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  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646044_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646061_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646050_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646047_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646062_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Barney Strange climbing out of the hatch during a visit by potential buyers to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646045_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Harvie Strange climbing out of the hatch during a visit by potential buyers to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646064_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Warren Bardsley, one of the potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646049_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Warren Bardsley, one of the potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646048_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646046_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Warren Bardsley, one of the potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646029_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Warren Bardsley, one of the potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646060_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646063_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646058_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    DUKAS_172646059_EYE
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction
    Cumbrian nuclear bunker goes to auction. Potential buyers view property mooted as a music studio, novelty Airbnb or even a hideaway for world war three.

    It’s a property with no windows, no running water and no mod cons except for a phone line. But there is parking, the countryside is phenomenal and when Armageddon happens it could be perfect.

    This week will bring the rare sale of a 1958 nuclear bunker in the Cumbrian Dales near Sedbergh.

    It was one of about 1,500 Royal Observer Corps monitoring posts built across the UK at the height of cold war fears of nuclear attack.

    Potential buyers on a visit to inspect a Royal Observer Corps nuclear bunker near Dent Railway station in Cumbria. The site is being offered for sale at auction with SDL Property Auctions who have listed it with a guide price of £15-20,000.
    The once in a generation opportunity is to buy a ROC Nuclear Bunker otherwise known as A Royal Observer post. This particular site was one of many built in the 1950s and was designed to provide protective accommodation for three observers to survive a nuclear attack, they were expected to report on the nuclear bursts and on the fall out of a nuclear attack. They were provided with enough food and water for fourteen days and had a land line and radio communications available to them.
    Dent, UK. 22 July 2024.

    Christopher Thomond / Guardian / eyevine

    Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
    T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
    E: info@eyevine.com
    http://www.eyevine.com
    (FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE)

    Christopher Thomond

     

  • Prince Charles Visits Kirby Lonsdale
    DUKAS_29407235_GOF
    Prince Charles Visits Kirby Lonsdale
    28th March, 2013: HRH the Prince of Wales visits Kirby Lonsdale on his visit to Cumbria. He received an Easter egg from local children and then poured himself a pint of Jubilee Beer from the Kirby Lonsdale Brewery and met schoolchildren taking part in a Maundy Thursday procession.

    Credit: Stewart/GoffPhotos.com Ref: KGC-55 (FOTO: DUKAS/GOFF)

    DUKAS/GOFF

     

  • Prince Charles Visits Kirby Lonsdale
    DUKAS_29407213_GOF
    Prince Charles Visits Kirby Lonsdale
    28th March, 2013: HRH the Prince of Wales visits Kirby Lonsdale on his visit to Cumbria. He received an Easter egg from local children and then poured himself a pint of Jubilee Beer from the Kirby Lonsdale Brewery and met schoolchildren taking part in a Maundy Thursday procession.

    Credit: Stewart/GoffPhotos.com Ref: KGC-55 (FOTO: DUKAS/GOFF)

    DUKAS/GOFF

     

  • Prince Charles Visits Kirby Lonsdale
    DUKAS_29407188_GOF
    Prince Charles Visits Kirby Lonsdale
    28th March, 2013: HRH the Prince of Wales visits Kirby Lonsdale on his visit to Cumbria. He received an Easter egg from local children and then poured himself a pint of Jubilee Beer from the Kirby Lonsdale Brewery and met schoolchildren taking part in a Maundy Thursday procession.

    Credit: Stewart/GoffPhotos.com Ref: KGC-55 (FOTO: DUKAS/GOFF)

    DUKAS/GOFF

     

  • Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14436348_REX
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 1190069c )
    Derrick Bird
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Taxi driver Derrick Bird, 52, who killed 12 people and injured a number of others during a shooting spree in the Lake District in Cumbria yesterday before killing himself. He is pictured during a holiday in Tenerife
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14436347_REX
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 1190069d )
    Garry Purdham, one of the victims murdered by Derrick Bird
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Garry Purdham, 31, a farmer's son and amateur rugby league player, one of the victims murdered by taxi driver Derrick Bird, 52, who killed 12 people and injured a number of others during a shooting spree in the Lake District in Cumbria yesterday before killing himself. Garry, a father-of-two and brother of Harlequins rugby league team captain Rob Purdham, was shot dead as he helped his uncle trim hedges in Gosforth
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14436346_REX
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 1190069e )
    Jamie Clark, one of the victims murdered by Derrick Bird
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Estate agent Jamie Clark, 23, one of the victims murdered by taxi driver Derrick Bird, 52, who killed 12 people and injured a number of others during a shooting spree in the Lake District in Cumbria yesterday before killing himself. Jamie was driving near Seascale when Bird opened fire and had moved to the area from Buckinghamshire to live with his fiance. He is pictured in a photo posted in tribute to him and the other victims on an obituary website.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14436345_REX
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 1190069g )
    Darren Rewcastle, one of the victims murdered by taxi driver Derrick Bird
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Darren Rewcastle, one of the victims murdered by taxi driver Derrick Bird, 52, who killed 12 people and injured a number of others during a shooting spree in the Lake District in Cumbria yesterday before killing himself. Darren, from Bigrigg, worked with Bird as a taxi driver and was said to be his friend. He was shot dead when Bird produced a gun and began shooting at his work colleagues in Duke Street, Whitehaven
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14436344_REX
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 1190069f )
    Jane Robinson, one of the victims murdered by Derrick Bird
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Jane Robinson, 66, one of the victims murdered by taxi driver Derrick Bird, 52, who killed 12 people and injured a number of others during a shooting spree in the Lake District in Cumbria yesterday before killing himself. Jane was shot dead in Drigg Road, Seascale, near her home.
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14436339_REX
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 1190069b )
    Derrick Bird
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Taxi driver Derrick Bird, 52, who killed 12 people and injured a number of others during a shooting spree in the Lake District in Cumbria yesterday before killing himself. He is pictured during a holiday in Tenerife
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    DUKAS_14436338_REX
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Rex Features ( 1190069a )
    Derrick Bird
    Derrick Bird Cumbrian shooting massacre, Cumbria, Britain - 02 Jun 2010
    Taxi driver Derrick Bird, 52, who killed 12 people and injured a number of others during a shooting spree in the Lake District in Cumbria yesterday before killing himself. He is pictured during a holiday in Tenerife
    (FOTO:DUKAS/REX)

    DUKAS/REX

     

  • British Isles - Heritage of England
    DUKAS_08969350_ZUM
    British Isles - Heritage of England
    A view to Packhorse Bridge and Watendlath Beck in the Lake District (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
    DUKAS/ZUMA