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London Transport (uk.transport.london) Discussion of all forms of transport in London. |
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#1
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![]() I think they would be a lot more useful if they had little flags hanging above them, giving an indication of which people might be interested in them. For instance, not many Londoners would be interested in a plaque about how the founder of Bolivia once lived in this house, whereas Bolivian tourists would probably like to have it drawn to their attention that of all the blue plaques in London, this is the one which is of interest to them, so a little flagpole with a Bolivian flag above the blue plaque would help everyone. I don't think it would spoil conservation areas either. |
#2
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On Sun, 17 Aug 2008, John Rowland wrote:
I think they would be a lot more useful if they had little flags hanging above them, giving an indication of which people might be interested in them. For instance, not many Londoners would be interested in a plaque about how the founder of Bolivia once lived in this house, Well they should be, the ignorant oiks. That's history! whereas Bolivian tourists would probably like to have it drawn to their attention that of all the blue plaques in London, this is the one which is of interest to them, so a little flagpole with a Bolivian flag above the blue plaque would help everyone. I don't think it would spoil conservation areas either. I think that's quite a nice idea. You might want to subdivide further than by country, though - if, say, 90% of plaques are about British people (does that sounds plausible? where's that Jelf when you need him? JELF!), then the national flag isn't providing a lot of information about those ones. Maybe we could have further flags which indicate that the person was an artist, engineer, politician, etc, or what century they were from. Perhaps the maritime signal flags could be used for this; letters for classifications, and numeral pennants for date (if the relevant year is 1xyy, fly pennant x; fly 0 for years before 1000, and, oh i don't know, the answering pennant for dates after 1999). tom -- History, I believe, furnishes no example of a priest-ridden people maintaining a free civil government. -- Thomas Jefferson |
#3
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![]() "John Rowland" wrote in message ... I think they would be a lot more useful if they had little flags hanging above them, giving an indication of which people might be interested in them. For instance, not many Londoners would be interested in a plaque about how the founder of Bolivia once lived in this house, whereas Bolivian tourists would probably like to have it drawn to their attention that of all the blue plaques in London, this is the one which is of interest to them, so a little flagpole with a Bolivian flag above the blue plaque would help everyone. I don't think it would spoil conservation areas either. Presumably these Bolivian tourists don't wander around London aimlessly on the off chance they might find a Bolivian-related blue plaque. If they particularly wanted to see the house of the founder of Bolivia they would look up the location beforehand and a flag would not be necessary. Peter Smyth |
#4
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On Aug 17, 5:07*pm, "Peter Smyth" wrote:
"John Rowland" wrote in message ... I think they would be a lot more useful if they had little flags hanging above them, giving an indication of which people might be interested in them. For instance, not many Londoners would be interested in a plaque about how the founder of Bolivia once lived in this house, whereas Bolivian tourists would probably like to have it drawn to their attention that of all the blue plaques in London, this is the one which is of interest to them, so a little flagpole with a Bolivian flag above the blue plaque would help everyone. I don't think it would spoil conservation areas either. Presumably these Bolivian tourists don't wander around London aimlessly on the off chance they might find a Bolivian-related blue plaque. If they particularly wanted to see the house of the founder of Bolivia they would look up the location beforehand and a flag would not be necessary. Apparently he did go to London in 1910, but I don't know where he stayed, and he probably wouldn't have had a house. |
#5
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On Sun, 17 Aug 2008, MIG wrote:
On Aug 17, 5:07*pm, "Peter Smyth" wrote: "John Rowland" wrote in message ... I think they would be a lot more useful if they had little flags hanging above them, giving an indication of which people might be interested in them. For instance, not many Londoners would be interested in a plaque about how the founder of Bolivia once lived in this house, whereas Bolivian tourists would probably like to have it drawn to their attention that of all the blue plaques in London, this is the one which is of interest to them, so a little flagpole with a Bolivian flag above the blue plaque would help everyone. I don't think it would spoil conservation areas either. Presumably these Bolivian tourists don't wander around London aimlessly on the off chance they might find a Bolivian-related blue plaque. If they particularly wanted to see the house of the founder of Bolivia they would look up the location beforehand and a flag would not be necessary. Apparently he did go to London in 1910, but I don't know where he stayed, and he probably wouldn't have had a house. Who is "he"? I'm not sure any one person can really be called the founder of Bolivia, but Simon Bolivar came to London in *1810*, and stayed at 4 Duke Street, just up from Selfridges. http://www.blueplaque.com/detail.php?plaque_id=393 tom -- The most successful people are those who are good at plan B. -- James Yorke |
#6
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On Aug 17, 8:12*pm, Tom Anderson wrote:
On Sun, 17 Aug 2008, MIG wrote: On Aug 17, 5:07*pm, "Peter Smyth" wrote: "John Rowland" wrote in message ... I think they would be a lot more useful if they had little flags hanging above them, giving an indication of which people might be interested in them. For instance, not many Londoners would be interested in a plaque about how the founder of Bolivia once lived in this house, whereas Bolivian tourists would probably like to have it drawn to their attention that of all the blue plaques in London, this is the one which is of interest to them, so a little flagpole with a Bolivian flag above the blue plaque would help everyone. I don't think it would spoil conservation areas either. Presumably these Bolivian tourists don't wander around London aimlessly on the off chance they might find a Bolivian-related blue plaque. If they particularly wanted to see the house of the founder of Bolivia they would look up the location beforehand and a flag would not be necessary. Apparently he did go to London in 1910, but I don't know where he stayed, and he probably wouldn't have had a house. Who is "he"? I'm not sure any one person can really be called the founder of Bolivia, but Simon Bolivar came to London in *1810*, and stayed at 4 Duke Street, just up from Selfridges. Sorry, typo. http://www.blueplaque.com/detail.php?plaque_id=393 tom -- The most successful people are those who are good at plan B. -- James Yorke- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#7
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Tom Anderson writes:
I think that's quite a nice idea. You might want to subdivide further than by country, though - if, say, 90% of plaques are about British people ... then the national flag isn't providing a lot of information about those ones. Ah, but the trick is to use the *correct* national flag. For Samuel Pepys, the St. George's Cross; for Samuel Johnson, the Union Jack without the red diagonal cross; for Samuel Palmer, the present version. -- Mark Brader, Toronto "He seems unable to win without the added thrill of changing sides." -- Chess My text in this article is in the public domain. |
#8
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On Mon, 18 Aug 2008, Mark Brader wrote:
Tom Anderson writes: I think that's quite a nice idea. You might want to subdivide further than by country, though - if, say, 90% of plaques are about British people ... then the national flag isn't providing a lot of information about those ones. Ah, but the trick is to use the *correct* national flag. For Samuel Pepys, the St. George's Cross; for Samuel Johnson, the Union Jack without the red diagonal cross; for Samuel Palmer, the present version. Ingenious! And for any Samuels born from about 2020 on, we can just use the EU flag, right John? ![]() tom -- Suddenly, everything is clear ... |
#9
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Mark Brader wrote:
Tom Anderson writes: I think that's quite a nice idea. You might want to subdivide further than by country, though - if, say, 90% of plaques are about British people ... then the national flag isn't providing a lot of information about those ones. Ah, but the trick is to use the *correct* national flag. For Samuel Pepys, the St. George's Cross; for Samuel Johnson, the Union Jack without the red diagonal cross; for Samuel Palmer, the present version. That could cause problems. For example, would you use pre- or post- 1800 Union Flag for Wellington? Then there are the really awkward people like Alexander Graham Bell[1]. Would he have a Union Flag, a defaced (Canadian) red ensign, or the Stars and Stripes (and in that case, how many stars)? Robin |
#10
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R.C. Payne wrote:
Mark Brader wrote: Tom Anderson writes: I think that's quite a nice idea. You might want to subdivide further than by country, though - if, say, 90% of plaques are about British people ... then the national flag isn't providing a lot of information about those ones. Ah, but the trick is to use the *correct* national flag. For Samuel Pepys, the St. George's Cross; for Samuel Johnson, the Union Jack without the red diagonal cross; for Samuel Palmer, the present version. That could cause problems. For example, would you use pre- or post- 1800 Union Flag for Wellington? Then there are the really awkward people like Alexander Graham Bell[1]. Would he have a Union Flag, a defaced (Canadian) red ensign, or the Stars and Stripes (and in that case, how many stars)? The flags are not for the deceased, they are for the tourists, so you would use current flags only - this would be a necessity, since a lot of people don't want to see Swastikas all over London, and a quarter of the world used to have a Union Jack flying over it anyway. You would use English/Welsh/Scottish/Norn Iron flags instead of Union flags, again maximising usefulness to (British) tourists. It wouldn't have to be one flag only. |
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