IAN BRADY THE GATES OF JANUS WAR HILL HATTERSLEY , USE OF ASTRONOMY , OCCULTISM MOORS MURDERS
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IAN BRADY THE GATES OF JANUS WAR HILL HATTERSLEY , USE OF ASTRONOMY , OCCULTISM MOORS MURDERS

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The St Michael and all Angels Church shares its name with the same one at Haworth where the Bronte's are buried .. W / H .. has a memorial and burial of a local called Lawrence EARNSHAW ( Think Cathy in Wuthering heights and we have a W/H character name ) .. W/H on the plans found 5 mins away at the house in Hattersley .. Brady we know was using Star Mapping , and often spoke of the Navy .. and sailing .. The history of Lawrence Earnshaw ..
Laurence Earnshaw (died 1767), was an 18th-century English mechanic and inventor. A monument was raised to Earnshaw's memory in 1868 in Mottram cemetery, until which his works remained largely unrecognised.Earnshaw was born in the early eighteenth century at Wednescough, in the parish of Mottram-in-Longdendale, Cheshire, England. Earnshaw's father was a weaver. After serving a seven-year apprenticeship to his father's business, Earnshaw was apprenticed to a tailor for four years, and then again to a clockmaker in Stockport. Earnshaw had developed interests in diverse fields like musical instrument-making, sundial-making, bellfounding, gilding, engraving, painting, metal works, optical instruments, mathematics, chemistry and metallurgy,. In 1753, Earnshaw is said to have invented a machine that could spin and reel cotton in a single operation, which he exhibited to some neighbours and then destroyed, fearing that its use might deprive the poor of the benefit of their labour, though the report is not generally considered true. Earnshaw also invented a machine to raise water from a coal mine at Hague, near Mottram. Earnshaw's greatest work is considered to be the making of an astronomical clock, which took him several years to complete. He made many of these clocks. One of such clocks was sold to John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute, for £150, and it later became the property of Lord Lonsdale. Earnshaw's earnings were only small despite his great local fame as a mechanic, and he remained poor to the end. His wife was bedridden for many years, and his privations were increased in the latter period of his life by his own lameness.
Earnshaw was a good friend of the better known English engineer James Brindley, and when the two met, they used to spend hours discussing matters of science and engineering. Earnshaw died in May 1767, at the age of about 60, and was buried at Mottram.
James Brindley

James Brindley with Barton Aqueduct in the background by Francis Parsons (1770)
James Brindley (1716 – 27 September 1772) was an English engineer. He was born in Tunstead, Derbyshire, and lived much of his life in Leek, Staffordshire, becoming one of the most notable engineers of the 18th century. Brindley was taught under Abraham Bennett from Taxal Whaley Bridge .. Brindley worked with Francis Egerton ( Hulme Hall and Worsley old Hal , ) and also John Gilbert ( canals built because of these and John Gilberts name was written on notes for John Kilbride ) .. Brindley .. James Brindley married Anne Henshall on 8 December 1765 at Wolstanton church, and had two daughters, Susannah and Anne. He also had a natural son, John Bennett (1760-99), from whom Arnold Bennett the novelist descended. ( Bennett was the critic for Ulysses ) ..
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