Geograph IrelandLatest Images by Mark Murphy
https://www.geograph.ie/
2024-03-28T11:44:59+00:00text/html2008-11-15T19:28:41+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/31360Mark Murphy51.737455 -0.464867TL0605 : Grand Union canal locks
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/1046353
Locks on the Grand Union canal at Apsleytext/html2008-11-15T10:46:34+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/31360Mark Murphy54.984812 -1.530866NZ3065 : Swan Hunter Shipyard cranes being dismantled
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/1045614
The cranes were being loaded onto a floating dry dock - presumably to be shipped to the new owners of the business in Indiatext/html2008-11-15T10:39:58+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/31360Mark Murphy50.561725 -2.451730SY6873 : Boats on Chesil Beach
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/1045611
text/html2008-11-15T10:27:51+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/31360Mark Murphy50.045521 -5.045943SW8220 : Carn-du rocks, the Manacles, Cornwall
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/1045603
text/html2008-11-15T10:14:35+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/31360Mark Murphy51.964510 1.362621TM3134 : Berners Road
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/1045594
In the 1890s this road was called Ocean Terrace. Felixstowe was a fashionable resort for the middle classes and some of these houses were holiday second homes.text/html2008-11-15T09:57:38+00:00https://www.geograph.ie/profile/31360Mark Murphy51.563020 -0.108329TQ3186 : Old shop fronts on Seven Sisters Road
https://www.geograph.ie/photo/1045588
These shops were built in the 1860s and known as Clarence Terrace before being renumbered as part of Seven Sisters Road. Hillyard Haydon lived at number 226 during the 1860s.