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The first hovercraft were designed and built not far away.
Queen Victoria's residence also nearby.
Global? Struggling.
We are within 5 miles of Sherrifmuir battle site (1715 and D-day practice), Wallace Monument and Stirling castle. I think that they are more a national importance.
Again on a national thought, the school massacre led to changes in the law on weapons that impacted the country we live in today.
We also have the estate of [url= https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Stirling ]David Stirling [/url], arguably the founder of the modern special forces - that does have global impact (sadly).
I think the biggest global impact would be Doune Castle. Of Monty Python, Outlander, Game of Thrones fame.
For Reading you can chuck in Henry i being buried their, the music festival, Oscar Wilde being imprisoned there, quite a few other literature references with links to Jane Austen, and Thomas Hardy. Ricky Gervais is from Reading and Gustav Holst lectured at the Uni. George Clooney owns a house on outskirts. Nearby are also Harwell where the UK did a lot of atomic research and Diamond is based and Henley is famous for the rowing.
OMITN, Ive just realised youre nowhere like in the north. If you're near Rollrights, you're not far from where I used to farm (Gt Ris)
I will have to adjust my mental picture of you from whippetty, flat-capped, chip-carrier, to becorduroy'd Golden Retriever stroker.
OMITN, Ive just realised youre nowhere like in the north. If you're near Rollrights, you're not far from where I used to farm (Gt Ris)
That's where I grew up. I do actually live in The North(tm). West Lancashire specifically.
I do own a flat cap - ideal for keeping my head warm on the platform to catch the early train to London every Monday.
I rather miss being on the edge of the Cotswolds - there's something rather ancient about the place that I always loved.
I was going to read the article but I saw that it's in the Daily Telegraph and I noticed elsewhere on STW that the "word" on the "street" is that apparently it's not good enough to scrub one's bottom with.
I lived there for a few years, and I didn't know that.I grew up in Fleet in Hampshire.
Little known fact that the printed circuit board was invented there in the late 50's. My dad worked there from 1960.
Greens pies
Hartleys XB (sadly no longer)
I was going to read the article but I saw that it's in the Daily Telegraph and I noticed elsewhere on STW that the "word" on the "street" is that apparently it's not good enough to scrub one's bottom with.
thread confusion?
Not sure there's much globally important within 5 miles of where I grew up, if there is it's passed me by.
Where I live now within 5 miles we've got birthplace/final resting place of the world's first vertical-takeoff jet 'aircraft', Byron, Ada Lovelace, DH Lawrence, Eric Coates (Dambuster composer)
Chorlton wins the internet today.
Bletchley park
Marshall amps
And Aston Martin are all local to me
Not much happens in this unfashionable northern town, but I suppose if I walk down the road I can watch the world's oldest classic horse race (St Leger), or walk across town to Doncaster Works where among others the Flying Scotsman and Mallard were made. Boolean Algebra, the mathematical basis for switching circuits and computer logic was invented across he road too. Three miles south of me is the world's last flying Vulcan bomber, which is cool too, but not for much longer.
The Surrey Iron Railway which was the first railway company in the world. It used horse traction btw.
And Croydon Airport control tower which was the first airport control tower in the world (it still stands btw). Indeed the whole concept of air traffic control originates from Croydon (someone thought it might be a good idea if the airport were to communicate with pilots about to land).
And the international distress call "Mayday" was the idea of someone who worked at Croydon Airport.
Thanks to this post and to Wikipedia I now know that I am 4.09 miles from the birthplace and home of Caradog Jones, the first Welshman to reach the summit of Everest.
within 5 miles of my house;
oldest human skeleton found in britain
first photograph of the moon taken
first passenger railway in the world
where am i ?
RRS Discovery
Edward Elgars birthplace is just within a 5 mile radius, but more importantly the worcester sauce factory is closer!
Forth rail bridge
Forth Road bridge
New Forth crossing
Robert Louis Stevenson wrote a book in the local pub
Birthplace of Stephen Hendry
Oldest dwelling ever discovered in Scotland (& possibly UK)
piemonster - MemberRRS Discovery
Terra Nova carried Scott's last expedition and was also built locally
Hadrian's Wall a couple of miles away, practically at the end of the garden.
The site of Baden Powell's first scout camp.
Bill was right wasn't he?
You must have a bloody massive garden, 'cos I always thought Baden Powell's first trip was to Brownsea Island in Poole Harbour?Hadrian's Wall a couple of miles away, practically at the end of the garden.
The site of Baden Powell's first scout camp.
Oldest dwelling ever discovered in Scotland (& possibly UK)
Isn't that the Knap of Howar on Papa Westray - 3800BC? IIRC the oldest standing dwelling in Northern Europe
I always thought Baden Powell's first trip was to Brownsea Island in Poole Harbour?
I [i]think [/i]the brownsea island trip was more like a trial run after which the scout movement started officially and the second was at Fourstones.
For Reading you can chuck in Henry i being buried their, the music festival, Oscar Wilde being imprisoned there, quite a few other literature references with links to Jane Austen, and Thomas Hardy. Ricky Gervais is from Reading and Gustav Holst lectured at the Uni. George Clooney owns a house on outskirts. Nearby are also Harwell where the UK did a lot of atomic research and Diamond is based and Henley is famous for the rowing.
But if you were parachuted into Reading today, what would you actually go and do or see?
Henry's grave is allegedly somewhere in the abbey area, which has mostly had 2 generations of tower blocks built on it now.
The festival is 3 days in August, and isn't really 'in' Reading, apart from the disruption (i like the festival, but it's not like you can just wander in, and there's no atmosphere outside the fence unlike say the Fringe).
There is the jail, Oscar Wilde was there, important or exciting? It's now on a roundabout with Staples, homebase and Toys'R'us.
Jane Austen, and Thomas Hardy. Austen was further south in Hampshire, Hardy was further north. Neither was in Reading.
Didn't know Gustav Holst lectured at the Uni, but again it's not something you could go and do or see (and I had to google who he was).
I've been here 7 years now, I've still not changed my mind that Reading is a cultural and historical vacuum. It's like Slough, only escaping the same criticisms because Windsor isn't next door to make it glaringly obvious.
[quote=Stoner ]the problem with where I live is that there's not a lot of anything within 5 miles except the great, bucolic, british countryside. Which I suppose is one of the things that makes Britain great. It's certainly the second most important thing I miss when Im away (the first being Real Ale, natch)
Or maybe that you need to research your local history - radar was developed within 5 miles of you, which I should think has global significance.
I'm also going to lay claim to Elgar - his birthplace is within 5 miles, but he was bandmaster and did some of his first composition within a hundred metres or so of where I'm sitting. A place which is probably nowadays more infamous for experimental use of psychedelic drugs
But if you were parachuted into Reading today, what would you actually go and do or see?
Henley, Marlow and Oxford ๐ Actually the surrounding area on a road bike on a sunny day is flipping great.
There is the jail, Oscar Wilde was there, important or exciting? It's now on a roundabout with Staples, homebase and Toys'R'us.
Not just the UK that suffers from this kind of thing. I did a tour of New Orleans and virtually every site had been torn down and replaced with something completely different. Trying to imagine the seedy bar that was the birthplace of jazz, while actually looking at a nondescript modern building takes some effort.
Henley, Marlow and Oxford Actually the surrounding area on a road bike on a sunny day is flipping great.
I agree, I'd still say that (insert name of just about anywhere else) has better biking, but relative to Reading, being somewhere else on a bike is indeed better ๐
The jail is still there, no idea how much is as it was when Oscar was a resident, but it's mostly a big tall brick wall with a big tall brick tower behind it, and a lot of CCTV and barbed wire. If you like that kind of thing Broadmoor is a bigger, more impressive wall, and scary as f***. In fact Broadmoor could probably make the list of significant things in/around Reading, but again, it's not something you can see/visit.
Still, it could be worse, it could be Basingstoke.
Living in Coventry we have loads of ex and current British car factories, The Cathedral's, various other historic buildings that survived 1940.
Work (same place as JAG I assume) so ex-nuclear deterant airfield.
Born in scotland approx 5miles from the historic [url= http://www.historic-scotland.gov.uk/index/places/propertyresults/propertydetail.htm?PropID=PL_254 ]St. Brides Church, Douglas[/url]
The Queen Mother had her honeymoon near me, Roger Waters was born in my village, Barnes Wallis lived nearby as did Thomas Cubitt and Maurice Joseph Micklewhite still does - that's the most famous thing so everyone knows that.
I live near stoke on trent. Large scale pottery manufactured here during the 17th and 18th century, pioneering processes by wedgewood, minton, spode & doulton. There is still a wedgewood factory at barlaston and I ride past it regularly on the canal.
oh god not barrow in furness?
On the Cumbrian front I was struggling a bit with where I grew up near Brampton until I remembered the invention of the modern train ticket:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Edmondson
His system is still in use in countries around the world!
jekkyl - Member
oh god not barrow in furness?
whats wrong with barra?
One of the main contributors to the original OED was in Broadmoor, gave him plenty of time for research.
I always thought Baden Powell's first trip was to Brownsea Island in Poole Harbour?
I think the brownsea island trip was more like a trial run after which the scout movement started officially and the second was at Fourstones.
The cairn at Lookwide says it was the first scout camp ๐
http://scoutguidehistoricalsociety.com/humshaugh.htm
[quote=davidtaylforth ]We build these things. They make the world a safer place to live.
Remind me again how they're helping with the current (and recent) significant conflicts?



