Cornell University Library
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Last upload was
April 2010 - 🇺🇸
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Recent uploads
The last upload was April 2010.
River above Eyjafjörður. uploaded April 2010
Eyjafjallajökull from Þórsmörk. Panoramic [view] A. uploaded April 2010
Reykjavík. National celebration, 1898. uploaded April 2010
Austurhlíð under Bjarnarfell. uploaded April 2010
Reykjavík.--Vesturgata. uploaded April 2010
Old chair from Rauðisandur. Nat[ional] Museum, Reykjavík. uploaded April 2010
Stórólfshvoll Church. - Bowl, etc. uploaded April 2010
Creamery (Rjómabú) at Seljaland (Eyjafjöll). uploaded April 2010
Þingvellir.--Nikulásargjá. uploaded April 2010
Svínafell. Flosi's home. uploaded April 2010
Geysir from Tungufljót. uploaded April 2010
Coast from Búðir, and Tröllkarl. uploaded April 2010
Hveravellir. Eyvindarhver. uploaded April 2010
Hvítá above Kópsvatn ferry. uploaded April 2010
Vopnafjörður. uploaded April 2010
Conversations
Here’s a selection of the conversations happening on these photos::
"Votes For Women" Canvas Bag, ca. 1920
- Flickr said:
- Markus Preiser said:
- Sigurd Krieger said:
- Ian Betley said:
- Anthony ( away Mar. 20th ) said:
Leamington
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DON said:
This is my old school!
Built in 1847 as Leamington College, it then housed the Sacred Heart Catholic Convent from 1903-1916, and subsequently Dover College from 1916-1922, before once again becoming Leamington College for Boys. I was a pupil here from 1959 to 1966.
In 1977 as part of secondary school reorganization, it became Binswood Hall sixth-form centre. It finally closed altogether in 2009, was sold for redevelopment, and is currently (July 2010) awaiting conversion into a retirement flats complex. -
Sam Saunders said:
Strange to tell, my current home is a flat in a retirement flats complex in Bristol.
Nineteenth-century English House
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Hans-Bernd Abel said:
No. 60 Banbury Road, North Oxford, viewed from south west. Named "Shrublands", built in 1866 by W. Wilkinson who described this house in his book "English Country Houses" (plates XI & XII). In the 1960s, no. 60 was one of those houses threatened by plans for a new building of Pitt-Rivers Museum, which, eventually, could not be realized due to lack of funds. Since 2006, this building forms the site of Kellogg College, together with No. 62 (partly visible on the left), No. 64, the strange Balfour Building in the backyard and some other modern additions. Today it's named "Geoffrey Thomas House", after the colleges first president, and houses the college library and some office and meeting rooms. Sources: - T. Hinchcliffe: North Oxford (Yale Univ. Press) - E. O. Dodgson: Notes on Nos. 56, 58, 60, 62 and 64 Banbury Road (Oxoniensia) - Historic England, Architectural Red Box Collection, "Oxford, Oxon" - Internet Archive (archive.org) for "English Country Houses" - Brochure "A short history of Kellogg College", found at kellogg.ox.ac.uk
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