Jury hears of lies, affairs, calls to a gay chatline and an incoherent explanation by David Chenery-Wickens after the death of his wife, a Bafta-winning TV makeup artist ... https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HVu9FIRjT_Y
crazed killer believed he really was Freddy Krueger, the star of horror film Nightmare On Elm Street, and set out to murder ten people so he would be remembered forever.
He slashed Mrs Harding's throat and stabbed her in the back as she walked to her home in Highdown, Southwick, on September 15 2004.
...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xB7ym7ba_as
Our Journey begins, I picked up Pete, and we made our way to Shaftsbury, Took around 3 Hours,
We arrived and met up with Dave (West Country Explorer)
I recorded the last 33 miles of the Trip down, and added 2 Songs to listen too whilst you watch the twisty, Turney, Road trip to Wessex.
...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VW2feZiIpik
A short video for the Family of John Humphries and the many soul's of the Ancient Ram Inn, May they all R.I.P.
...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KgDdEKP4Ucs
Lots of whispers caught on camera,
Souls asking for help,
Lots of responses from the Spirit Talker app,
A big Thank you To my Uncle Paul & My Sister Carolyn for coming along.
...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bZbrHr282TM
The origins of Steyning's church are somewhat vague: it was founded around the 8th or 9th centuries, supposedly by St Cuthman. But it is clear that during the 9th century there was a flourishing Minster church here, dedicated to its presumed founder, and Ethelwulf, King of Wessex and the father of Alfred the Great, was buried here in 858. (His body was later moved to Winchester Cathedral.) An ancient gravestone in the porch purports to be from his tomb.
Nothing else recognisably survives from the Saxon period: after the Norman conquest, the church came into the care of the monks of Fecamp Abbey in France, who rebuilt the church in romanesque style between the late 11th and mid 12th centuries. The porch was added in the 15th century and the tower in the 16th, but after the dissolution, the Norman chancel decayed and the present chancel is a Victorian addition.
But the nave remains a Norman building of very high quality, which makes a strong, even dramatic impression as you enter. The arcades and clerestory are richly carved, with the typical Norman decorations across the arches and columns of ziz-zag and dogtooth carving, with additional human and animal motifs. The whole scheme is a delight, and is preserved in excellent condition.
...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zljwb8YuWSw
The church was built in 1820 as a chapel of ease, and much work survives from that time. A difficult item to explain is a copy of a painting of the original church at the W end of the building. This shows the nave as it is today but there is no W tower visible. Although the nave and tower are usually stated to be of 1820 it is possible that the tower followed on a little after the nave as it is hard to explain the lack of a tower as an artist¿s omission. The church gained parish status in 1894. The modern extension contains kitchen and meeting rooms.
The designer of the chancel, Thomas Graham Jackson (1835-1924), was a leading architect of the late C19 and early C20. He was articled to George Gilbert Scott from 1858 and began in independent practice in 1862. He is best known for his secular work and in particular his extensive commissions within the University of Oxford. He was also a considerable scholar and wrote several books on historic architecture. He was created a baronet in 1913.
...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uesAK8wDZdU