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Posted
37 minutes ago, Wymsey said:

Highgate Cemetery.

IMG_3648.jpg?fit=1200,900&ssl=1

 

 

Bizarrely, a place I'd love to visit, looking at the names on headstones and wondering what life they led. 

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
5 minutes ago, Parafox said:

 

Bizarrely, a place I'd love to visit, looking at the names on headstones and wondering what life they led. 

Indeed.

 

I currently work a stone's throw away from there (Whittington Hospital) and have been recommended to visit.

Edited by Wymsey
Posted
5 minutes ago, Wymsey said:

Indeed.

 

I currently work a stone's throw away from there (Whittington Hospital) and have been recommended to visit.

 

Have you ever been to the Hunterian Museum? That's is a fascinating place to visit if you're into surgical and anatomical history.

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Posted
3 minutes ago, Parafox said:

 

Have you ever been to the Hunterian Museum? That's is a fascinating place to visit if you're into surgical and anatomical history.

Never heard of it, admittedly, but I'll certainly give it a thought as am quite interested in the latter.

 

Thanks.

Posted

442414875_122149071662200825_78735358993

Murdo518  · 

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Castellfollit de La Roca, Spain The basalt crag where the town is situated is over 50 meters (160 feet) high and almost a kilometer long. It was formed by the overlaying of two lava flows
Posted
On 09/05/2024 at 19:41, Parafox said:

 

Bizarrely, a place I'd love to visit, looking at the names on headstones and wondering what life they led. 

The Necropolis in Glasgow is worth a visit too. Best views of the city as well as amazing tombs.

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Posted
2 hours ago, davieG said:

442414875_122149071662200825_78735358993

Murdo518  · 

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Castellfollit de La Roca, Spain The basalt crag where the town is situated is over 50 meters (160 feet) high and almost a kilometer long. It was formed by the overlaying of two lava flows

Looks like a sea(cliff)side village in Norfolk.

  • 5 weeks later...
Posted

No photo description available.

Lovable Nerds  · 

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The Fuller building in 1903. With the building's resemblance to a clothes iron, it was nicknamed "Flatiron building". After it's completion in 1902, it was one of the tallest buildings in New York city. With 20 floors and a height of 285 feet, it's one of the city's oldest surviving skyscrapers and has been designated as a NYC landmark and a national historic landmark.

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