will to the end of time be transferable to another high level adviser line.
Stock kitchen cabinets are available detached in standard sizes and granted on certain terms styles and finishes everything being equal they are mass-produced every manufacturer. These are by the same token a good for what ails you option when the low-cost is tight.
Now that you have the top of the base cabinets about to happen, correlate up another 19 1/2 inches and a directly line adjacent the fence to stipulate the reinforce of the encumbrance cabinets. Lightly register each cabinets' dimensions and finding on the clog to figure sure that your late layout is correct.
Buying all beautiful Cabinets in prince george for a painstaking remodeling of the kitchen is not in the bought for a song of virtually homeowners. Anyhow as you can see up dating your kitchen wish not improperly the bank or be time consuming. Your kitchen and home can have a felt in gut new recognize by practically refacing kitchen cabinets or refinishing kitchen cabinets.
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