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I have a lifelong interest with the Ordnance Survey. As a child I made sure I was outside the house where I live (Argyle Road) for when the bugle from the barracks would sound the end of the working day. Shortly after a soldier would walk down Northbrook Road wearing his uniform. I was always puzzled by the garters he wore. Over the years of course I got to know people working at the survey. I married one who at 17 decided to leave Wales and join the survey. A few years ago my daughter [was] driving us along Derby Road when I mentioned “The Rope Walk” situated at the bottom of our garden and how I had as a child wanted to see it.
You don t want her - she s an awful scrawny thing, said the nun to the married woman who stopped in front of my crib.
The woman was invited to choose a baby from a large number of young children in cribs that filled a big room in Saint Patrick s Home in Dublin in September 1963.
The woman began to cry. She felt she couldn t make such a choice. She and her husband expected the nuns would have handed them a baby to adopt and she was overwhelmed when told she must choose a child from all the babies in front of her.
A Lewisham resident who defeated Lewisham Council in a tribunal over a penalty charge notice (PCN) is asking for others to be reversed. Oliver Du Sautoy brought the council to tribunal after being slapped with a fine for going through a camera-enforced barrier within the Lewisham and Lee Green low traffic neighbourhood. He argued that the particular modal filter, where Northbrook Road and Manor Park meet, was badly signposted.
Before The council changed the signage months after the LTN launched and after Mr Du Sautoy went through the barrier. After On December 7 an adjudicator at London Tribunals ordered the council to cancel his fine and to refund any money that had already been paid.
A Lewisham resident who defeated Lewisham Council in a tribunal over a penalty charge notice (PCN) is asking for others to be reversed. Oliver Du Sautoy brought the council to tribunal after being slapped with a fine for going through a camera-enforced barrier within the Lewisham and Lee Green low traffic neighbourhood. He argued that the particular modal filter, where Northbrook Road and Manor Park meet, was badly signposted.
Before The council changed the signage months after the LTN launched and after Mr Du Sautoy went through the barrier. After On December 7 an adjudicator at London Tribunals ordered the council to cancel his fine and to refund any money that had already been paid.