Six Things on

War and peace at Caernarfon Castle, North Wales

War and peace at Caernarfon Castle, North Wales

Caernarfon Castle is a medieval fortress in Gwynedd, north-west Wales. The first fortifications there were built by the Romans, on the outskirts of the modern town. Although little is known about the fate of the fort after the Romans departed in the early 5th century, another castle was built in the medieval period, and has enjoyed a rich history since.

Robert Stephenson - the man behind the worldwide railway boom

Robert Stephenson - the man behind the worldwide railway boom

Robert Stephenson was an English civil engineer and designer of locomotives. The only son of George Stephenson, the "Father of Railways", he built on his father's achievement, with both the technical design of steam engines and the spread of railways around Britain and the world, and has been called the greatest engineer of the 19th century.

Tarmacadam: an invention given an essential tweak

Tarmacadam: an invention given an essential tweak

The tarmac that covers our roads is famously credited to the Scottish engineer and inventor John Loudon McAdam. However, county council surveyor Edgar Hooley is the man that pioneered the world’s first tarmac road in Nottingham.

Brimham Rocks - Bizarre rock formations in Yorkshire

Brimham Rocks - Bizarre rock formations in Yorkshire

Brimham Rocks is a 454-acre Site of Special Scientific Interest(SSSI), near Harrogate, North Yorkshire, on Brimham Moor in the Nidderdale Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. The site is known for its water and weather-eroded rocks, which were formed over 325 million years ago and have assumed fantastic shapes.

The first railway tragedy - an inattentive politician

The first railway tragedy - an inattentive politician

William Huskisson was a British politician and former Cabinet minister who had the misfortune to become the first casualty of the newly invented railway. He was run over by George Stephenson's locomotive 'Rocket' at the opening ceremony of the Liverpool & Manchester Railway in 1830.

The BBC Testcard F - icon of TV history

The BBC Testcard F - icon of TV history

Test Card F was a picture created by the BBC in the 1960s to support the development of television technology and help deliver a quality screen image on receiving equipment, and to support the calibration of TV sets by manufacturers, owners and installation engineers.

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