EPW002092 ENGLAND (1920). Lancaster Castle and environs, Lancaster, 1920

© Hawlfraint cyfranwyr OpenStreetMap a thrwyddedwyd gan yr OpenStreetMap Foundation. 2025. Trwyddedir y gartograffeg fel CC BY-SA.

Delweddau cyfagos (15)

EPW002092
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EPW002086
  329° 52m
EAW037592
  118° 58m
EPW029178
  100° 69m
EAW003570
  112° 71m
EAW005632
  93° 71m
EAW005633
  90° 71m
EAW005630
  98° 74m
EPW042027
  115° 77m
EAW005629
  116° 79m
EPW042028
  94° 84m
EAW005631
  128° 103m
EAW023385
  72° 118m
EPW026404
  108° 120m
EAW023386
  138° 121m

Manylion

Pennawd [EPW002092] Lancaster Castle and environs, Lancaster, 1920
Cyfeirnod EPW002092
Dyddiad July-1920
Dolen
Enw lle LANCASTER
Plwyf
Ardal
Gwlad ENGLAND
Dwyreiniad / Gogleddiad 347287, 461879
Hydred / Lledred -2.8052212159713, 54.049989931319
Cyfeirnod Grid Cenedlaethol SD473619

Pinnau

Lancaster prison’s female wing, one of the few remaining examples of the Panopticon design conceived by Samuel Bentham and promoted by Jeremy Bentham from the late 1700’s. The Panopticon principle is that a small number of supervisors can oversee a large amount of activity albeit in a factory, prison, hospital, asylum etc, by being positioned in a central location from which all activity is visible. ‘…the Female Penitentiary, designed by Joseph Gandy and built between 1818 and 1821, next to the Female Felons’Tower of 1792/3. The Female Penitentiary is a particularly interesting design for a prison, very different from the ‘Pentonville’ style of cells in two long rows facing an open area where prisoners can meet. This style of prison can be found in the two floors of A Wing of Lancaster Castle, the Male Penitentiary of the mid-1800s. The female Penitentiary, in contrast, comprises five floors, the basement for stores, ground floor for offices and hospital and above these four floors each with nine cells, these being arranged in a fan-shape.’ From LANCASTER CASTLE’S FEMALE PENITENTIARY, Lancaster Civic Vision Guide 118. Text – Gordon Clark. Published by Lancaster Civic Vision (2023). https://www.lancastercivicsociety.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/10/Lancaster-Castles-Female-Penitentiary.pdf https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panopticon

Kentishman
Tuesday 18th of February 2025 07:20:35 AM
Lancaster Castle and prison. Records of the castle's use as a prison go back to 1196. After continual use during the 18th and 19th Centuries, the prison was closed in 1916. However, in 1955 HM Prison Lancaster was opened on the site and continued until closure in 2011. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lancaster_Castle

Kentishman
Monday 17th of February 2025 03:48:23 PM
Glasson Dock branch curving off

DaveH
Friday 26th of March 2021 01:32:45 AM
Lancaster Castle station

DaveH
Friday 26th of March 2021 01:31:29 AM
Greyhound Bridge.

John Wass
Saturday 19th of August 2017 02:34:52 PM
Midland Railway loco shed.

John Wass
Saturday 19th of August 2017 02:33:37 PM
Town Hall, Lancaster, 16/07/2015

Class31
Sunday 19th of July 2015 07:28:06 PM
Dalton Square, Lancaster, 16/07/2015

Class31
Sunday 19th of July 2015 07:25:58 PM
Lancaster Baptist Church, 16/07/2015

Class31
Sunday 19th of July 2015 07:24:53 PM
Lancaster City Museum, 16/07/2015

Class31
Sunday 19th of July 2015 07:23:43 PM
Royal King's Arms Hotel, Lancaster, 16/07/2015

Class31
Sunday 19th of July 2015 07:23:02 PM
Green Ayre Station

stuart
Sunday 1st of July 2012 10:58:12 AM
Electric trains reversed here and crossed the Greyhound bridge to go to Morecambe.

John Wass
Saturday 10th of January 2015 07:41:17 PM
what are these gantries for if rail lines were not electrified until the 1960s?

steve
Wednesday 27th of June 2012 09:30:42 PM
See the comments by Senogdet

senojdet
Sunday 1st of July 2012 08:33:23 PM
See the comments by Senojdet.

senojdet
Sunday 1st of July 2012 08:35:22 PM
These lines were electrified in 1908, well berore the 1960s.

Hence the gantries.

Brigham
Tuesday 6th of August 2024 07:17:48 PM

Cyfraniadau Grŵp

The Gantries were for Electric trains that ran from Castle Station to Green Ayre, Morecambe Promenade Station and Heysham Docks. The line was opened on 1 July 1908 and ran until Feb 1951 when steam engines hauled the trains until Aug 53 when Electric took over again. Quite a few experiments were carried out on this line. The Electric trains in 1960 were the Main line conversions and during this time the Ribbleshead Viaduct showed it's worth when trains were diverted during this work.

senojdet
Sunday 1st of July 2012 08:32:34 PM
Lancaster Castle and Priory With Green Ayre Station at the top left corner. The curved Greyhound rail bridge is now a road bridge.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lancaster_Green_Ayre_railway_station

Robert - Cumbria
Tuesday 26th of June 2012 10:57:35 PM
Lancaster Castle and Priory with the Castle Station to the right and the River Lune to the top left showing the old Greyhound Bridge just in the top left corner Green Ayre Station.



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lancaster_Green_Ayre_railway_station

Robert - Cumbria
Tuesday 26th of June 2012 10:43:17 PM