The stamps show:-
Top left - Llandudno Pier, the longest in Wales and is considered the finest surviving Victorian Pier in the country because it has been relatively disaster free. When English Heritage gave it its listed status they described its style as 'Indian Gothic'.
Top right - Dunoon Pier in Scotland. Paddle steamers used to ply between here and Glasgow. Amazingly a paddle steamer is still taking passengers down the Clyde, and this is the Waverley (launched in 1945). In 1977 she made her first trip away from there to celebrate the centenary of Llandudno Pier, sailing down to Fleetwood, Liverpool and then Llandudno.
Bottom left - Brighton Pier which is in actuality called Palace Pier because there used to be more than one at Brighton but this is the survivor and which, as can be see, has a wonderful helter-skelter on it.
Bottom Right - Worthing Pier. This has had the usual disasters of fire and storm damage but it must be the only one which was deliberately damaged when they blew a hole in it in World War 2 to prevent it being used in the event of an invasion. The stamp shows the 1935 amusement pavilion.
An entry to Viridian Postcards's Sunday Stamps theme of anything you like here
5 comments:
I've not seen any of these yet. Can't wait to receive them.
I have received some of these, and I found them wonderful.
I have even scheduled a post about these stamps in my blog!
Nice stamps, but I think gray skies are depressing. (It is gray here this morning)
such a beautiful mini-sheet, I hadn't seen it before, probably as they are so hard to find at the Post Office.
I love the idea of these piers (we don't have anything near so grand (but then we don't have a sea in Ontario, either). This is a nice set.
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