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  • Finding Great Ruins in the UK,  Uncategorized

    St Patrick’s Chapel in the Lancashire Village of Heysham

    A window into the Past of St Patrick’s Chapel in Heysham (photograph courtesy of the author) A beautifully traditional Lancashire lane leads from the square at Heysham down to the coast. One begins to feel time presenting itself on either side as the delightful eighteenth & nineteenth century fishing cottages pass during the gentle walk. Such pretty & well maintained properties have to lead to something well worth visiting. The Irish sea & huge expanse of Morecambe Bay soon comes into view. The street & view are well worth the visit already, yet that is not all you have come to see. St Peter’s Church, Heysham. Photograph Courtesy of the…

  • Reviews of Lovely Local UK History Books,  Uncategorized

    Rufford, It’s Past and It’s People

    Rufford. Its Past and Its People Rufford. Its Past and Its People. Well, Joan, a criticism should first be brought to the fore. Where is the apostrophe? Not a slight at you of course, definitely the publisher (my cheek can only go so far).  The book is a wonderful read for the local people of Rufford, both for those with longstanding ties to the rural Lancashire Village, situated in the triangle between Ormskirk, Southport and Preston, and those commutters who now call Rufford their home.  Fertile fields supplied trade to the Leeds and Liverpool Canal through to the industrial coal & trading towns of Wigan & Liverpool. A back water,…

  • Reviews of Lovely Local UK History Books,  Uncategorized

    Tragedy and Tears of a Lancashire Mill Town.

    A Walk Through Preston’s Past. Death, Tragedy and Intrigue From the City and Surrounds, including Barton, Bamber Bridge, Farrington, Lea, Penwortham, Freckleton, Lytham and Tarleton. A Walk Through Preston’s Past. Death, Tragedy and Intrigue.  Preston has a long and distinguished past. Edmund Calamy described the town in the early 1700’s as a pretty town with an abundance of gentry in it, commonly called Proud Preston. However, like any settlement today or at any point in history, Preston has had to endure many tears. Any town has a dark under belly, not often discussed or conveniently consigned to the annals of time, long lost & forgotten. Preston has a number of…

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  • Finding Great Ruins in the UK,  Uncategorized

    Wingfield Manor House – Destruction Derbyshire – a journey through time

    A long shadow of dereliction has cast down upon the beautiful Derbyshire countryside for two and a half centuries. Wingfield Manor, located just four miles from Alfreton, saw three hundred years of dramatic history come to an end. Never to rise again.  The property was originally constructed for the Treasurer to King Henry VI, Ralph Cromwell, in 1441. Unfortunately for Ralph he was not to see his Country Manor House completed. It was then taken on by the second Earl of Shrewsbury, John Talbot, who’s family was to be the custodians for the next two centuries.  The turbulent years to follow were to see the Wingfield Manor used as a…

  • Finding Great Ruins in the UK,  Uncategorized

    List of Great Ruins within the UK

    Cambusnethan House, Dylan Avery, Cambusneathan House Side View, CC BY-SA 4.0 Introduction The United Kingdom is blessed with Centuries of wonderful historic architecture, yet neglect or changing trends can see many of these properties fall into disrepair. Local authorities often use such downturns in a building’s fortunes as an opportunity to clear the site & start again. Usually with disastrously ugly projects.  Ruinous states of buildings, though, is not always down to the shortsightedness  of twentieth and twenty first century planners. There are many examples where the ruins have been maintained in such a state for centuries following tumultuous episodes in history such as the Dissolution of the Monasteries or changes in…

  • Finding Great Ruins in the UK,  Uncategorized

    Llanthony Priory – A Wonder of Wales

    Llanthony Priory dates back to the year 1100, having been founded by Norman Nobleman Walter De Lacey who had discovered a ruin chapel at the site. His plan for secluded prayer could not have found a better site, with the Priory located in the sparsely populated Ewyas Valley. The glacial scar in the earth is found in the beautiful Black Mountains seven miles north of Abergavenny.  The peace and quiet Walter wished for was not a constant. Long before the Dissolution of the Monasteries the priory was under frequent attack from the Welsh locals. By 1135 the monks had retreated to their daughter cell in Gloucester, yet this was not to…