Going soon
Carbon rain
Liberal Club
Crossing in the works
Increasing capacity
Safety on the battery
Clowsgill Quarry
Saarstahl
Meadowhall gasholders
Sikulje in the snow
George Barnsley and Sons
Stanfield Colliery Company
J.H.Ketley & Co Ltd - Knutton Tileries Co
Denver Reading Room
Sutton Bridge
Last days at Thoresby
Industrial railways at Hope
Crossing the viaduct
A forest of tanks
Fixing the hole
Rising from the trees
Snab End
Bridging the Wreake
Koch and Co, 136 West 125th Street
Bestwood
Limeburner's hut
Greasing the motion
Cold, cold Jalainur
Spa Fields Gasworks
Opencasting
Honestone Mining
Hindlow kilns
Higher Heights Holes kiln
British Bricks
Tatenhill Lock
Adams
Coating plant
Tapping the slag
Carrickfergus
Rhyd Ddu Garratts
Shunting
East Coanwood Colliery
Outgang Laithe
County Playhouse
Barn and kiln
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Rockingham


The Rockingham is a historic hotel building in Portsmouth, New Hampshire. It was originally built in 1785 as a residence by Woodbury Langdon, prominent merchant and politician. Thomas Coburn converted it into a hotel in 1833. Frank Jones, who was, among other things, mayor of Portsmouth, a US Representative, and a brewer, bought it in 1870. After a fire in 1884, Jones rebuilt it extensively. The only significant part saved from Langdon's mansion was the dining room, which is now the Library Restaurant. The building incorporates lions, Jones's personal symbol, terracotta sculptures of the Four Seasons of Man, and busts of Jones and Langdon. It was a hotel until 1973 and is now condominiums. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.
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