Video yükleniyor...

Video Yüklenemedi

Ana Sayfaya Dön

Interesting fact.

1,257,270 görüntüleme • 1 yıl önce •via X (Twitter)

10 Yorum

Miguel Caball profil fotoğrafı
Miguel Caball1 yıl önce

Not to light the lamp, to change mantles & stuff Lighting was by a pole with a hook which went into a small chain hanging down from the gas valve. There was a constant pilot light

DavidJWood profil fotoğrafı
DavidJWood1 yıl önce

Idea for a new programme hosted by Jim Moir

Simon Ross profil fotoğrafı
Simon Ross1 yıl önce

Right outside my home of 20 years and I never knew that,every day’s a school day 👌

Séamus Mateus profil fotoğrafı
Séamus Mateus1 yıl önce

My great great grandfather was a lamplighter around Dublin Castle and Temple Bar.

Minxyminx1952🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧 profil fotoğrafı
Minxyminx1952🇬🇧🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧1 yıl önce

Not quite right. These horizontal supports were certainly for ladders but for longer work such as maintenance & repair. The Lamp Lighters had long lighting poles with which to charge the mantles from ground level.

Tim Cooke profil fotoğrafı
Tim Cooke1 yıl önce

No cigar I'm afraid Jim. They were for pigeons, which were much heavier in the old days.

les paul junior 🍔🍺🎸🚍🐕 profil fotoğrafı
les paul junior 🍔🍺🎸🚍🐕1 yıl önce

It is an interesting fact. I’m now imagining a TV series with you and John Shuttleworth travelling round the U.K. pointing these out. You could paint them and he could write a song about them. It’d be better than Antiques Roadshow.

Dave profil fotoğrafı
Dave1 yıl önce

You’re gaslighting us

Coach House Chambers profil fotoğrafı
Coach House Chambers1 yıl önce

Next time you're in Paddington station, look up at the star shaped holes in the roof trusses. They were designed to take scaffolding poles so they could clean the windows without having to build a platform from the floor.

John Meropoulos profil fotoğrafı
John Meropoulos1 yıl önce

That is the best thing I’ve learned on Twitter in a long time. 👏

Benzer Videolar