Musical puppets
My favourite shoes
No idea !!
Northants water towers
Oakham Mural 4 of 4
Oakham Mural 3 of 4
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P1030004
P1160007
P1160016
P5010002
P6140002
Painting of a Victorian doll.
Paperweight
Paperweight
Tres Chic
Turkey stir-fry
PC230001
Seaside humour
Sign of the times...
Some of my favourite shoes
Steaming broccoli
Sutton on Sea, Lincolnshire
Little drummer boy and girl
Just in time.....
Just dropping by
Have a seat, why don't you?
Green, yellow and red pepper.
Golden Wells
Glass paperweight
Frog Shell - Bursa Bulba?
Free as a bird
For your own safety...
Experiment 5 of 5
Experiment 4 of 5
Experiment 3 of 5
Experiment 2 of 5
Experiment 1 of 5
DO NOT TEXT AND DRIVE
Days of recession and they supply music for the bi…
Dame Judi Dench Walk, York.
Cromer Pier
Come fly with me..
Closed for business (Wells -next-the-sea)
Candles for peace.
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254 visits
More ghostly sightings in the York Castle Prison.


The Debtors' Prison
1701AD - 1705AD
York Castle has a long history as a place where justice and punishment are dispensed. At the turn of the 18th century, its facilities were brought right up to date with a major new prison building, described by Daniel Defoe as ‘the most stately and complete of any in the kingdom, if not in Europe’.
The prison was designed to be ‘an instigator of virtue’, a wholly new concept.
It became known as the Debtors’ Prison after some of its inmates but it also housed some of Yorkshire’s most notorious criminals, such as Dick Turpin.
The architect was possibly William Wakefield; a trained lawyer rather than a professional architect. A native of Yorkshire, Wakefield is known to have designed Duncombe Park and Gilling Castle.
The finished building was a handsome example of English Baroque architecture; built to reflect county pride. It was also modern and functional, with separate areas for men and women. The debtors, people imprisoned because they owed money, were also housed in a different area to the other criminals.
There is a tower which has a clock with a single hand, installed in 1716 by John Terry a York clockmaker.
The prison institution expanded later in the same century when the Female Prison was built and again in the 19th century when a Victorian Prison was built on the site.
@courtesy of History of York
Thank you for your visits and comments, appreciated, as always
1701AD - 1705AD
York Castle has a long history as a place where justice and punishment are dispensed. At the turn of the 18th century, its facilities were brought right up to date with a major new prison building, described by Daniel Defoe as ‘the most stately and complete of any in the kingdom, if not in Europe’.
The prison was designed to be ‘an instigator of virtue’, a wholly new concept.
It became known as the Debtors’ Prison after some of its inmates but it also housed some of Yorkshire’s most notorious criminals, such as Dick Turpin.
The architect was possibly William Wakefield; a trained lawyer rather than a professional architect. A native of Yorkshire, Wakefield is known to have designed Duncombe Park and Gilling Castle.
The finished building was a handsome example of English Baroque architecture; built to reflect county pride. It was also modern and functional, with separate areas for men and women. The debtors, people imprisoned because they owed money, were also housed in a different area to the other criminals.
There is a tower which has a clock with a single hand, installed in 1716 by John Terry a York clockmaker.
The prison institution expanded later in the same century when the Female Prison was built and again in the 19th century when a Victorian Prison was built on the site.
@courtesy of History of York
Thank you for your visits and comments, appreciated, as always
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