Nice Machining Company images

Some cool machining organization photos:

Image from page 112 of “List of parts : machines nos. 44-1 to 44-3, 44-eight, 44-9, 44-13, 44-17, 44-20, 44-22 to 44-24, 44-28, 44-29, 44-72, 44-74, 44-75.” (1922)

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Identifier: listofpartsmachi00sing
Title: List of parts : machines nos. 44-1 to 44-3, 44-eight, 44-9, 44-13, 44-17, 44-20, 44-22 to 44-24, 44-28, 44-29, 44-72, 44-74, 44-75.
Year: 1922 (1920s)
Authors: Singer Manufacturing Company.
Subjects: Singer Manufacturing Organization–Catalogs. Sewing machines–Catalogs.
Publisher: New York? : Singer Manufacturing Co.
Contributing Library: Rutgers University Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation

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Text Appearing Prior to Image:
of arm) 52454 5842 Retainer 50429c Set Screw . 24097 1341 Take-up Crank 1037c 1341 « « Position Screw… 1036c 1341 « Set Screw 4307725 E20060225f 2102 1560c325724394412398123293257450327c44141 823824984 108 Parts FOR MACHINE No. 44-29 NO. PLATE NAME 24068 1341 Thread Take-up Lever 12166 773 Hinge Pin 24099 1341 Hyperlink 11204 770 Hinge Pin… 435c 5806 Set Screw 24070 Thread Take-up Lever full, Nos. 12166, 24068 and 24099 24071 1343 Thread Take-up Spring 7336 772 Regulator 448c 783 Set Screw 20123 1266 Throat Plate for 20115, 20116, 20137, 20163 and 20164 Note : No. 20123 is sent with this Machine unlessanother Throat Plate is specified on order. 69lF 782 Throat Plate Screw 24079 2644 Drip Pan with 4 1 in. wire nails SPOOL HOLDER Disc) 26763 1352 Bracket with 219f and 287d 219f 774 Screw 287d 2636 Thumb Screw 19066 1352 Spindle 19067 1352 Thread Guiding Disc 691p 782 Screw 26764 1352 Spool Holder (disc) total, Nos. 691f, 19066, 19067 and 26763 109 LIST OF Components Total FOR

Text Appearing After Image:
MACHINE No. 44-72 FOR BINDING CORSETS AND OTHER ARTICLES ALSO FORSTITCHING Work OF UNEVEN THICKNESS OR HAVINGADHESIVE SURFACES. HAS Optimistic UPPER AND UNDERFEEDING MECHANISM AND ALTERNATING PRESSERS. NO. PLATE NAME *24469 Arm with 11104 8582 773 Dowel Pin 12453 773 Oil Tube, for intermediate bearing. . 12454 773 with 29599, for oiling 1240911119 773 12408 and 19365 24131 2014 Arm Oil Tube with 29599, for oiling 20283 29599 2014 Packing (felt) 748e 782 Sere A- (back) 868e 1366 (front) 16511 1349 Shaft *11104 Bushing (front) 12357 767 Flanged Bushing (back) 110 Parts FOR MACHINE No. 44-72 NO. : PLATE 448c 783 144d 782 12193 2004 286 D 783 12403 772 11241 2003 24296 1348 24297 1340 210d 1343 448c 783 *24470 20197 1350 *20198 896E 773 908c 773 1619E 773 19354 19355 1311 219d 774 44181 12150 773 12152 773 2827 773 8505 773 12368 767 313c 783 56813 1519J 783 24471 2688 19367 1313 199d 1312 219d 774 3033 770 375c 782 1518E 783 24344 1267 208e 782 20283 1:^five 446c 783 24036 1340 20284 1350 NA

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An Sector Epoch

Image by Tobias Higbie
&quotChanging the Performs in Ford Staff to 5-Day Movements.&quot The Labor Age, February 1927, p. 1.
&quotNothing speaks more eloquently of the ‘new era’ facing the unorganized than the above cartoon, from the Automobile quantity of LIFE. Speed-up has reached the sublime state where it has turn into ridiculous. Humourous weeklies have to strain their imaginations but small to get a hearty laugh at the mechanical guys produced by Ford, et al.&quot

Image from page 59 of “List of components : machines nos. 44-1 to 44-three, 44-8, 44-9, 44-13, 44-17, 44-20, 44-22 to 44-24, 44-28, 44-29, 44-72, 44-74, 44-75.” (1922)

Image by Net Archive Book Pictures
Identifier: listofpartsmachi00sing
Title: List of parts : machines nos. 44-1 to 44-3, 44-8, 44-9, 44-13, 44-17, 44-20, 44-22 to 44-24, 44-28, 44-29, 44-72, 44-74, 44-75.
Year: 1922 (1920s)
Authors: Singer Manufacturing Company.
Subjects: Singer Manufacturing Business–Catalogs. Sewing machines–Catalogs.
Publisher: New York? : Singer Manufacturing Co.
Contributing Library: Rutgers University Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Lyrasis Members and Sloan Foundation

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About This Book: Catalog Entry
View All Photos: All Images From Book

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Text Appearing Prior to Image:
777 big needle hole, for 12450 and 20348 12451 -—• Throat Plate, little needle hole, for 12450 and 20348 19497 1261 Throat Plate, large needle hole, for 2011719405 modest needle hole, for 20117 19409 massive needle hole, for 20138 and 20162 19410 1263 Throat Plate, little needle hole, for 20138 and 20162 19412 1260 Throat Plate, huge needle hole, for 20147 and 44177 19413 Throat Plate, tiny needle hole, for 20147 and 44177 19415 1262 Throat Plate, massive needle hole, for 20151 and 44144 19416 Throat Plate, modest needle hole, for 20151 and 44144 19418 1262 Throat Plate, big needle hole, for 20158 and 44156 19419 Throat Plate, little needle hole, for 20158 and 44156 20107 1259 Throat Plate, tiny needle hole, for 20106 Components FOR MACHINE No. 44-13 55 NO. PLATE NAME 20120 1259 Throat Plate, massive oblong needle hole, for20119 20187 Throat Plate, small oblong needle hole, for 20119 691f 782 Throat Plate Screw 24079 2644 Drip Pan with 4 1 in. wire nails.- 56 LIST OF Parts Complete FOR

Text Appearing Right after Image:
MACHINE No. 44-17 FOR COLLARS AND CUFFS. THROAT PLATE FLUSHWITH BED. DROP FEED. NO. PLATE NAME *16501 A] 773 773 -m with 11104 8582 * Dowel Pin 12453 Oil Tube, for intermediate bearing.. 12454 773 with 29599, for oiling 12409 11119 773 12408 24131 2014 &lt « 20283 29599 2014 782 Packing (felt) 748E Screw (back) 868e 1366 (front) 16511 1349 &lt Shaft *11104 Bushing (front) 12357 767 Flanged Bushing (back) 448c 783 SetScrew Components FOR MACHINE No. 44-lV 57 NO. PLATE NAME 144d 782 Arm Shaft Screw 12480 767 Side Cap 219d 774 Screw 12193 2004 Cover 286d 783 Thumbscrew 12403 772 Spool Pin and Thread Eyelet 11241 2003 Washer (cloth) 24296 1348 Balance Wheel (power) hght rim, 2 A in. pulley, with two 448c 24297 1340 Balance Wheel Oil Cover 210d 1343 Screw 448c 783 Set Screw *16503 Bed 20197 1350 Crank Connecting Rod with 20198 and two 896e *20198 Crank Connecting Rod Cap 896e 773 Screw 908c 773 Hinge Screw 1619E 773 Nut. 20057 Face Plate 20058 1340 Face Plate comprehensive, Nos. 2827,12150 and 20

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Good Cnc Turning Machining photographs

Some cool cnc turning machining images:

Black Widow – Christopher Allison Photography –

Image by christopherallisonphotography
Christopher Allison Photography
619-368-2202
ALL Pictures ARE COPYRIGHT PROTECTED &amp Obtainable FOR Buy OR LICENCING

The Original Black Widow restored by Richard Riddell
Built in 1952

“THE BLACK WIDOW” Builders: Wally Olson (1952), Bill Scott (1954) and Richard Riddell (2005) The garage uncover of the century! How long have you been hot rodding vehicles–considering that the 1950’s? A lot of of us got started in the 50’s and 60’s. (For you actual old birds out there that bear in mind hot rodding “T” roadsters with Roto-Faze ignitions, Ruxtell two-speed rear axles, Riley 2-port heads and Laurel lowering kits, effectively what can we say you are a generation before us and we take our hats off to you ‘original’ hot rodders.) BUT for all of us “The Black Widow” is a severe piece of 1950’s hot rodding annals and a benchmark for the business! In an article in Hot Rod Deluxe, July 2008 entitled, “Tangled Web” the complete-story of Richard Riddell’s quest to restore the original Black Widow had its public debut. Hot Rod Deluxe reported the car’s winning the 2008 Grand National Roadster Show which was a dream come true, taking “Best Early Altered T Roadster”. (See also Rod and Custom, June 2008.) It was also a contender for the Bruce Meyer award at the ‘Grand Nats.’ Why do guys like Richard Riddell (and the rest of us) commit years (3400 hours in Richard’s case) restoring a car we located in a barn? Answer: ‘For the really like of the sport!’ All of us keep in mind some other automobiles with similar names, for instance the ‘Black Widow’ Monogram model automobile (“1/24 scale model/Ford ‘T’ Pickup Rod/removable top” by Mattel top quality hobby kits). Also, we remember Common Motors/Chevrolet coming out in 1957 with their very first racing version Chevy called “The Black Widow.” But predating each of these historic cars is the “The Black Widow” built by Wally Olson to help hold his children out of difficulty in 1952 and initial débuted in Hot Rod magazine, September 1954 in an write-up entitled, “Lil’ Beau T”, which study, “Wally Olson, Fresno, California, automotive machinist, is the lucky owner and builder. Duane Taylor was referred to as in for the body perform.” It added as to why he constructed the auto, “What with so considerably current upheaval in the teen-age ranks, Wally figured that a confident-fire way to eliminate these totally free-time, practically nothing-to-do troubles would be to interest them (his 9 and 12 year old sons) in a rod. So far the notion has worked like a charm.” In time the family members moved on to other projects and Bill Scott bought the car and redid it with fenders, headlights and all the stuff to make it ‘street legal’—as we employed to contact it! The very first documentation of the car becoming known as “Black Widow” is discovered in the magazine Rodding and Re-styling, August 1957 concern. That write-up reported Bill Scott’s alterations to Wally Olson’s vehicle, “The front finish was revised to incorporate a tubular axle and tube shocks. The new owners also equipped the auto with a new power plant. The original mill is a ’41 Merc bored out .100 inch over stock, ported and relieved…includes eight.5-to-1 Offenhauser heads, a Weber full-race cam, and an Evans three-caberator manifold.” [Note: The several engines that have been housed in this auto later varied see final Merc construct information under.] Don’t you adore the sound of that “ported and relieved” and “full-race cam”—when’s the final time you used those terms? By the time the 1959 Hot Rod Annual was published the vehicle-title stuck for all time “The Black Widow.” Riddell’s two-Year Renovation! According to extended time race auto builder Richard Riddell’s log he states, “Sometime in 1955 Wally sold his roadster to Bill Scott. Bill once again named on Duane Taylor to turn the car into a bonified street rod. With the extra of windshield, head lights, tail lings, and fenders it was finally capable to jump into his tiny Hot Rod and go crusin’. The pin stripping was accomplished by none other than Dean Jefferies with the familiar cobweb and spider on the turtle deck.” He reports that the car’s initial win was “…a 5 foot trophy at the Sacramento AutoRama in 1957 for ‘Best Roadster’. Yes, Bill’s auto was having the time of its life becoming 1 of the ideal looking early California street roadsters of all time.” Richard states, “Bill Scott died about 1987…for many years the vehicle languished…getting worse and worse…as is so frequently the case for old Hot Rods.” The garage uncover in 2005 notes, “At a glance the roadster didn’t appear that poor.” But the Naugahyde and carpet had been shot, fenders, original wheels and hub caps to name a few difficulties for the however to commence restoration. Riddell notes, “Under a somewhat decent physique and paint job lurked a mess that went beyond your worst nightmare.” He adds, “I began wondering how I could salvage this little beauty in the rough. Not that several individuals have restored an old Hot Rod but, these who have know what I’m talking about. It is a lot tougher than building a rod from scratch. But the roadster was begging to be restored and I’m glad that I was selected to do it.”and#9472Richard died shortly right after finishing the project but happily he was able to see “The Black Widow” win the ‘Grand Nats’ and have a feature center-spread post in Hot Rod Deluxe. Here are a handful of of the Riddell-engineered refinements to this original vehicle. and#61692 Recessed pockets had to be built in the frame rails to accept the front motor mounts which double as water pumps. and#61692 New front radius rods were built out of heavy wall chrome-moly tubing. The original ones had been so poorly made that they have been unsafe. and#61692 The correct master cylinder banjo fitting was not obtainable so, he fabricated a new a single from scratch. and#61692 The tooling mandral had to be CNC machined to facilitate metal spinning new brass tail pipe finish bells. Hey would you agree? Hot rodding is an art type and some Hot Rod Artists have mastered the craft and Richard Riddell is 1 of them!!! Reconstruction points of interest: and#61656 Original steel body and doors welded shut and#61656 ‘42 Merc 274 c.i flathead (current engine) and#61656 ’39 Lincoln-Zephyr tranny and#61656 ’34 Ford rear with Halibrand fast-adjust center and enclosed drive shaft and#61656 ’39 Ford hydraulic brakes all about and wide “5” 16-iunch wheels and caps and#61656 ’37 Ford tube axle and#61656 Engine by RPM Machine and#61656 Chrome by Ace Plating and#61656 Frame accomplished by Capps Powder Coat and#61656 Physique/paint by Showtime Customs and#61656 Upholstery by Brents Why is the automobile becoming sold? To quote his wife Pat, “Unfortunately, Richard passed away on March 18, 2008 and will not get to enjoy seeing the new owner drive away with a piece of automotive history.” Richard’s loyal wife Pat grew up around racing considering that she was 9 years old. Her maiden name was Rodriguez. If you grew up at Lion’s Dragstrip, as she did, you could bear in mind her father’s rail? He and his brother ran an old prime alky rail beneath the name “Rodriguez Brothers”. Pat mentioned, ‘As I was developing up I frequently wondered how I would ever meet someone to marry, because all that our loved ones ever did was go to the drags. Then one particular day Richard came along and met me at the Winternationals.’ Nicely the rest is history. For Pat soon after Richard’s death there are just as well many memories attached to all the memorabilia, race automobiles and hot rods in their storage—she would like to sell “The Black Widow” to some deserving hot rodder. Terms of sale: 5,000.00. Please get in touch with Don Burdge at DreamRodLocator or call him at 619.804.8033. You need to get in touch with me before Leno does! We have hundreds of added photos and numerous 50’s and present magazine articles available to seriously interested purchasers.

Cool Machining Supplier photos

Some cool machining supplier images:

Queen Victoria, Leader of the Anglican Empire

Image by Mondo Tiki Man
The first of the terrestrial governments into the Caeliverse, the Anglican Empire is the most powerful trans-world government claiming almost three dozen planetary colonies outright, and have a administering presence on several dozen more. The eminent Queen Victoria has presided over the Empire ever since formal expansion began in the late 1830’s and is the very definition of the expansionist age.

Originating as the Earth bound island nation of Britain, the Anglicans were the first into the fold, and immediately brought their pervasive institutional aptitude for exploration, colonization and trade, setting a robust foundation for their role as the prime power in the Caeliverse. Augmenting their expansion with the stoutest air fleet of any of the governments, the Anglicans have a determined resolution to maintain their empire by all means necessary. This position has inevitably lead to a variety of conflicts with other major powers, each moving through the Caeliverse to make claims of their own. Their strongest political ties have been with the Federation, having similar cultural origins and existing robust diplomacy machine. Additionally, after Civil war broke out within the Federation, the Anglicans were one of the first to embrace the Confederation, a traditional regional supplier to their factories of raw materials.

By far the most adversarial relations has been with the Republic, with each nation confronting one another at almost every turn. This has lead to hundreds of minor skirmishes, dozens of small scale conflicts, all culminating in a current, far flung war that rages across dozens of world in the Caeliverse.

Cyborg Ivy

WI – WR – Historical Bristol Street Directory 1871

Image by brizzle born and bred
Mathews’ Bristol Street Directory 1871

Wilder Street, North Street to Grosvenor Road

John Smith, lath render
J. T. Ball and Sons, maltsters, etc
John Summerville, builder, etc
Charles Pitman
James Merry, black smith
John Tucker
Thomas Davis, chimney sweep

William Sherring, nail manufacturer William Nichols – In October 1884 he was 14 years old, living with his parents in Baptist Mills and working at Messrs W Sherring of Wilder Street, a nail manufactory. Whilst carrying iron from the bins he slipped and fell against the flywheel. By the time the machine was stopped, he was dead. There was a fence around the machine, but the workers were in the habit of ‘pushing it aside’.

Withy & Co. ginger-beer, lemonade & soda-water manufacturers
James Williams, 1, Cave street cottages
Eliza Snow, fly proprietor, 2, Cave street cottages
Joseph Johnson, carpenter & undertaker, 3, Cave street cottages
George Smith, boot maker
William Lambert, grocer, etc
Joseph Chard, baker & flour dealer
J. Andrews, chimney sweeper
Ann Winniatt, shopkeeper
Joshua Williams, builder
George Mico, grocer
Mary Weston, greengrocer
James Seamer, beer seller

Mrs William Paul, vict, Two Trees 1794. John Lewis / 1806. Isaac Phipps / 1816. Stephen Seager / 1820 – 22. J. Morrosson / 1823 – 32. Samuel Morrosson 1834 – 45. James Vickery / 1847 – 61. James Bale / 1863. Edwin Hamber / 1865 – 69. George Lambourne / 1871. Mrs. Paul 1872 – 75. George Wintle (jnr) / 1877 – 78. Sarah Sowden / 1879 to 1882. John Sharp / 1883. C. Tomkins.

George Howard, vict, Albion Tavern 1841 – 53. Elizabeth Morrison / 1858 – 66. Henry Couzens / 1867 to 1868. W. Watts / 1869. Francis Virtue / 1871. George Howard 1872 to 1875. S. Barton / 1876. T. C. Manning / 1877. S. Balderson / 1878. C. Wyman / 1879. Samuel Harris / 1882 – 83. William Tarr 1885 – 88. William Bailey / 1889. George Clohesey / 1891. Sarah Ann Knight / 1892. Rosina Pollard / 1896 – 99. Charles Spiller 1901. Edward Coles.

Charles King, vict, Royal Oak 1832 – 34. Henry Watkins / 1869. George King / 1871. Charles King / 1872 to 1874. Mabel King / 1875 – 83. Isabella King 1885. George Knott / 1886 – 1909. Frederick King / 1914 – 17. Ellen White / 1921 – 25. Angelina Reed.

James Newman, vict, Crown 1860. John Yeandel / 1866 – 82. James Newman / 1883 to 1887. Kate Morgan / 1888 to 1891. Kate Rowles / 1892. Thomas Dinan 1896 – 1901. George Jenkins.

James Nash, vict, Royal George 1860. Ann Mundy / 1863 – 72. James Naish / 1874 – 81. Joseph W. Keall / 1882 – 87. William Clements / 1889 – 1901. James Thatcher.

Notes

Harry Dimmock – Living at Wilder Street, he was buried at St Paul on January 19th 1839 aged 71.

Ann Roach – Aged 21 in November 1842, she was taken to the Infirmary as while she was crossing Wilder Street she was knocked down by a fly (cab) which passed over her leg and injured it severely.

Wildgoose Cottages, St Philip’s Marsh

Wilkin’s Cottages, Folly Lane

William Street, Grosvenor road to Ashley Road

1. Maria Fuller
2. William Barter
3. Samuel David White
4. Henry Critchett
5. George Hill
6. James Wilmot
7. Herbert Cousins
8. George Browning
9. Charles Williams
10. Henry Hobbert
11. John Edward Sollis
12. Henry Tom Moody
13. David Bank Edwards
14. William Henry Thomas
15. John Goodeve, tea dealer

Notes

G Drake – Lived at 31, King Square. On 2nd March 1899 wrote to the newspaper stating that John Drake carpenter convicted of theft at the assizes was no connection. He did have a son called John who was also a carpenter who resided at 25, William Street, St Pauls.

William Street, Dings

Samuel Isles, beer retailer (Off Licence)
Francis Evans, grocer

William Street, Pylle Hill, Totterdown

2. Edwin Nott, haulier
3. George and Henry Roe
74. Henry Haskins, baker, Victoria house

1. Gilbert Babbage, vict, King William Hotel 1868 – 69. Aaron Davy / 1871 – 83. Gilbert Babbage / 1885 – 88. Matilda Morse / 1889 – 91. Henrietta Thomas 1892 to 1896. John Southwood / 1897. Joseph Gair / 1899. H. Smith / 1904. Emily Newman / 1909. Joseph Gullock 1912 – 21. Florence Annie Geh / 1925 – 38. Frederick Grove.

Williams’ Court, off Barton Street

Richard Excell – Aged 46 in 1818, a shoemaker living with his wife in Williams’ Court, Barton Street, they, were receiving relief payments from St Peter’s Hospital.

Willway Street, Philip Street, Bedminster

Robert Lewis, grocer
William Morgan, mason

George Parker, vict, Willway Tavern 1871. George Parker / 1872 to 1886. Herman Tozer / 1887 – 89. Elizabeth Tozer / 1891 – 1906. Alfred Tozer 1909. William Saunders / 1914 – 21. Leonard Wyatt / 1925 – 31. Robert Wyatt.

Samuel Hardwick, vict, Eagle Tavern 1871 – 77. Samuel Hardwick / 1878. Eli Bowditch / 1881 – 82. William Fewings / 1883 – 91. William Hill / 1892. Joseph Wring 1896. Mary Jane Wring / 1899. Henry Nichols / 1901. William Bryant / 1904. M. Broomsgrove.

Jesse Bumbold, vict, Chequers Tavern Whitehouse Lane / Willway Street. 1865 – 87. Jesse Rumbold / 1888 – 99. Benjamin Rowse / 1901. Henry Pillinger / 1904 – 06. Mary Hampton / 1909. Henry Hampton 1914. William Bailey / 1917 – 21. Albert Evans / 1925 – 28. Nellie Catherine Foxwell / 1931. Gabriel Biggin 1934 – 38. William James Rowland.

Willway Street, Whipping Cat Hill to Lucky Lane

15. Thomas Chinnock, dairyman
Wethered, Cossham, and Wethered, coal merchants, Railway yard

16. J. Gazzard, grocer and beer retailer, vict, Beaufort Arms grocery, bakery and beer house. 1870 – 76. Joseph Gazzard / 1881 – 86. William Bowyer / 1888. H. Maynard / 1888 – 89. John H. Kennard / 1891. Charlotte Baker 1892. George Dunn / 1899. Elizabeth Gulley / 1901 – 06. Hannah Underdown / 1914. Harry Stubbins.

Wilmot’s Crescent, Rose Street, Great Gardens

Wilmot’s Vale, Pipe Lane, Temple

Wilson Avenue, Wilson Street to Cross Gardens

(Beaufort Cottages)

Mark Appleby
Charles W. Porter
John Woodward, carpenter and builder
Elizabeth Thomas

(Beaufort Place)

John Purnell
George Dowling, smith
Charles Cockle
James Bailey
Thomas Wright
Edwin Mutton, boot maker

Wilson Court, Wilson Street

Wilson Place, Wilson Street

John Gore, 1, Wilson villas
William Mortimer, 2, Wilson villas
John Edwards, Aldine cottage
M. Bendell, Gloster cottage
John Cockle
Joseph Baker
John Kirby
M. Fowler
William Thompson
John Southern
John Cudler, mason
Joseph Davis, painter

Wilson Street, Portland Square to Cross Gardens

1. Charles D. Hall, relieving ofiicer
2. George Higgs Masters
3. William Wills, (post office)
4. Mrs Parry
5. Angus Cameron, draper
6. Henry Jones, carpenter
7. Miss Louisa Roberts
8. James Perry, boot maker
9. Joseph Griffin
10. William Ackland
11. William Smith
12. Charles Allen
13. David Griffin
14. Amos Deacon
15. Edward Taplin
16. Thomas Jones
(Gideon Cottages Intersect)
13. James Burrell
14. George Winterson, mason
15. Charles Cuthbert
16. Daniel Chapple
17. James Larcombe, grocer & beer seller
18. Mrs Cox
19. John Routley, grocer & beer seller
(cross over)

St. Paul’s National School, Henry George Clevely, master, Miss Wood, mistress – see below

19. John Clark
20. Mary Smith
21. John Marsh, wood carver
22. Samuel Pullin
23. David Williams
24. John Wakley, mason
25. Thomas Wall
26. Jane Ash
27. Elizabeth Holder
28. James Kingcott, tailor and draper
29. Frank Webb
30. George Adlam, junr.
31. Charles Phillips
Robert Nicholls
32. John Evans
33. Priscilla Mainwaring
31. Malcombe Robertson, tailor, etc
35. Sidney Sprod
36. John Postance
37. R. S. Deacon
38. Nathaniel Davis

Wright and Butler, lamp manufacturers of Birmingham. 1875 exhibited petroleum heating stoves at the 1875 Smithfield Club Show. Oil lamps with the American-style circular ‘The Union Burner’. By 1913 they had been taken over by Falk Veritas of London but use of the Trade name continued.

Parochial Schools, Wilson Street, St Pauls In 1883 225 boys, 162 girls. In 1898 185 boys, 162 girls. Some members of staff as listed in directories, etc: George Vernon (Teacher), Miss F Perry (Teacher) 1861 Mr Clevely (Teacher), Miss Roberts (Teacher) 1883.

Notes: In 1858 John Henry Trinder who had been a pupil teacher at the school was made a Queen’s Scholar, being entitled to 3 years’ education at one of Her Majesty’s Training Colleges free of charge. At the annual school treat in July 1861 400 children were present in the morning when they were examinaed in Scripture by Rev H Rogers, the incumbent and in grammar, gepgraphy and arithmetic by their respective teachers. In the evening there was a substantial tea in the school room which had been decorated with flowers and mottos. In the centre was suspended a white silk banner with a bridal rosette in the middle, as a token of regard of the incumbent’s daughter, Mary Anne Rogers, who had married Thomas Byard Winter Sheppard the previous week. The banner bore the words ‘God bless our pastor’s daughter – Happiness attend her’ in blue lettering.

George Vernon was Master for 18 years and in July 1868 he left to take up the Mastership of the Earl Ducies schools at Tortworth. Several of his past students started a collection and in the end there were 169 subscribers who gave a total of £25. He was presented with an English gold lever watch with guards and appendages and there was enough left over for a pair of vases for Mrs Vernon. At the presentation on July 20th he was also awarded an illuminated text. Edward William Clevely was the second son of George and Emma Clevely. He died aged 22 in October 1884. In July 1886 Ada Reilly Sims passed the examination for admittance to Red Maids.

Notes

Henry Flower – A groom in the service of Mr Tucker of Surrey Mews. He lived at 10, Wilson Street, St Pauls. In July 1885 he was riding a horse through Cumberland Street when the animal slipped and he sustained a compound fracture of the left leg.

Wilson Terrace, Wilson Street

1. Joseph Bridges
2-3. Harriett Thomas
4. George Case
5. William Blake, tailor
6. S. Barrett, painter, etc
7. Alfred Tucker
8. James Stokes

Windmill Hill, Whitehouse Lane

Edward Edgar, beer retailer
Edward Parsons, grocer
James Webber, boot maker, Clifton view cottage
Mrs Gummer, shopkeeper
Albert Stone,
Bethel Chapel (Congregational) founded 1855.
Windmill Hill Board School. Architect A R F Trew.

Sarah Annie Jones, vict, Rising Sun Alfred Road (Windmill Hill) 1853 – 63. William Old / 1871 – 72. Sarah Jones / 1874. William Cheeseman / 1875 to 1888. William Allen / 1889 – 92. John Crossman 1896 – 1917. William Haines / 1928 – 31. James Templar / 1933 – 50. William King / 1953. Walter Lippiatt.

William Bray, vict, Friendship Windmill Hill. 1871 – 1909. William Bray / 1914. Henry Bray / 1917 – 21. Maurice Gould / 1925. Rosina Gould / 1928 – 31. Rosina Parfitt 1935 – 38. Frederick Burchill / 1950 – 53. Frederick Thorne / 1960. R. C. Loveridge / 1975. D. W. Hooper.

Edwin Griffiths, vict, Saddler’s Arms 1871. Edwin Griffiths.

(Providence Place)

Ann Callow, grocer
George Merritt, butcher

Stephen Hopper Hemmings, vict, Spotted Horse Providence Place (Mill Lane) 1842 – 58. Henry Wakefield / 1860 – 69. Samuel Barber / 1871 – 72. Stephen Hopper Hemmings / 1874 – 78. William Davey 1879. George Parker / 1881 – 97. Isaac Gould / 1899. William Brayley / 1904 – 38. Alfred Giles / 1944 – 50. Albert May 1953. Ernest Edward May.

Henry Parker, vict, Colston’s Arms Providence Place, Mill Lane. 1775. Evan Williams / 1792. John Cox / 1837 – 40. James Parker / 1842 – 87. Henry Parker / 1888 – 1901. Charles R. Parker 1904. Frederick Bishop / 1904 to 1908. William Hamlyn / 1909 – 21. Thomas Horner / 1925 – 44. Edwin Nathaniel Watkins 1950 – 53. Frederick Prideaux.

Notes

John Cox (d. January 1899) Aged 43 of Alfred Road, Windmill Hill, found dead in bed. Inquest revealed he suffered pains in his chest. Verdict cardiac failure.

John Howell (d. February 1872) He was 46 when he was found dead in a limekiln on Windmill Hill. His wife Eliza, who had been separated from him for 5 years said he had formerly been a cooper, but due to drink he had had a paralytic seizure and had been put in the workhouse.. He had however left the day before and slept in the kiln where he was found dead by George Rogers a limeburner, on arriving for work.

Windmill Hill Terrace, Windmill Hill

New Mission, Windmill Hill This was opened in August 1884. Rev Canon Mather speaking at the ceremony said many years ago he had unsuccessfully tried to get a church built in the area and was glad to see that there was now a mission rooms. It was beautiful, inexpensive but in want of so many things, not even a harmonium as the one that was there that day had been lent to them. The room was capable of holding 230 people, being 45′ 6" by 20′ 6" with a gallery at one end and a movable platform at the other. On top of the building was a gilded weathervane representing a windmill. A design for a church had been approved at that time, but money was required to carry out the building of it.

Windsor Court, Blackfriars, Lewin’s Mead

Blackfriars Board School, Maudlin Street. Some members of staff as listed in directories, etc: J Whippey (Master), Miss Sophia Vigor (Mistress) 1883-1865 Miss Mitchell (Mistress) 1898.

Moravian Day, Sunday and Infant Schools, Blackfriars and Maudlin Street. In 1872 for 100 boys and 100 girls. Some members of staff as listed in directories, etc: Mr Stockman (Master, Miss Vigor (Mistress) 1872.

Windsor Court, Temple Street

Windsor Court, Kingsland Road

Windsor Terrace, Whitehouse Lane

William H. Gregory, chemist
Thomas Webb, greengrocer
Samuel Hignell, grocer, etc

John Perrett, vict, Forester’s Arms Whitehouse Lane. 1871. James Perrett / 1872. John Perrett / 1874 – 77. James Crof / 1879 – 89. Wellington Beaven / 1891 – 1917. William Evans 1921 – 35. Arthur Evans / 1936 – 1937. Caroline Evans / 1937. Grace Johnson / 1944 – 53. Caroline Sutor.

Notes

Henry Dalton – In February 1872 he was 35 years old, a labourer of 28, Windsor Terrace, Bedminster. He had been unloading bags of sugar from the ship Zanzibar, when he stumbled and fell about 20 feet into the hold and died on the spot. An inquest was held.

Windsor Terrace, Granby Hill, near Paragon, Clifton

1. Joseph Tinn
2. Mrs McGeachey
3. Michael Castle
4. Rev. Walter J. Whiting
5. Isaac Allan Cooke
7. Henry Tayler
10. Miss P. Usher
Herbert De Winton, Windsor villa
William F. Fox, 1, Windsor place
Arthur Carter, 2, Windsor place

Windsor Terrace, St Paul’s

1. William Garrard
2. Robert Couch
3. Samuel James Toleman
4. Mary Matthews
5. Thomas Austin
6. Noah Browning
7. Charles Wathen
8. Sarah Harding
9. William Besley (police)

Windsor Terrace, Totterdown

Mark Thomas
George Richardson, shipping agent
W. Bucknell
Thomas Powell
Felix Raistrick
Charles Thomas, builder
Robert Goddard
John Wallbridge
William Paul, mason
Charles Woodman, cooper
J. L. Vincent, pianoforte tuner

Windsor Terrace, Woolcott Park

Henry Long
Benjamin Vowles
James Heard
J. R. Freeman
Charles Blackburn
Herr Voit, professor of music
George Vinney
Miss Chapple
George Towning
H. R. Wheeler
James Chard, British schoolmaster
Alfred R. Watson, professor of music
H. Evans
W. French, grocer & provision factor

Notes

George Wolfe 1834-1890 Born in Bristol, adopted in early life by a Mrs Buckley of Windsor Terrace, Clifton. Painted marine views and landscapes, oil and watercolour. On his marriage went to live in Hampshire.

Wine Street, Corn Street to Narrow Wine Street

1. Mary Bell, fishmonger & fruiterer
J. W. Trew, surveyor
F. Powell, lithographer
2-3. William and Alfred Edwards, hosiers, glovers, etc
4. Samuel Miller, stationer, fancy depot
5. George Nattriss, confectioner
6. Cotterell Brothers, paper-hangings manufacturers
7-8. O’Handlen & Co., umbrella & fishing tackle manufacturers
9. Samuel J. Burman, watch maker, etc
10. Charles M’Millan, tailor and draper
11-13. A. T. Maishman, milliner and fur manufacturer
14. Baker & Burt, ladies’ outfitters, etc
15-16. Charles and Son, tailors
17. Ridler, Coulman, & Co. Manchester warehousemen, etc
18. Joseph Vincent, brush & comb maker
19. G. Edwards and Son, outfitters
20. John Catlin, brush and comb maker
21. Edward John, hat maker
21. O. Ransford, wholesale hat maker
22. James Candy & Son, linen warehouse
23. John Stroud, chemist
24-26. John W. Langdon & Co. woollen merchants
27-28. Gray & Co., milliners, etc
29. J. Barker, glass and china warehouse
30. William Pockson & Son, fringe and fancy warehouse
31. Maurice Michael, watchmaker and pawnbroker
32. Wills, Biggs and Williams, general warehousemen
33-35. S. Weston, milliner and mantle warehouseman
36. Thomas Bale, watchmaker, etc
37. Martin Wintle, silk mercer, etc
38. Henry Peart, straw warehouse
39. Hillyer & Trew, hosiers & lacemen
40. Thomas Thompson, hosier & laceman
41. Henry Jacob Allis, watch maker
42. David Hyam, outfitter
43. Sharp and Granger, linen drapers
44. Todd and Co. outfitters
45-47. Snow and Taylor, linen drapers, silk mercers, etc
48. Coombs & Co. woollen drapers
49. J. Lodge & Co. bonnet, fur, and mantle warehouse
50-54. Baker, Baker, & Co. warehousemen, drapers, etc
55. Richard Taylor, linen draper, etc
56-60. Jones & Co. linen drapers, etc
61-62. D. P. Belfield & Son, toy & fancy goods warehouse
63-64. J. A. Hodgson, hosier and outfitter
65. J. Baker, hosier and shirt maker
66. Maurice Moore, tobacconist and foreign money exchange
67. Thomas W. Tilly, hat & umbrella maker & fancy bag dealer

Adam and Eve, Wine Street (also listed as Wine Street Passage) For sale on 19th January 1860 as in the possession of George Knowland under lease for 14 years from 14th September 1857, rent £105. Freehold and free. Listed in Inn and Commercial Tavern section.

Information on landlords: F Probart 1824 Edwin Ward 1836-40 George Knowland 1852 G Knowland 1867 George Frederick Knowland 1878 Elizabeth Knowland 1882. Notes: Richard Trotman described as ‘late landlord’ died aged 46 at Coronation Road on March 20th 1840.

Notes: Mr Knowland had a disagreement with T Jones of Jones & Co when the firm’s new store was being erected in Wine Street owing to a part of a cellar used by Mr Knowland being purchased by Mr Jones during the construction. This boiled over on 1st May 1855. Mr Jones had been celebrating a win in Chancery with a group of friends at the house of Mr McMillan, consuming half a dozen bottles of champagne between them which they decided would benefit froma a brandy and water chaser. So they went to the Adam and Eve, whereupon Mr Knowland burst out, grabbed Mr Jones by the collar, pushed him against a wall and swore that he would not enter. After asking him by letter to apologise and send an amount to the Bristol Infirmary, to which there was no reply, Mr Jones brought a case against Mr Knowland that was heard at the Tolzey Court in July. After hearing the evidence the Recorder stated that it would be better settled out of court, which was done.

In 1856 John Baker was charged at Bristol Police Court with stealing three coats from the tavern, the property of Mr Knowland, the landlord. Baker, a recruit, to whom Mr Knowland was said to have shown great kindness, was said to have confessed his guilt and to be very contrite and on the landlord.s intercession the charge was dropped and Baker handed over to his sergeant.

In January 1870 it was reported that for many years Mr Knowland had placed on the smoking tables each Saturday a box in aid of the Royal Infirmary and General Hospital, He had regularly, until recently before his health failed, shaken the box before each customer in the 2 rooms with a friendly request for a penny. The collection for 1861 amounted to 25 guineas, in 1869 was £25 4s.

Mr Knowland was also a visitor at St Peter’s Hospital and Robert James ‘a big powerful man’ who had been an inmate and knew him from this work was taken to court on 1868 for threatening him when he would not offer employment. In 1883 Mrs Knowland reported the collection boxes holding £2 12s 8d.

In March 1884 Albert O’ Brien and Albert Richards were charged with having stolen a pint measure from the pub. It was noticed by a policeman that the measure was marked with ‘Knowland, Adam and Eve’ on the side. O’Brien said that he had ordered the beer just before closing time and could not finish it all so he had taken the cup away and was going to return it the next week. They were fined 11s without costs.

Notes

George Beard – In October 1892 was charged along with his elder brother George, with stealing dress material and other goods from Messrs Jones in Wine Street. George had been employed by the firm as a porter for 2 years. A shop assistant, Helen Anstey stated that she had cut a length of dress material and put it aside and when she returned it was missing. At 6pm George asked her for paper to wrap a parcel and when she followed him the cloth was found there. He pleaded guilty and when he was accompanied to 2, Orchard Street, the Batch, where he lived other pieces of material were found there. His brother lived in 54, Goodhind Street , where more material was found.

Eliza Emily Cottrell, of Wine Street. Declared bankrupt 2nd June 1868.

Joseph Dyer – A lodging house keeper of Wine Street, inserted a notice in the newspaper, February 1818, expressing thanks to the Governor, Deputy Governor and Guardians of the Poor for not prosecuting him ‘for suffering Margaret Thomas, a single woman to lye in at my house of a Bastard Child, thus bringing a charge upon the parish of St Peter’.

Widow Foord – In 1757 was a glover. Lived near the Corn Market in Wine Street.

Catherine Forster (d. 18th January 1805) Eldest daughter of Mr Joseph Forster formerly an apothecary in Wine Street. Died in her 30th year of a consumption ‘as did her two sisters, a few years past.’ according to obituary notice.

Ralph Oliff – Landlord of the Three Tuns In Wine Street. Was sheriff in 1664 and mayor in 1673 and it is claimed he said he took office ‘solely to persecute the Nonconformists.’ Died aged 64 and was buried in the chancel of All Saints.

Mrs Oxley – In 1827 she and three of her children perished in a fire in Wine Street.

Philip Scapulis (d. 1590) Originally from Trier, a stationer lived in Wine Street. In 1577 he was involved (with others) in a dispute with the Attorney General regarding whether their houses which had previously belonged to the Merchant Tailors’ Guild were therefore property of the Crown It was decided by jury that this was not the case. Wife Elizabeth, daughter Margaret, who was born in 1581 and died 4 years later. It is unlikely that he had any other children as they are not mentioned in his will which left bequests to cousins and godsons, neighbours and an ex-apprentice Richard Foorde.

Businesses Wine Street

The Don, 45 and 46 Wine Street (Clothing) The Bristol branch of the Don opened in 1883 under Manager W H Forsyth, who presided over a staff of 30. was one of many in towns throughout England. The upper floor housed workrooms, where at the end of the 19th century sewing machines were ‘driven by an engine, also acting as the motor for the dynamo forming the generator for the electric light installation.’ The height of technology in the high street.

While bespoke tailoring was carried on using these sewing machines, the ready to wear items were made at Stroud. This enabled them to charge the customer only one shilling per ready-made item over the cost price. The handsome premises were destroyed during the Second World War, although the company carried on. Moving to the top of Park Street, particularly noted in the later years as recommended suppliers of school uniforms.

Parnall & Sons, Narrow Wine Street Parnall’s – much more than shop fitters, although this advertisement was specifically aimed at the grocery trade.

H G Parnall founded the business in 1820 and in 1893 it was being described as ‘immense’, having become a limited company some four years earlier. As well as the main warehouse and showroom in Narrow Wine Street, the company had an iron and brass foundry at Rosemary Street and a steam joinery at Fairfax Street. Scales and weighing machines (including the Patent National Balances invented by Mr Parnall and 20,000 sold between 1883 and 1893) were manufactured at Fishponds. The Patent Agate Hand Scales were described as ‘specially worthy of the attention of tea dealers……when suspended above the counter they will work three times as long as any other scale without getting out of order’.

The wide range of items manufactured and supplied also included weighbridges (suitable for railway companies, collieries and public corporations), scoops, sack lifters, barrows and trucks, canisters (in large variety), counter boxes and window show trays, show glasses, butchers’ and other warranted cutlery, marble top tables (for restaurants etc), show stands, treacle cisterns, safes and cash boxes, patent tills, provision tickets, window name plates, tobacco cutters and tobacconists’ fixtures, chairs, bottling machines hand carts, coffee mills, tea mixers, hoists, lifts and gas engines.

They employed 10 representatives on the road and 400 workmen.

Winscombe Buildings, Frogmore Street

Winscombe Court. Frogmore Street

Winsford Street, Pennywell Road, Stapleton Road

Joseph Thorley, painter, etc
Thomas Curtis, tailor, etc
Mary Gapper, greengrocer, etc
James H. Cole, grocer & tea dealer
George Woolley
Mrs Mary Young
Charles Turner, mariner
Charles Shapland
Thomas Rutley, shoe maker
Joseph Snell, tanner, etc
Alfred Johnson, mechanic
William Rowe
Fitzroy Robert Colborne, painter and glazier
John Jennings, baker
Simeon Millman, tea dealer

Mary Jenkins,vict, Pine Apple Pennywell Road. In 1881 Mary Jenkins described herself as ‘publican – out of business’. 1853. Robert Fewing / 1854. Mary Fewing / 1861 – 66. James Webber / 1867 – 79. Mary Jenkins / 1883 – 1904. William Whitaker 1909 – 21. Charles Tristram / 1925 – 38. Henry Castle / 1944 – 53. Edith Holbrook (James Webber was a publican, and potato dealer).

Winsley Villas, Coburg Road, Montpelier

Woburn Place, near Grenville Place, Hotwells

Woodbury Place, Black Boy Hill

Woodbury Terrace, Blackboy Hill

Woodland Road, Tyndall‘s Park to Cotham Road

Miss Butt, Bannerleigh house
James Proctor, Moreton house
Robert H. Symes, Carlton house
Capt. Charles Mallard, R.N. Dundonald house
Thomas N. Harwood
Augustus Phillips, Lansdown house
J. S. Marchant, Somerville house
William Sturge, Chilliswood house
John Hill Morgan, Parklands house
Alfred Gardiner, Dale villa

Iron Church In the fashionable suburb of Clifton, amid the large villas, a mission church was built of iron in 1865. Plans were drawn up for a permanent church by the celebrated architect James Piers St Aubyn, his only church in Bristol, and building was slow, 1870-81. His planned steeple, similar in appearance to that built at Christ Church, never rose above the basement stage and serves as a rather enormous NW porch.

Concerns about the stability of the building brought in John Bevan and he rebuilt part of the nave and chancel, completed 1909. It survived in use until 1976 when the parish was joined to St Saviour. The joint parish purchased the redundant Highbury Chapel c1975 which in turn was restored and rededicated to St Saviour & St Mary, Cotham to replace both buildings. The BBC purchased the Tyndall’s Park church for use as a scenery store. The interior was subdivided and a new entrance created in the north aisle. The church was acquired in the mid-1990s by a free-church congregation, and now in use as the Woodlands Christian Centre. Work began in July 2000 to convert the upper floor into supported housing and the ground floor is to be retained for worship.

Houses

Abergeldie, Woodland Road, Clifton No 19 in road. left hand side going towards Park Row.

Bannerleigh, Woodland Road, Clifton No 15 in road. left hand side going towards Park Row.

Carlton House, Woodland Road, Clifton No 11 in road. left hand side going towards Park Row.

Dundonald House, Woodland Road, Clifton No 9 in road. left hand side going towards Park Row.

Gordon Lodge, Woodland Road, Clifton No 17 in road. left hand side going towards Park Row.

Woodland Terrace, Hampton Road to Auburn Road

1. David Clarke Lindsey
2. Miss Eliza Peters
3. M. A. H. Wood
5. Caroline Ridgway
6. Edward Joseph Heyre

Woodwell Cottages, White Hart Lane

Woodwell Crescent, Jacob’s Wells

Woolcott Buildings, Lower Redland Road to Clyde Road

1. William Pincott
2. John Guppy
3. Benjamin Hall, grocer
4. Mrs Boxwell
5. Thomas Gammon
6. George Morgan, dairyman
7. George Parsons
8. James Carp
9. Walter Mizen, junior
10. Walter Mizen, senior
11. John Shorland, carpenter
12. Maurice Taylor, carpenter and stationer
13. Jeremiah Wicks
14. John Henson, boot maker
15. John Bool
16. William John Woodman
17. Enos Boulter
18. ?. Fear
19. John Knight
20. Enoch Ford
21. Isaac House, greengrocer & fruiterer, Fairfield cottage
22. Thomas Roberts, dairyman
23. T. Roberts, teacher of the piano, etc
24. Mrs Ann Ricketts
Miss Catherine Downs, dressmaker
William Johns
John Smith

Thomas Skyrme, vict, Shakespeare Tavern Lower Redland Road 1867 – 75. Thomas Skyrme / 1876 – 83. Emma Skyrme / 1885 – 92. Jane Marie Tavener / 1894 – 1928. Jane Marie Row 1931 – 35. John Pullen / 1937 – 50. William Hardwell / 1953. Lily Rose / 1975. A. T. H. Bryant Jane Marie Tavener/Rowe was the niece of Thomas and Emma Skyrme.

Woolcott Park, Clyde Road to Lover’s Walk

Uriah Mullett, dairyman & haulier
William Knowles, Rhosven lodge
Albert Gribble, Wynn house
Robert Acton Dodds, Gordon house
?. Stockwell house
Capt. Thomas W. Hives, Marlbro’ villa
George Gatchell, Carrville villa
Mrs Frankland Evelyn villa
W. B. Morgan, Brockley villa
Mrs Mary Harris, Merton villa
Mrs Hannah Hall, Eversley house
Alfred Albert Holmes, Northcote house
Arthur G. Heaven, Lyndhurst villa
Mrs Francis Gatchell, Sunnyside villa
Alfred P. Menefy, Dunmore villa
Mrs John Dix, Penmaen villa
Mrs Mary Ann Williams, Kingmead villa
Christopher Pocklington, Didsbury villa
William Arthur Leonard, Woolbury villa
John Clarke Wallop, Innisville villa
Miss C. Dickenson, Sidney lodge
George Young Home, Roseville villa
James Bailey, Sidney house
Mrs Edmond Gill, Old Cleve house
?. Rock house
Edwin Tardrew, Newlands villa
Henry Wansborough, Bewdley villa
?. Ahorn house
James Buck, Brookville lodge
Jesse Harris, Clarefont house
Eliza Knowles, Myrtle lodge
Dennis Fairchild, Melrose villa
Miss Chard, Gouldnappe house
?. Fripp, Carr villa

St Saviour’s Infant School, Woolcott Park. In 1898 for 100 children. Some members of staff as listed in directories, etc: Misss A Coombe (Mistress) 1898.

Charles Seaman – Living at 6. Leigh Villas, Woolcott Park when prosecuted by Bristol School Board in January 1875 for not sending children to school and fined 3 shillings.

Woolcott Park Terrace, Woolcott Park

George Henry Pike, Gifford lodge
Mrs Isabella Butler, Wilton villa
Christopher Waltham Porter
Miss Morgan, ladies’ school

Worcester Crescent, College Road (South)

Woodforde Ffookes
Joseph B. Powell
Admlral James Vashon Baker
Graham Campbell
Mrs Radcliffe
Montagu Gilbert Blackburn
Miss Elizabeth Salmon

Worcester Lawn, College Road (South)

Joseph L. Roeckel, professor of music
Rev. Beedam Charlesworth
Mrs Christian C. Jones
Dr. George Thompson

Worcester Terrace, Clifton Park

Frederick William Badock, Badminton house
Misses Haycock
Henry Pritchard
Charles Stewart Clarke
Rev. Nicholas Pocock
Rev. F. Vaughan Mather
William Edward Fox
Lady Molyneaux
Arthur Montague
Mrs Catherine Span
Robert Dow Ker
Rev. Philip Ashby Phalps
Gwinnett Tyler

Sshools Clifton Park

Anna Maria Notley & Louisa Nascele Harris, school, Worcester House, Worcester Terrace.

Miss Bartlett’s School for Young Ladies, Badminton House, Clifton park, Clifton. Listed 1898.

Clifton High School for Girls, Clifton Park, Clifton.

A R Douglas’ School for Young Gentlemen, Colchester House, Clifton Park, Clifton. Listed 1898.

Worcester Villas, College Road (South)

Francis Black, M.D. Worcester lodge
William Killegrew Wait
George Wills
Major Owen, Barham lodge
Swinfen Jordan, Cherith lodge

Wordsworth Terrace, Woolcott Park

World’s End, White Hart Steps, Jacob’s Wells

Worrall’s Road, Caroline Row, Durdham Down

Wright’s Court, Pipe Lane, Temple Street

R&ampS Machining to Bring Jobs and Investment to Mehlville with New $six Million

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Chromalloy unveils turbine engine element machining facility
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R&ampS Machining to Bring Jobs and Investment to Mehlville with New $six Million

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Cool Precision Machining Firm images

A few good precision machining company photos I identified:

Image from web page 22 of “The Maxim Electric Light and Energy Co., Philadelphia.” (1882)

Image by World wide web Archive Book Photos
Identifier: TheMaximElectricLightAndPowerCo.Philadelphia_595
Title: The Maxim Electric Light and Energy Co., Philadelphia.
Year: 1882 (1880s)
Authors: United States Electric Lighting Business
Subjects: electrical energy Division 26 lighting power provide
Publisher: United States Electric Lighting Organization
Contributing Library: Canadian Centre for Architecture

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About This Book: Catalog Entry
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Click here to view book on-line to see this illustration in context in a browseable on the web version of this book.

Text Appearing Just before Image:
tendant. I Ins is clearly objeCti„nable, as it entails the presence of an attendanta th, machmeandI acadenti cur, and in fact do happen in practice, from lack of a Mention. Mr Maxm, has devised an ingenious regulator for accomplishing this^automatically, wh.ch has attracted considerably consideration and functions well in practiceMr Weston, even so haS been in a position, by a peculiar construction of the machine itself- make ,t entirely self regulating with out the use of any specia. mechanism This ratesmth such .puck,,, Ss and precision, that, with one particular hundred lights for instance J r11- nKt&gt-in! «* hmied out with no affecting the Scy «.f he r.nauun, hg „ly cha,^ ,„ ^ WtajC, , * /V. V **■« M accomplishes this most desiraTu „Z In o re ,t ,s desirable to vary the illuminating power of the 1 ,m, , rfnuUr ^ that employed with the arc machines is suppheo 1 T * ther machine in the markincandescent lamp, which is shown full sizc. in th(. ,„t fl ^* ^:^^lr:z THE UNITED STATES ELECTRIC LIGHTING CO. 19

Text Appearing Soon after Image:
The Maxim Incandescent Lamp. THE UNITED STATES ELECTRIC LIGHTING CO. tiding the disinteg ful currents. A single of the dm lam| tit of twenty-five candles, was run for a short tim- n illuminatin n hundred candles. We nt lamp would i The life- im lamp, when run at its typical energy, is ver) long. In plants which haw ■ uring tl i lifetime of the lumps bus been m lamps which hav&lt been burning fromusand 1 nonetheless iiit A i hinc unci ninety-seven tarted in tin Mew-York that tiuu the machine has Iniai k without repaii ident, and on the lamp • n hundn d and fifty which had burned constantly thirty-fourmr tdition thi i« n | – of the lit plant hudind place into pi… tical « omnu n ial : l I pthe t&lt m will be hti.M) in | beW 4ain T -„„., rrupn in die THE UNITED STATES ELECTRIC LIGHTING CO. 21

Note About Photos
Please note that these photos are extracted from scanned page photos that may possibly have been digitally enhanced for readability – coloration and appearance of these illustrations may possibly not completely resemble the original perform.

Image from page 271 of “Sights in Boston and suburbs : or, guide to the stranger” (1856)

Image by World wide web Archive Book Pictures
Identifier: sightsinbostonsu1856midg2
Title: Sights in Boston and suburbs : or, guide to the stranger
Year: 1856 (1850s)
Authors: Midgley, R. L
Subjects:
Publisher: Boston : J. P. Jewett &amp company Cleveland, Ohio : Jewett, Proctor &amp Worthington
Contributing Library: Boston College Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Boston Library Consortium Member Libraries

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Text Appearing Just before Image:
(|$ doofssoqfbof 6ontf)3f.So$ fo»|, DEALER IN JMMw of 60ft aito Siter anl&gt IJmte Stones, S. T. C. has consistently on hand a large and properly-assorted stock of GOLD AND SILVER WATCHES, Created by the ideal Manufacturers. SILVER PLATE, Comprising Tea Sets, Pitchers, Waiters &amp Goblets,Silver Knives, Porks, Ladles, Spoons, &ampc. ARTICLES OP GOIiD In every conceivable type, among which may be found Medium High quality andExtra Fine GOLD CHAINS, BROOCHES, EAR RINGS FINGER RINGS, &ampC.Valuable STONES In plain and elaborate Settings, some extremely superior and expensive also. Consisting of fa Sets, Juttles, Commmtion Sfotbke, tfcc.All of which are supplied at most Satisfactory Costs.

Text Appearing Soon after Image:
%t parlor Seining Utarjniu. This new and gorgeous machine, made for every selection of FamilySewing and Tailors Operate, forms each stitch the very same as sewing by hand. The superiority of this machine over each and every other is at as soon as apparentfrom the fact that it in fact sews, producing, with matchless precision,the genuine life-like hand stitch in all its adjustments — running, hemming,more than and more than, back, half and quarter back, and side stitching, enablinga individual to adapt the stitch to the perform or fabric as preferred. Each partia completely simple and effortlessly understood no underthread to spool andcontinually take care of, as on other machines no peculiar mode ofthreading the needles no rewinding spools, but utilizing a single thread,and the needles threading themselves, it at as soon as becomes the ladysready seamstress at will, and the tailors substitute for a dozen hands.With the turn of a single screw, every single various stitch is obtained, inwhich a person with the directions sent quickly becomes specialist. N

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Nice Machining Suppliers images

A couple of nice machining suppliers images I located:

A Bitcoin You Can Flip

Image by jurvetson
My son has grow to be fascinated with bitcoins, and so I had to get him a tangible a single for Xmas (thanks Sim1!). The public key is imprinted visibly on the tamper-evident holographic film, and the private essential lies underneath.

I too was fascinated by digital money back in college, and much more specifically by the asymmetric mathematical transforms underlying public-important crypto and digital blind signatures.

I remembered a technical paper I wrote, but could not find it. A desktop search revealed an essay that I totally forgot, anything that I had recovered from my archives of floppy discs (while I nevertheless could).

It is an write-up I wrote for the college newspaper in 1994. Ironically, Microsoft Word could not open this ancient Microsoft Word file format, but the free of charge text editors could.

What a fun time capsule, beneath, with some option naivetés…

I am trying to reconstruct what I was thinking, and asking yourself if it tends to make any sense. I think I was arguing that a bulletproof framework for digital money (and what far better testing ground) could be utilized to secure a digital container for executable code on a rental basis. So the expression of an notion — the distinct code, or runtime service — is locked in a safe container. The notion would be to avoid copying rather of punishing following the reality. Micro-currency and micro-code appear like equivalent exercises in regulating the single use of an issued quantity.

Now that the Bitcoin experiment is underway, do you know of anybody writing about it as an option framework for intellectual property?

IP and Digital Money
@Normal:
Digital Money and the “Intellectual Property” Oxymoron
By Steve Jurvetson

Many of us will soon be working in the details solutions or technologies industries which are currently tangled in a bramble patch of intellectual home law. As the law struggles to discover coherency and an internally-consistent logic for intellectual house (IP) protection, digital encryption technologies might offer a much better remedy — from the point of view of lowering litigation, exploiting the inherent rewards of an data-primarily based company model, and preserving a free economy of ideas.
Bullet-proof digital cash technology, which is now emerging, can supply a protected “cryptographic container” for intellectual expressions, thereby preserving conventional notions of intellectual house that shield particular instantiations of an thought rather than the thought itself. For example, it seems affordable that Intuit need to be capable to safeguard against the widespread duplication of their Quicken application (the expression of an concept), but they must not be capable to patent the underlying thought of single-entry bookkeeping. There are sturdy financial incentives for digital cash to develop and for those methods to be adapted for IP protection — to develop a protected container or expression of an idea. The speedy march of information technology has strained the evolution of IP law, but rather than patching the law, details technologies itself may possibly offer a much more coherent remedy.

Info Wants To Be Totally free
Presently, IP law is enigmatic due to the fact it is expanding to a domain for which it was not initially intended. In building the U.S. Constitution, Thomas Jefferson argued that suggestions should freely transverse the globe, and that tips were fundamentally different from material goods. He concluded that “Inventions then cannot, in nature, be a subject of home.” The troubles surrounding IP come into sharp focus as we shift to being much more of an data-primarily based economy.
The use of e-mail and local Tv footage assists disseminate details about the globe and can be a force for democracy — as observed in the Television footage from Chechen, the use of modems in Prague in the course of the Velvet Revolution, and the e-mail and Television from Tianammen Square. Even Gorbachev employed a video camera to show what was taking place after he was kidnapped. What seems to be an inherent force for democracy runs into issues when it becomes the subject of home.
As larger-level programming languages grow to be much more like organic languages, it will grow to be increasingly hard to distinguish the thought from the code. Language precedes believed, as Jean-Louis Gassée is fond of saying, and our language is the framework for the formulation and expression of our suggestions. Restricting software program will increasingly be indistinguishable from restricting freedom of speech.
An economy of ideas and human attention depends on the continuous and cost-free exchange of concepts. Because of the associative nature of memory processes, no notion is detached from other folks. This begs the query, is intellectual home an oxymoron?

Intellectual Home Law is a Patch
John Perry Barlow, former Grateful Dead lyricist and co-founder (with Mitch Kapor) of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, argues that “Intellectual home law can not be patched, retrofitted or expanded to contain digitized expression… Faith in law will not be an efficient strategy for higher-tech organizations. Law adapts by continuous increments and at a pace second only to geology. Technologies advances in lunging jerks. Real-globe situations will continue to change at a blinding pace, and the law will lag further behind, much more profoundly confused. This mismatch may prove impossible to overcome.”
From its origins in the Industrial Revolution where the invention of tools took on a new significance, patent and copyright law has protected the physical conveyance of an concept, and not the thought itself. The physical expression is like a container for an concept. But with the emerging info superhighway, the “container” is becoming far more ethereal, and it is disappearing altogether. Regardless of whether it is e-mail these days, or the future goods of the Info Age, the “expressions” of tips will be voltage situations darting about the net, very significantly like thoughts. The fleeting copy of an image in RAM is not quite different that the fleeting image on the retina.
The digitization of all forms of information — from books to songs to photos to multimedia — detaches information from the physical plane exactly where IP law has often identified definition and precedent. Patents can not be granted for abstract concepts or algorithms, however courts have lately upheld the patentability of application as lengthy as it is operating a physical machine or causing a physical outcome. Copyright law is even a lot more of a patch. The U.S. Copyright Act of 1976 calls for that operates be fixed in a durable medium, and where an idea and its expression are inseparable, the merger doctrine dictates that the expression can not be copyrighted. E-mail is not presently copyrightable due to the fact it is not a reduction to tangible form. So of course, there is a proposal to amend these copyright provisions. In current rulings, Lotus won its case that Borland’s Quattro Pro spreadsheet copied components of Lotus 123’s appear and feel, yet Apple lost a related case versus Microsoft and HP. As Professor Bagley points out in her new text, “It is tough to reconcile beneath the total idea and feel test the results in the Apple and Lotus instances.” Provided the inconsistencies and financial significance of these troubles, it is no surprise that swarms of lawyers are studying to practice in the IP arena.
Back in the early days of Microsoft, Bill Gates wrote an inflammatory “Open Letter to Hobbyists” in which he alleged that “most of you steal your software program … and need to be kicked out of any club meeting you show up at.” He presented the economic argument that piracy prevents correct profit streams and “prevents very good computer software from becoming written.” Now we have Windows.
But seriously, if we continue to believe that the worth of details is based on scarcity, as it is with physical objects, we will continue to patch laws that are contrary to the nature of details, which in several instances increases in worth with distribution. Small, fast moving organizations (like Netscape and Id) shield their ideas by getting to the marketplace quicker than their larger competitors who base their protection on fear and litigation.
The patent office is woefully understaffed and unable to judge the nuances of application. Comptons was initially granted a patent that covered virtually all multimedia technology. When they tried to collect royalties, Microsoft pushed the Patent Workplace to overturn the patent. In 1992, Computer software Marketing Corp received a patent for “displaying and integrating commercial ads with computer software.” That’s like patenting the concept of a radio industrial. In 1993, a DEC engineer received a patent on just two lines of machine code typically utilized in object-oriented programming. CompuServe announced this month that they plan to collect royalties on the extensively utilised GIF file format for images.
The Patent Office has issued properly more than 12,000 software program patents, and a programmer can unknowingly be in violation of any them. Microsoft had to spend 0MM to STAC in February 1994 for violating their patent on data compression. The penalties can be costly, but so can a patent search. Many of the application patents don’t have the words “computer,” “software,” “program,” or “algorithm” in their abstracts. “Software patents turn every single selection you make while writing a plan into a legal threat,” says Richard Stallman, founder of the League for Programming Freedom. “They make writing a huge system like crossing a minefield. Every single step has a little likelihood of stepping on a patent and blowing you up.” The really notion of seventeen years of patent protection in the quickly moving software market seems absurd. MS-DOS did not exist seventeen years ago.
IP law faces the further wrinkle of jurisdictional issues. Exactly where has an Web crime taken location? In the nation or state in which the laptop server resides? Many nations do not have the same intellectual house laws as the U.S. Even inside the U.S., the law can be challenging to enforce for instance, a group of music publishers sued CompuServe for the digital distribution of copyrighted music. A complication is that CompuServe has no understanding of the activity because it happens in the flood of bits transferring in between its subscribers
The tension noticed in creating digital copies revolves around the concern of home. But as opposed to the theft of material goods, copying does not deprive the owner of their possessions. With digital piracy, it is significantly less a clear ethical issue of theft, and much more an abstract notion that you are undermining the company model of an artist or computer software developer. The distinction among ethics and laws often revolves about their enforceability. Ahead of copy machines, it was challenging to make a book, and so it was apparent and visible if someone was copying your function. In the digital age, copying is lightning quickly and tough to detect. Offered ethical ambiguity, comfort, and anonymity, it is no wonder we see a cultural shift with regard to digital ethics.

Piracy, Plagiarism and Pilfering
We copy music. We are seldom diligent with our footnotes. We wonder exactly where we’ve seen Strat-man’s PIE and the four slices ahead of. We forward e-mail that may contain text from a copyrighted news publication. The SCBA estimates that 51% of satellite dishes have illegal descramblers. John Perry Barlow estimates that 90% of individual tough drives have some pirated application on them.
Or as last month’s Red Herring editorial points out, “this atmosphere of electronic piracy appears to have in turn spawned a freer attitude than ever toward good old-fashioned plagiarism.” Articles from significant publications and WSJ columns seem and circulate extensively on the Internet. Laptop Photographs magazine replicated a full post on multimedia databases from New Media magazine, and then publicly apologized.
Music and voice samples are an increasingly common art kind, from 2 Reside Crew to Negativland to regional bands like Voice Farm and Consolidated. Peter Gabriel embraces the shift to repositioned content “Traditionally, the artist has been the final arbiter of his perform. He delivered it and it stood on its personal. In the interactive globe, artists will also be the suppliers of info and collage material, which men and women can either accept as is, or manipulate to develop their personal art. It’s part of the shift from talent-primarily based function to selection-making and editing operate.”
But many traditionalists resist the adjust. Museums are hesitant to embrace digital art because it is not possible to distinguish the original from a copy according to a curator at the New Museum of Modern Art, “The art planet is scared to death of this stuff.” The Digital Audio Tape debate also illustrated the paranoia the music sector 1st insisted that these DAT recorders had to purposely introduce static into the digital copies they created, and then they settled for an embedded code that restricted the number of successive copies that could be made from the a master source.
For a healthier reaction, appear at the phenomenally productive company models of Mosaic/Netscape and Id Software program, the twisted creator of Doom. Just as McAfee built a organization on shareware, Netscape and Id encourage widespread free distribution of their product. But as soon as you want help from Netscape, or the greater levels of the Doom game, then you have to pay. For industries with robust demand-side economies of scale, such as Netscape web browsers or Safe-TCL intelligent agents, the creators have exploited the economies of information distribution. Software items are especially susceptible to growing returns with scale, as are networking merchandise and most of the information technology industries.
However, the Software Publishers Association reports that 1993 worldwide losses to piracy of enterprise application computer software totaled .45 billion. They also estimated that 89% of software program units in Korea have been counterfeit. And China has 29 factories, some state-owned, that press 75 million pirated CDs per year, largely for export. GATT will impose the U.S. notions of intellectual property on a globe that sees the issue quite differently.
Clearly there are robust economic incentives to protect intellectual house, and affordable arguments can be produced for software patents and digital copyright, but the complexities of legal enforcement will be outrun and potentially obviated by the reasonably rapid developments of an additional technology, digital money and cryptography.

Digital Cash and the IP Lock
Digital cash is in some approaches an extreme instance of digital “property” — given that it can not be copied, it is possessed by one particular entity at a time, and it is static and non-perishable. If the methods for safeguarding against pilferage and piracy operate in the domain of money, then they can be utilized to “protect” other properties by becoming embedded in them. If I wanted to copy-shield an “original” work of digital art, digital cash tactics be used as the “container” to protect intellectual home in the old style. A bullet-proof digital cash scheme would inevitably be adapted by these who stand to acquire from the existing system. Such as Bill Gates.
Several organizations are building technologies for electronic commerce. On January 12, numerous High-Tech Club members attended the Cybermania conference on electronic commerce with the CEOs of Intuit, CyberCash, Enter Television and The Lightspan Partnership. According to Scott Cook, CEO of Intuit, the motivations for digital money are anonymity and effective modest-transaction World wide web commerce. Anonymity preserves our privacy in the age of increasingly intrusive “database marketing” based on credit card purchase patterns and other personal details. Of course, it also has tax-evasion implications. For Web commerce, money is more effective and less complicated to use than a credit card for little transactions.
“A lot of people will commit nickels on the Net,” says Dan Lynch of CyberCash. Banks will soon exchange your current money for cyber-tokens, or a “bag of bits” which you can devote freely on the World wide web. A competitor primarily based in the Netherlands called DigiCash has a Web web page with numerous articles on electronic money and completely functional demo of their technology. You can get some free of charge money from them and commit it at some of their allied vendors.
Digital cash is a compelling technologies. Wired magazine calls it the “killer application for electronic networks which will modify the worldwide economy.” Handling and fraud expenses for the paper funds technique are increasing as digital color copiers and ATMs proliferate. Donald Gleason, President of the Intelligent Card Enterprise unit of Electronic Payment Services argues that “Cash is a nightmare. It fees cash handlers in the U.S. alone roughly billion a year to move the stuff… Bills and coinage will increasingly be replaced by some sort of electronic equivalent.” Even a Citibank VP, Sholom Rosen, agrees that “There are going to be winners and losers, but everyone is going to play.”
The digital cash schemes use a blind digital signature and a central repository to safeguard against piracy and privacy violations. On the privacy situation, the techniques used have been mathematically confirmed to be protected against privacy violations. The bank cannot trace how the cash is becoming utilized or who is using it. Embedded in these schemes are effective digital cryptography tactics which have lately been spread in the industrial domain (RSA Data Safety is a leader in this field and will be speaking to the Higher Tech Club on January 19).
To safeguard against piracy calls for some extra operate. As quickly as I have a digital bill on my Mac hard drive, I will want to make a copy, and I can. (Several companies have busted their picks attempting to copy protect files from hackers. It will never ever perform.). The distinction is that I can only invest the bill as soon as. The copy is worthless. This is possible due to the fact every bill has a special encrypted identifier. In spending the bill, my computer checks with the centralized repository which verifies that my distinct bill is still unspent. As soon as I spend it, it cannot be spent once more. As with a lot of electronic transactions right now, the security of the technique depends on the integrity of a centralized personal computer, or what Dan Lynch calls “the big database in the sky.”
One particular of the most important limitations of the digital money strategies is that they are tethered to a transaction between at least 3 parties — a purchaser, seller and central repository. So, to use such a scheme to shield intellectual home, would demand networked computer systems and “live” files that have to dial up and verify in with the repository to be operational. There are many compelling applications for this, like voter registration, voting tabulation, and the registration of digital artwork originals.
When I asked Dan Lynch about the use of his technology for intellectual home protection, he agreed that the bits that now represent a bill could be utilised for any quantity of things, from healthcare records to photographs. A digital photograph could hide a digital signature in its low-order bits, and it would be imperceptible to the user. But those bits could be utilised with a registry of appropriate image owners, and could be utilized to prove misappropriation or sampling of the image by others.
Technology author Steven Levy has been researching cryptography for Wired magazine, and he responded to my e-mail inquiries with the reply “You are on the correct track in pondering that crypto can preserve IP. I know of numerous attempts to forward plans to do so.” Digital money might supply a “crypto-container” to preserve traditional notions of intellectual house.
The transaction tether limits the short-term applicability of these schemes for software program copy protection. They will not perform on an isolated personal computer. This definitely would slow its adoption for mobile computer systems given that the wireless networking infrastructure is so nascent. But with Windows ’95 bundling network connectivity, quickly most computer systems will be network-ready — at least for the Microsoft network. And now that Bill Gates is acquiring Intuit, rather of dollar bills, we will have Bill dollars.
The transaction tether is also a logistical headache with present slow networks, which may hinder its adoption for mass-market applications. For instance, if an individual forwards a copyrighted e-mail, the recipient may possibly have to have their computer do the repository check ahead of they could see the text of the e-mail. E-mail is slow sufficient right now, but in the close to future, these tactics of verifying IP permissions and paying suitable royalties in digital money could be background processes on a preemptive multitasking pc (Windows ’95 or Mac OS System eight). The digital money schemes are consistent with other trends in software program distribution and improvement — specifically software program rental and object-oriented “applets” with nested royalty payments. They are also consistent with the document-centric vision of Open Doc and OLE.
The user of the future would start working on their stationary. When it’s clear they are doing some text entry, the word processor would be downloaded and rented for its existing usage. Digital pennies would trickle back to the men and women who wrote or inspired the various portions of the core program. As you use other application applets, such as a spell-checker, it would be downloaded as needed. By renting applets, or potentially finer-grained software objects, the licensing royalties would be automatically tabulated and exchanged, and software piracy would require heroic efforts. Intellectual property would become precisely that — property in a marketplace economy, beneath lock by its “creator,” and Bill Gates’ 1975 lament more than software program piracy could now be addressed 20 years later.

——–end of paper———–

On additional reflection, I have to have been considering of executable code (where the runtime needs a cloud connect to authenticate) and not passive media. Verification has been a pain, but possibly it is seamless in a internet-solutions future. Cloud apps and digital cash depend on it, so why not the code itself.

I don’t see it as particularly beneficial for nevertheless images (but it could confirm the official owner of any special bundle of pixels, in the sense that you can &quotown&quot a sufficiently huge quantity, but not the essence of a work of art or derivative works). Frankly, I am not certain about non-interactive content in general, like pure video playback. &quotFixing&quot software IP alone would be a huge adequate accomplishment.

Cool Machining Suppliers pictures

Verify out these machining suppliers photos:

Puch MV50 Steyr Daimler moped (1980)

Image by British Postal Museum & Archive
In the 1970s, the bigger suppliers of motorcycles to the Post Office steadily gave way to other makes such as Puch, Honda and Kawasaki.

Puch mopeds have been used in little numbers for each Telegram and letter delivery operate. Its small size created it most suitable for low volume deliveries in towns and rural locations.

The machine on show was used at the Northern District Office, London (primarily based at Finsbury Park).

For far more info on this exhibition please go to our website

BSA C10

Image by British Postal Museum & Archive
Following Planet War I the Post Workplace started to obtain the more effective motorcycles then offered. The commence of the 1920s was the starting of The Post Office’s motor transport scheme, during which it bought Matchless, Triumph, Enfield, Douglas, Clyno and Chater Lea motorcycles. 1 of the biggest suppliers of machines to the Post Workplace was BSA.

Combination machines (with sidecars), although much more costly to operate had been frequently utilized each for delivery and collection function. Regardless of this, solo machines such as the BSA C10 were ideally suited for the solo delivery of mail and for telegram function.

This machine is one of the couple of wartime purchases created by the Post Workplace. The continuation of an efficient mail service in the course of the war years was important both as a indicates of communication and to boost morale. In the course of Globe War II this motorcycle would have been fitted with a hooded headlight to conform to wartime blackout regulations.

For much more info on this exhibition please check out our web site

FLOOR CLEANING MACHINE – Supplies of floors cleaning machine (flooring) at Pulire 2013

Image by КИИТ
Suppliers of floor cleaning machine and sweppers. Mach is synonymous with producing high quality firm specializing in rental and sale of motorized ideal according to your particular wants. PULIRE 2013 – это международная выставка машин, клинингового оборудования, изделий и систем для индустриальной очистки и клининга. В английской версии – International Exhibition of Machines, Equipments, Merchandise and Systems for Industrial Cleaning. Уборочная техника и оборудование для клининга от ведущих мировых производителей KARCHER, LAVORPRO, FIMAP, COMAC, COLUMBUS. Мы являемся официальными дилерами и дистрибьюторами COMAC в России, FIMAP (Италия), LAVORPRO (Италия). Специальные предложения для клининговых компаний мы осуществляем сервис, ремонт, поставляем запчасти и расходники следующих производителей: Fimap, Kаrcher, COMAC, HAKO, Nilfisk, IPC, Lavor PRO, Columbus, Delvir, Cleanfix, Taski, Tennant Мы работаем по всей России: Москва, Санкт-Петербург, Новосибирск, Екатеринбург, Нижний Новгород, Самара, Омск, Казань, Челябинск, Ростов-на-Дону, Уфа, Волгоград, Пермь, Красноярск, Саратов, Воронеж, Краснодар, Тольятти, Барнаул, Ижевск, Ульяновск, Ярославль, Владивосток, Иркутск, Хабаровск, Новокузнецк, Тюмень, Оренбург, Кемерово, Рязань, Пенза, Тула, Набережные Челны, Астрахань и др. города России. Узнай больше www.kiit.ru/uborochnaya-texnika-i-oborudovanie.html# на сайте ЗАО &quotКомпания инноваций и технологий&quot