Is there any chance you could post the furniture factory pictures? Totally off topic I know, but pictures of, presumably Wake & Deans at Yatton, would be interesting to see. I understand that they did transport furniture by rail in the past.
Steve
Sorry!!I visited Wells today to get an idea of the proposed location of the old photo and ended up even more confused. The Priory Health Centre which still includes the old building that was the workhouse is actually located a good distance down the Glastonbury Road and not Priory Road at all. I may be totally wrong but I understand that the railway followed a line down what is now Strawberry Way and continued into East Somerset Way on the modern map. The present traffic roundabout the end of Priory Rd itself was I believe about the location of the level crossing on the old railway.
If this is the case then it would be impossible for the photo to have included both that level crossing plus the workhouse in the position that it is depicted. For this to happen the level crossing would have to be much further down the Glastonbury Rd which would then place the railway in as I understand the wrong place. I know that this is not much help but I ôbumped intoö a local ôexpertö who was certain that the location in the photo was not Wells. Anything that you and your fellow forum members can do to clarify this would be most appreciated.
I refer the honourable gentleman to my previous postsjules wrote:Oh dear. Robin is going to hate this. Just received the following message:
Sorry!!I visited Wells today to get an idea of the proposed location of the old photo and ended up even more confused. The Priory Health Centre which still includes the old building that was the workhouse is actually located a good distance down the Glastonbury Road and not Priory Road at all. I may be totally wrong but I understand that the railway followed a line down what is now Strawberry Way and continued into East Somerset Way on the modern map. The present traffic roundabout the end of Priory Rd itself was I believe about the location of the level crossing on the old railway.
If this is the case then it would be impossible for the photo to have included both that level crossing plus the workhouse in the position that it is depicted. For this to happen the level crossing would have to be much further down the Glastonbury Rd which would then place the railway in as I understand the wrong place. I know that this is not much help but I ôbumped intoö a local ôexpertö who was certain that the location in the photo was not Wells. Anything that you and your fellow forum members can do to clarify this would be most appreciated.
Reading this and thinking about it again makes me reconsider too,BristleGWR wrote:Thanks Jules.
I'm sorry Robin but I'm not convinced that it is Wells (Glastonbury Road).
Looking at the 1903 1:2500 map, I believe Robin is placing the photographer near the triangle at the level crossing just below the 'hotel', and facing south west.
The orientation of the line at this point is around 300 degrees (i.e. running north west to south east). If you look at the shadows, particular the one made by the post in the foreground, then going by the orientation of the line the sun must be further north of the line i.e. much greater than 300 degrees. The sun is also quite high in the sky. Even around the longest day of the year the sun sets in this part of the country at about 310 degrees. Hence I don't think it can be this location.
Ian
On a wider point about this, are there any WW1 historians around here?madhattie wrote:It's only a minor point, but there's a lamp on the crossing gate to warn road traffic when the gate is closed (ie. across the road). The lamp is on the right hand side of the gate. I reckon the photo is somewhere other than the UK.
I would agree with this. Holland and Belgium could be remote possibilities, as they have tended to build in terraces that look something like the buildings we see in the background. French architecture is completely differentAndyK wrote: I'm still inclined to think it's in Britain because to my eyes the architecture seems characteristically English.
You've written exactly what I thought but decided not to put into print!AndyK wrote: It's perhaps risky making judgements like this, but the ladies look quite respectable - more like wives or sweethearts than good-time girls who would consort with foreign soldiers. If so it's more likely to be in blighty.
Aw ... and I've already spent another hour pouring over my OS 6th and 7th series maps before I went down the pubAndyK wrote: Still, none of that gets us any closer to identifying the place. If we're not getting anywhere, I would suggest posting it to the Prototype Questions section of the railway modelling site RMWeb http://www.rmweb.co.uk/community/ . They really relish mystery pictures there and there are some people with an amazing amount of knowledge about obscure locations/
Is that the structure with the steeply sloping roof beneath the big tree on the left? It does look as if it could be what I believe is called a lych gate, but I'm more inclined to interpret it as a stone-built house - perhaps a lodge at the entrance to the grounds. I seem to have seen quite a few houses with that look in the limestone areas of Somerset, indeed it reminds me of some of the station buildings on the Cheddar Valley line.Robin Summerhill wrote: and what looks like some sort of ecclesiastical building (perhaps a covered entrance to a churchyard) in front of it and to its left.
YesAndyK wrote:Is that the structure with the steeply sloping roof beneath the big tree on the left?Robin Summerhill wrote: and what looks like some sort of ecclesiastical building (perhaps a covered entrance to a churchyard) in front of it and to its left.