At the Palace of Versailles
George Stephenson (9 June 1781 – 12 August 1848)
Taken at Gretna Green
Joined in death
Jolly Fisherman, Skegness, Lincs
June's Yorkshire
June's Yorkshire
Richard the Lion Heart
Lord Tennyson
Lord Tennyson (2)
Lovers-----Sculpture by Karen Jonzen 1990
Memorial to Sir Joseph Banks
Memorial to the Corby Steel Workers (scanned)
Mother and child
Found in Oakham Castle
Oliver Cromwell 1599-1658
Found in Lincoln ;-)
In the garden of Palace of Versailles
In the garden of Palace of Versailles
William Chambers, Princes Street Edinburgh
Princes Street Edinburgh
Princes Street Edinburgh
Railway memorabilia
Empowerment
Edward Parker Charlesworth
Constantine the Great (Emperor of the Roman Empir…
Captain James Cook 1728-1779
Belton Parish Church, Grantham
Belton Parish Church, Grantham
Belton Parish Church, Grantham
Belton Parish Church, Grantham
Belton House gardens
Belton House gardens
Anchor sculpture at Sutton on Sea
York Museum
York Crown Court
Antique water pump
Vintage car
Views from St Mary's Wall around the city of York
St Mary's Wall around the city of York
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Victorian Quarter, Leeds
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Victorian GPO barrow in Kirkgate
Victorian dining room
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Empowerment


Empowerment is a public sculpture in the centre of the city of Lincoln in England.
Designed by the artist Steven Broadbent, sponsored by Alstom Power (now Siemens), and completed in 2002, the sculpture spans the River Witham in Lincoln's City Square. It takes the form of two aluminium-and-steel human figures reaching to each other across the water. The design is intended to echo the shape of turbine blades, in recognition of Lincoln's industrial heritage.
At 16 metres tall, Empowerment is the largest sculpture in Lincolnshire. Increasingly, it is used alongside more traditional images of Lincoln — the cathedral and castle — as a recognisable 'tourist emblem' of the city (similar to the adoption of the Angel of the North as a symbol of North East England).
Designed by the artist Steven Broadbent, sponsored by Alstom Power (now Siemens), and completed in 2002, the sculpture spans the River Witham in Lincoln's City Square. It takes the form of two aluminium-and-steel human figures reaching to each other across the water. The design is intended to echo the shape of turbine blades, in recognition of Lincoln's industrial heritage.
At 16 metres tall, Empowerment is the largest sculpture in Lincolnshire. Increasingly, it is used alongside more traditional images of Lincoln — the cathedral and castle — as a recognisable 'tourist emblem' of the city (similar to the adoption of the Angel of the North as a symbol of North East England).
Marco F. Delminho, Valfal, Ste, Antje P. and 7 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Wishing you an HFF and hope you have a good weekend
Best wishes ... Steve
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