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Dunno where in Lancashire you are, but it's only 70 miles even from Morecambe.Yes another brilliant feat of engineering - sadly I have not seen that one in real life yet.


Dunno where in Lancashire you are, but it's only 70 miles even from Morecambe.Yes another brilliant feat of engineering - sadly I have not seen that one in real life yet.
I recommend it if you find yourself up that way.Nor I the Falkirk Wheel.
Yes it is remiss of me (I do look across Morecambe Bay a few times each year .Dunno where in Lancashire you are, but it's only 70 miles even from Morecambe.
It certainly wasn't only in mansions. My parents' house where I spent much of the first ~18 years of my life, built in early 20th century, was a very modest 2.5-bed terraced house in the outer NW suburbs of London but when we moved into it (in mid-50s) it had the remnants of a signalling system, with push buttons in the bedrooms and an indicator panel in the kitchen (which had a massive built-in 'Triplex Grate'). It's hard to understand why such a house ever needed such a signalling system, or what it was used for!I`m trying to remember an old domestic signalling system that was deployed in old houses (mansions with servants probably)


I guess by that point servants were less common
Yes, that's the nearest to a possible explanation that I've ever been able to think of. On the assumption that the signalling system was probably 'original' to the house, I can but presume that it was battery-powered, since the house did (and maybe still does, today!) still bear remnants of gas lighting in all the rooms.It was used to reinforce notions of grandeur.
I don't think I've ever seen functioning gas lights inside a building. However, when we moved into the house in question (in mid-50s), the street lights were still gas, and remained so for quite a while.I worked somewhere once which still had functioning gas lights being used in the stairways, which was weird, because it looked like a 1960's building from the outside. Inside felt more 50's, I'd say.
However, when we moved into the house in question (in mid-50s), the street lights were still gas, and remained so for quite a while.
Thank you very much Harry, That was pretty much how I remembered it.The five needle telegraph was not used in domestic applications
If they were near time for coming on, then a good kick would trigger them..

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