EPW040891 ENGLAND (1933). The Merchant Taylors' School, Moor Park, 1933

© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2024. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.

Delweddau cyfagos (16)

EPW040891
  0° 0m
EPW040890
  90° 7m
EPW040892
  37° 16m
EPW040893
  249° 20m
EPW040899
  119° 68m
EPW040888
  94° 71m
EPR000494
  195° 72m
EPW040895
  115° 76m
EPW040896
  276° 91m
EPW040889
  128° 109m
EPR000496
  132° 131m
EPR000495
  141° 146m
EPW031466
  235° 173m
EPW031285
  4° 192m
EPW040897
  288° 195m
EPW031471
  156° 217m

Manylion

Pennawd [EPW040891] The Merchant Taylors' School, Moor Park, 1933
Cyfeirnod EPW040891
Dyddiad March-1933
Dolen
Enw lle MOOR PARK
Plwyf
Ardal
Gwlad ENGLAND
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad 509149, 194057
Hydred / Lledred -0.42270156631337, 51.634251094588
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol TQ091941

Pinnau

Byddwch y cyntaf i ychwanegu sylw at y ddelwedd hon!

Cyfraniadau Grŵp

Beyond the newly-completed independent Merchant Taylors' School in the foreground is a dragline excavator, possibly steam driven, digging gravel from a "wet" pit, i.e. extracted from below the water table, thus creating Hampermill Lake. In 1932/33, approximately 12 million tons of gravel and sand were extracted in Britain, with about one-third coming from pits such as the one shown here. Further west of this location, new lakes appeared south-west of Rickmansworth when massive quantities of material were removed for the construction of Wembley Stadium and the 1924 British Empire Exhibition during the early 1920s, to form the popular Aquadrome.

John Swain
Monday 16th of September 2013 01:33:11 PM