
This is what Whitley Bay looked like in the 1970s years before I was born this is Whitley Bay Beach from the 70s. As you can see it is a lot different then how it is now and it has changed a lot to.
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This is what Whitley Bay looked like in the 1970s years before I was born this is Whitley Bay Beach from the 70s. As you can see it is a lot different then how it is now and it has changed a lot to.

This was one of my favourite episodes of Scooby Doo it is Foul Play In Funland. I have loved this episode since I was little me and my brother Dan use to watch this episode all the time when we were younger. I still watch it with my niece Ellie sometimes to and it still is one of my favourite Scooby Doo episodes that I still like watching with Ellie I think it is really funny to. I use to love watching it at my grandmas house now now and again with my brother Dan when me and Dan were little to.

I use to love going to Metroland for years when I was younger I use to go for years when I was little. It was one of my favourite places to go to when I was really young I use to go all time and this is the yellow rollercoaster track.

These are the really old vanished buses from the 70s and 1980s from before I was born. These buses use to go all over and a lot of people use to get on them they use to be loads of people that use to travel around on them.

I love my new coat it’s nice and long and warm I bought it at Silverlink just last Tuesday. I think it’s really nice it keeps me nice and warm when I have it on to.

This is what Tynemouth Longsands Beach use to look like in the 1970s before I was born this is what it was like in the 70s. A lot different then what it looks like now this is a art picture of it that someone has drawing to show people what Tynemouth Longsands looked like back then.

I use to love watching the Batman And Robin cartoons when I was little I use to really enjoy them. I watched them for years when I was younger I thought they use to be funny they use to be on in the mornings and I use to watch them in the mornings to.

I really like Elton John I love his music I love listening to most of his songs in my music library on my iPhone I think he is really good. I love his music I have just downloaded and bought ten of his songs that I love on my iTunes in to my music library on my iPhone.

I love this song it is from 98 the song it came out on the 3rd November 1998 when I was twelve years old when I was in year seven and in my first year at Southlands School when I was younger. I love the song I love listening to it on my iPhone in my music library now and again to. I have loved the song since I have been younger and the music video was filmed at Newcastle Eldon Square.

The Collingwood Monument is a Grade II* listed[1][2] monument in Tynemouth, England, dedicated to Vice Admiral Lord Cuthbert Collingwood. A Napoleonic-eraadmiral noted for being second-in-command to Admiral Lord Nelson during the Battle of Trafalgar, Collingwood is sometimes referred to as the forgotten hero of Trafalgar.[3][4] The monument’s base is by John Dobson and the statue is a work of the sculptor John Graham Lough. It is situated just off of Front Street in Tynemouth and overlooks the mouth of the River Tyne.
Lord Collingwood was born in Newcastle upon Tyne, the son of a merchant.[5] He attended the Royal Grammar School[6] and joined the Royal Navy as a volunteer at the age of 12. From there he continued his nautical education under his cousin Captain Richard Brathwaite. After serving in the British Naval Brigade at the Battle of Bunker Hill, Collingwood was commissioned in 1775 as a lieutenant. His first command was HMS Badger, after succeeding Horatio Nelson, and his first major command was HMS Sampson. During the Battle of Trafalgar Collingwood assumed command of the British fleet after the death of Lord Nelson, transferring to HMS Euryalus. Collingwood then led the fleet and completed the battle plans that he and Nelson had created together.[3] For his role in the battle Collingwood was given the thanks of both houses of Parliament and awarded a pension of £2,000 per annum, as well as being promoted on 9 November 1805 to Vice-Admiral of the Red and raised to the peerage as Baron Collingwood, of Caldburne and Hethpool in the County of Northumberland.[7]
In 1805 Collingwood was appointed to the Commander-in-Chief, Mediterranean Fleet. After requesting to be relieved of his command the Government stated that it urgently required an admiral of his calibre to lead against the dangers of the French and her allies, and that his country could therefore not dispense of him. However, in 1809 his health declined and he was granted leave. In 1810 Collingwood died of cancer on board the HMS Ville de Paris as he sailed for England.[8] He was laid to rest beside Lord Nelson in St Paul’s Cathedral. During his career he had served in the American Revolutionary War, the French Revolutionary Wars and the Napoleonic Wars, and had been awarded three Naval Gold Medals, making him one of only three people to share the distinction of earning a total of three.[9]The inscription on the base of the plinth.
The monument was erected to commemorate Collingwood and his connection to North Shields; it was deliberately positioned so that it could be seen from the Tyne. It was erected by public subscription. The architect was John Dobson and John Graham Lough was responsible for the sculpture. The monument features a high wide base, with slit openings and a door in the rear. A flight of steps leads to the base of the plinth and side walls flank the steps. Upon the walls are four cannon from HMS Royal Sovereign, Collingwood’s flagship during the Battle of Trafalgar. The statue of Collingwood stands upon this plinth and the is draped in a cloak over Collingwood’s Royal Navy uniform.[clarification needed] The figure’s left hand rests on a bollard wrapped in rope.[2]
The monument was completed in 1845 except for the cannon, which were added in 1849.[2]
The inscription on the plinth.