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  • A young, vulnerable-looking youth stands close to two members of a local Evangelical church who are using a carpet warehouse as a temporary Ministry. Rolls of carpets and rugs are behind these Christians as the two officials practice the 'laying on of hands' to cleanse the soul of their young convert during a religious meeting in Newport, Wales. As the ceremony takes place when this boy is persuaded to accept Jesus into his life, two retail signs proclaim the prices and credit terms of the household items. The laying on of hands is a religious practice found throughout the world in varying forms. In Christian churches, this practice is used as both a symbolic and formal method of invoking the Holy Spirit during baptisms, healing services, blessings, and ordination of priests, ministers, elders, deacons, and other holy church ceremonies.
    RB_034-13-05-1986.jpg
  • Converted from an old boat is a ramshackle artist's studio on Eel Pie Island on the River Thames, London. Eel Pie Island is an island in the River Thames at Twickenham in the Borough of Richmond upon Thames, London. It is situated on the Tideway and can be reached only by footbridge or boat. The island was known as a major jazz and blues venue in the 1960s. In 1969, the Eel Pie Island Hotel was occupied by a small group of local anarchists including illustrator Clifford Harper. By 1970 it had become the UK's largest hippie commune.
    eel-pie_island01-09-12-2012.jpg
  • Converted from an old boat is a ramshackle artist's studio on Eel Pie Island on the River Thames, London. Eel Pie Island is an island in the River Thames at Twickenham in the Borough of Richmond upon Thames, London. It is situated on the Tideway and can be reached only by footbridge or boat. The island was known as a major jazz and blues venue in the 1960s. In 1969, the Eel Pie Island Hotel was occupied by a small group of local anarchists including illustrator Clifford Harper. By 1970 it had become the UK's largest hippie commune.
    eel-pie_island02-09-12-2012.jpg
  • Money retailer Travelex foreign currency rates displayed at Heathrow's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport267-13-07-2009.jpg
  • An assistant counts through blurred Pounds Sterling notes at the Travelex bureau de change at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport1446-18-08-2009.jpg
  • Ex-Anglican now Catholic priest Father Chris Viper at St. Lawrence's Catholic church in Feltham, London.
    catholic_church115-24-08-2010.jpg
  • Bureau de change reflected in parked car window on Florence street. A bureau de change shop offers deals and best prices to tourists and Italian passers-by on a Florence street. With the countries' flags on the far left and across, are the buy and sell rates for the Euro. Lit with dot matrix numbers, the list of decimal figures can be seen from across the street. A local-looking people walk past the store situated in a pedestrian street in the commercial centre of the city and we see the typical flag stones that line the pavements and roads.
    florence_italy24-22-10-2010.jpg
  • Travelex bureau de change assistant serves currency to passenger at Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport972-10-08-2009.jpg
  • Travelex bureau de change assistant serves currency to passenger at Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport970-10-08-2009.jpg
  • Travelex bureau de change logo and reflected sign at Heathrow airport's terminal 5
    heathrow_airport968-10-08-2009.jpg
  • Money retailer Travelex foreign currency rates displayed at Heathrow's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport263-13-07-2009.jpg
  • Money retailer Travelex foreign currency rates displayed at Heathrow's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport258-13-07-2009.jpg
  • Money retailer Travelex foreign currency rates displayed at Heathrow's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport253-13-07-2009.jpg
  • Money retailer Travelex foreign currency rates displayed at Heathrow's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport1669-24-08-2009.jpg
  • Money retailer Travelex foreign currency rates displayed at Heathrow's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport1667-24-08-2009.jpg
  • An assistant counts through Suadi Riyal notes at the Travelex bureau de change at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport1666-24-08-2009.jpg
  • An assistant counts through Pounds Sterling notes at the Travelex bureau de change at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport1451-18-08-2009.jpg
  • An assistant counts through blurred Pounds Sterling notes at the Travelex bureau de change at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5.
    heathrow_airport1450-18-08-2009.jpg
  • A female member of the Thomas Cook staff issues foreign currency to an unseen airline passenger in the departures concourse at Heathrow Airport's Terminal 5. This Bureau de Change is one of two companies trading in foreign exchange, travel insurance and travellers cheques for passengers passing through this aviation hub is west London. We see on the wall behind the assistant, a beach paradise scene of palm trees, calm seas and beach chalets, the idea of tranquillity and prosperity. On the left are the exchange rates for the world's currencies for purchase at this kiosk. From writer Alain de Botton's book project "A Week at the Airport: A Heathrow Diary" (2009). .
    heathrow_airport1135-12-08-2009.jpg
  • A renovated Northumbrian village chapel converted into a home with a brown-painted phone box, on 26th September 2017, in Eshott, Northumberland, England.
    eshott-01-26-09-2017.jpg
  • A Christian man sits on a bench outside the Design Museum on Kensington High Street, on 6th January 2019, in London, England.
    jesus_bench-02-06-01-2019.jpg
  • A Christian man sits on a bench outside the Design Museum on Kensington High Street, on 6th January 2019, in London, England.
    jesus_bench-01-06-01-2019.jpg
  • Seen from a low angle inside their open-top classic American car, two openly gay men cuddle up close to look into each other's eyes while holding their favourite cans of Websters Yorkshire bitter (beer). They are attending a classic car rally in Brighton during a Gay Pride festival, that this English seaside town regularly hosts during the hot south coast summers. The large 60s steering wheel is seen in the foreground and the vehicle's leather seat looks shiny clean against the bright light. There is a classic car magazine resting on one man's knee and they are clearly mad about this era of motor transportation.
    gay_pride001-13-07-1998.jpg
  • Tattoed hermit Tom Leppard (aka Leopard Man) comfortable in his secret makeshift underground hideaway shelter on Skye, Scotland
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man157-27-09-2007.jpg
  • Tattoed hermit Tom Leppard (aka Leopard Man) comfortable in his secret makeshift underground hideaway shelter on Skye, Scotland
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man141-27-09-2007.jpg
  • Tattoed hermit Tom Leppard (aka Leopard Man) comfortable in his secret makeshift underground hideaway shelter on Skye, Scotland
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man137-27-09-2007.jpg
  • Tattoed hermit Tom Leppard (aka Leopard Man) makes tea in his secret makeshift underground hideaway shelter on Skye, Scotland
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man128-27-09-2007.jpg
  • Tattoed hermit Tom Leppard (the Leopard Man) looks through wrapped books in his makeshift underground library, Isle of Skye
    5247-RPB59-leopard_man259-27-09-2007.jpg
  • The exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library05-23-02-2016.jpg
  • The frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library03-07-02-2016.jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest16-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest13-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest09-06-02-201...jpg
  • The exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library15-25-02-2016.jpg
  • A mother leads her kids past the exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library14-25-02-2016.jpg
  • A father leads his kids past the exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library09-25-02-2016.jpg
  • A mother leads her kids past the exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library08-25-02-2016.jpg
  • The exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library06-25-02-2016.jpg
  • The exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library05-25-02-2016.jpg
  • A mother leads her kids past the exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library03-25-02-2016.jpg
  • The exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library01-25-02-2016.jpg
  • The exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library04-23-02-2016.jpg
  • The exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library02-23-02-2016.jpg
  • The exterior frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privately-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library01-23-02-2016.jpg
  • The frontage of Carnegie Library in Herne Hill. Faced with the closure of its local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library04-07-02-2016.jpg
  • Interior of Carnegie Library, herne Hill, south London. Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest27-06-02-201...jpg
  • Interior of Carnegie Library, herne Hill, south London. Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest26-06-02-201...jpg
  • A breastfeeding mother in Carnegie Library, Herne Hill, south London. Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest29-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest24-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest22-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest21-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest20-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest18-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest17-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest32-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest31-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest15-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest14-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest12-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest11-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest10-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest08-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest07-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest06-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest05-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest04-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest03-06-02-201...jpg
  • Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, the people of Herne Hill, Lambeth, south London hold a demonstration outside the Edwardian library. Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest02-06-02-201...jpg
  • A breastfeeding mother in Carnegie Library, Herne Hill, south London. Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest28-06-02-201...jpg
  • Taking donations to help raise funds for Carnegie Library, Herne Hill, south London. Faced with the closure of its beloved local library, Lambeth council plan to close the facility used by the community as part of austerity cuts, saying they will convert the building into a gym and privatey-owned gentrified businesses - rather than a much-loved reading and learning resource. £12,600 was donated by the American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie to help build the library which opened in 1906. It is a fine example of Edwardian civic architecture, built with red Flettan bricks and terracotta, listed as Grade II in 1981.
    carnegie_library_protest25-06-02-201...jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-14-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-13-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-08-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-12-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-11-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-10-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-09-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-07-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-06-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-03-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-04-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-05-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-01-15-11-2017.jpg
  • Workmen begin erecting scaffolding to the front of the Grade II listed public Carnegie Library in Herne Hill, closed by Lambeth council in 2016 to partially-convert it into a gym - something locals and library users say they don't want or need, on 15th November 2017, in London, England.
    carnegie_library-02-15-11-2017.jpg
  • A exterior of the now ruined Shildon Engine House, on 29th September 2017, in Blanchland, Northumberland, England. Built around 1805 to house a Cornish pumping engine which kept the network of lead mines operating underneath from flooding. The North Pennines is known for its deposits of lead ore etc., a large part of the area's economy. In the 1840s an enormous steam engine was installed in an attempt to keep the mines dry enough to work. Following decommissioning, the engine house was converted to a series of flats for mining families. It was finally abandoned around 100 years ago and has been derelict ever since. The Engine House is a dramatic reminder of a once thriving lead mining community of 170 people. The population declined after the mid-1800s when cheaper lead began to be imported from abroad, and young Shildon families emigrated to the goldmining areas of Australia and America.
    shildon-02-29-09-2017.jpg
  • A exterior of the now ruined Shildon Engine House, on 29th September 2017, in Blanchland, Northumberland, England. Built around 1805 to house a Cornish pumping engine which kept the network of lead mines operating underneath from flooding. The North Pennines is known for its deposits of lead ore etc., a large part of the area's economy. In the 1840s an enormous steam engine was installed in an attempt to keep the mines dry enough to work. Following decommissioning, the engine house was converted to a series of flats for mining families. It was finally abandoned around 100 years ago and has been derelict ever since. The Engine House is a dramatic reminder of a once thriving lead mining community of 170 people. The population declined after the mid-1800s when cheaper lead began to be imported from abroad, and young Shildon families emigrated to the goldmining areas of Australia and America.
    shildon-01-29-09-2017.jpg
  • Exterior of an Odeon cinema in central London. The Saville Theatre is a former West End theatre at 135 Shaftesbury Avenue in the London Borough of Camden. The exterior of the theatre retains many of the 1930s details, although the wrought iron window on the frontage has been replaced by glass blocks. A sculptured frieze by British sculptor Gilbert Bayes around the building for nearly 130 feet (40 m), remains and represents 'Drama Through The Ages'. The theatre opened in 1931, and became a music venue during the 1960s. In 1970 it became the two cinemas ABC1 Shaftesbury Avenue and ABC2 Shaftesbury Avenue, which in 2001 were converted to the four-screen cinema Odeon Covent Garden. Odeon Cinemas is a British chain of cinemas operating in the United Kingdom and Ireland. The company is one of the largest cinema chains in Europe.
    odeon_cinema01-10-12-2014.jpg
  • Television documentary film maker Desmond Wilcox (1931 – 2000) and production crew during the filming of a programme. The portrait is with members of his colleagues during a break in filming for a programme about Hampstead Heath in London. Desmond John Wilcox (21 May 1931 – 6 September 2000) was a British documentary maker at the BBC and ITV. He was producer of This Week, Man Alive, and That's Life! and married to television presenter Esther Rantzen in 1977. He died of a heart attack in Paddington, London, in 2000, aged 69 after converting to Judaism in 1992.
    desmond_wilcox-18-08-1994.jpg
  • A view along the fuselage of a DC3 Dakota, from its tail aileron to its propeller. Pointing upwards as it sits on a low tail wheel and with one of its 4 propellers still against a blue sky, we see the plane painted in the colours that many appeared in during the D-Day landings in June 1944, from where paratroopers jumped out for the eventual invasion of German-occupied France. The Douglas DC-3 is a fixed-wing propeller-driven airliner. Its speed and range revolutionized air transport in the 1930s and 1940s. Its lasting impact on the airline industry and World War II makes it one of the most significant transport aircraft ever made. Many DC-3s and converted C-47s are still used in all parts of the world. The designation "DC" stands for "Douglas Commercial".
    dakota01-07-08-2000.jpg
  • Converted from an old boat is a ramshackle artist's studio on Eel Pie Island on the River Thames, London. Eel Pie Island is an island in the River Thames at Twickenham in the Borough of Richmond upon Thames, London. It is situated on the Tideway and can be reached only by footbridge or boat. The island was known as a major jazz and blues venue in the 1960s. In 1969, the Eel Pie Island Hotel was occupied by a small group of local anarchists including illustrator Clifford Harper. By 1970 it had become the UK's largest hippie commune.
    eel-pie_island03-09-12-2012.jpg
  • The Thomas Telford-designed church on Ulva, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The Telford Church, Ardalum Ulva. The church was designed by Thomas Telford and built between 1827 and 1828 for a cost of £1,500. Dedicated to St. Ewan of Arstraw the nearest wing has now been partitioned off for use for worship. The remainder of the building is used as a community hall. The church boasts that in 1847 everyone on Ulva attended services including one catholic and one atheist. Isle of Ulva, Inner Hebrides. Ulva is a privately owned island with a thriving population of approximately 16 people who are involved variously in traditional sheep and cattle farming, fish farming, oyster farming and tourism. There are no tarmac roads on Ulva, so the main form of transport is quad bikes used by all inhabitants, young and old. The proprietors (the Howard family) are dedicated to creating a balance between the needs of the community and the preservation of one of Scotland’s most unique, beautiful and accessible islands...This Parliamentary church was one of five churches on Mull and Iona to be designed by Thomas Telford and was completed, along with the manse, in 1828. In the mid 1950s Lady Congleton who owned the island purchased the church and the larger partof it was converted into a community hall. Only the north west portion was retained for ecclesiastical use. The church is now privately owed and a couple of services are conducted every year at Easter and Harvest time
    isle_of_mull239-20-11-2011.jpg
  • The Thomas Telford-designed church on Ulva, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The Telford Church, Ardalum Ulva. The church was designed by Thomas Telford and built between 1827 and 1828 for a cost of £1,500. Dedicated to St. Ewan of Arstraw the nearest wing has now been partitioned off for use for worship. The remainder of the building is used as a community hall. The church boasts that in 1847 everyone on Ulva attended services including one catholic and one atheist. Isle of Ulva, Inner Hebrides. Ulva is a privately owned island with a thriving population of approximately 16 people who are involved variously in traditional sheep and cattle farming, fish farming, oyster farming and tourism. There are no tarmac roads on Ulva, so the main form of transport is quad bikes used by all inhabitants, young and old. The proprietors (the Howard family) are dedicated to creating a balance between the needs of the community and the preservation of one of Scotland’s most unique, beautiful and accessible islands. ..This Parliamentary church was one of five churches on Mull and Iona to be designed by Thomas Telford and was completed, along with the manse, in 1828. In the mid 1950s Lady Congleton who owned the island purchased the church and the larger partof it was converted into a community hall. Only the north west portion was retained for ecclesiastical use. The church is now privately owed and a couple of services are conducted every year at Easter and Harvest time
    isle_of_mull238-20-11-2011.jpg
  • The Thomas Telford-designed church on Ulva, Isle of Mull, Scotland. The Telford Church, Ardalum Ulva. The church was designed by Thomas Telford and built between 1827 and 1828 for a cost of £1,500. Dedicated to St. Ewan of Arstraw the nearest wing has now been partitioned off for use for worship. The remainder of the building is used as a community hall. The church boasts that in 1847 everyone on Ulva attended services including one catholic and one atheist. Isle of Ulva, Inner Hebrides. Ulva is a privately owned island with a thriving population of approximately 16 people who are involved variously in traditional sheep and cattle farming, fish farming, oyster farming and tourism. There are no tarmac roads on Ulva, so the main form of transport is quad bikes used by all inhabitants, young and old. The proprietors (the Howard family) are dedicated to creating a balance between the needs of the community and the preservation of one of Scotland’s most unique, beautiful and accessible islands...This Parliamentary church was one of five churches on Mull and Iona to be designed by Thomas Telford and was completed, along with the manse, in 1828. In the mid 1950s Lady Congleton who owned the island purchased the church and the larger partof it was converted into a community hall. Only the north west portion was retained for ecclesiastical use. The church is now privately owed and a couple of services are conducted every year at Easter and Harvest time
    isle_of_mull239-20-11-2011.jpg
  • The Jewish faith Mikveh baths where recent converts to Judaism bathe in private, at the Sternberg Centre. London.
    jewish_mikveh35-18-03-2010.jpg
  • The Jewish faith Mikveh baths where recent converts to Judaism bathe in private, at the Sternberg Centre. London.
    jewish_mikveh34-18-03-2010.jpg
  • The Jewish faith Mikveh baths where recent converts to Judaism bathe in private, at the Sternberg Centre. London.
    jewish_mikveh26-18-03-2010.jpg
  • The Jewish faith Mikveh baths where recent converts to Judaism bathe in private, at the Sternberg Centre. London.
    jewish_mikveh22-18-03-2010.jpg
  • The Jewish faith Mikveh baths where recent converts to Judaism bathe in private, at the Sternberg Centre. London.
    jewish_mikveh19-18-03-2010.jpg
  • The Jewish faith Mikveh baths where recent converts to Judaism bathe in private, at the Sternberg Centre. London.
    jewish_mikveh18-18-03-2010.jpg
  • The Jewish faith Mikveh baths where recent converts to Judaism bathe in private, at the Sternberg Centre. London.
    jewish_mikveh17-18-03-2010.jpg
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