|
If you are looking for a specific topic, name or date, use the Search field in the top right hand corner of the panel. It reads ‘Enter Search Term …’; type in the word/s or figure/s and press “Search’.
The Tag Cloud contains a list of key words representing some of the topics, names and dates which appear most frequently in the Archive. Click on any of these.
If you wish to scroll through a list of all the entries, click on Archive in the top menu bar. There is a list of Categories into which the entries have been placed and you can click on one of these to go straight to that one. Under the Category, you will see headings and dates of each item. Click on one.
The Archive Home page displays a panel with the header you have selected. It either describes the items available under this heading or displays the text from the original article or web page. Below, after a gap, is index information, telling you when the item was created, by whom and where it is stored. Paper records are stored either in the Managing Secretary’s Office or in the Hampshire Records Office in Winchester.
When you roll the cursor over the panel header it becomes an active link to another page. Click on this and you will be taken to a second panel dedicated to this topic. In many respects, this is the same as the first entry. It will have an extra panel at the bottom with links to other items related to this entry. It may also offer a link to, for instance, photographs stored in the Liphook Archive Gallery.
There is a large collection of images stored in a Picasa gallery (part of the Google environment). When you click on a link in the Archive, you will be taken to a display of small images (‘thumbprints’); click on any of them and you will be shown a larger image of that photo.
To see all the albums in the Gallery, click on Liphook Archive Photos and you will see one image each from each of the Categories of photos. Click on one and you will be shown the collection under that heading.
|
|
The Wheatsheaf Hotel at the end of the 19th Century

Arthur Croome, the designer of Liphook golf course

Charles Ambrose playing off the first tee (now the tenth) at the Grand Opening in 1923
|