Diplomatic Gates
W1, Grosvenor Square
The spelling is probably a good indication of which country funded this memorial.
The spelling is probably a good indication of which country funded this memorial.
British History On-line confirms our suspicions that this should read "T. Chancellor". Goodness knows why or when it got corrupted into "...
There has been a church on this site since 1262. The current building was designed by George Gilbert Scott and erected in 1872.
The plaque is a one-off in a delicate serif typeface. The off-set string course suggests that the plaque was designed into the building. ...
The bible reference Psalm 118:24 gives "This is the day which the Lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it." A very general-purp...
The web page given on the plaque plots 900 British transport heritage sites on a map and provides information about each one.
We could not read the plaque itself but it is shown very clearly in the British Pathe film.
Chandler lived here, 1900 to 1905, while a day pupil at nearby Dulwich College, overlapping by a term, but never meeting, with fellow stu...
Rosslyn Gardens, the red-brick mansions on the northern side of this road (now nos. 4-26 Belsize Lane) was built about 1881.
Brian May who was a student at Imperial said before the unveiling: "The first proper gig we did was at Imperial College in the Union Hall...