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  • ...-west and [[Mynydd Eppynt]] the north. Most of the Brecon Beacons National Park lies within the county. The highest point is [[Pen-y-Fan]] at 2,907 feet. T ...e Families of Fitz Osbern, Neufmarché, Gloucester, Hereford, Braose, Fitz Herbert'' (ISBN 1-899376-79-8)
    9 KB (1,354 words) - 11:47, 8 December 2019
  • * [[Aldenham]] Country Park ** [[Hatfield House]] – Jacobean house, gardens and park
    14 KB (2,058 words) - 10:01, 6 June 2019
  • *{{i-Forest}} [[Galloway Forest Park]] *Maxwell, Sir Herbert: ''History of Dumfries and Galloway'' (Edinburgh, 1896)
    17 KB (2,623 words) - 14:25, 19 January 2021
  • ...ounty Wexford, as having appeared in the County of Wexford about 1676.<ref>Herbert F. Hore (ed.), ''"A Chorographic Account of the Southern part of the County *Irish National Heritage Park (Ferrycarrig)
    27 KB (4,024 words) - 20:58, 25 June 2017
  • ...ll stands. Particularly good sections can be seen at the Welsh Street car park, and either side of the A48 road. The Town Gate through the wall at the top ...onvent and school, the remains of which are buried under the adjoining car park. Benedictine monks from Cormeilles Abbey in Normandy, Chepstow's twin town
    19 KB (3,086 words) - 09:14, 8 April 2017
  • ...xander II and was for the reception of poor men and women.<ref>Mackintosh, Herbert B: Elgin Past and Present, Elgin, 1914 p. 44</ref> * Elgin Library, Cooper Park
    16 KB (2,641 words) - 12:08, 18 March 2021
  • ...sides'',<ref>[http://www.kingscotepark.co.uk/index.asp?page=6913 Kingscote Park] - The Kingscote, Gloucestershire area</ref><ref>Charnock, Richard Stephen: ...orris lived occasionally in Broadway Tower, a folly, now part of a country park.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.cotswoldswebsite.com/broadway-tower.htm|titl
    11 KB (1,580 words) - 13:36, 7 March 2013
  • ...itecturalWalk/Architectural2.htm |title=An Architectural Walk |author=Rudi Herbert |publisher=Wolverhampton History & Heritage Society |accessdate=2007-07-08} ...ublic as Wolverhampton's first public park, whilst several years later the park was leased out to Wolverhampton Wanderers FC, for the Molineux Stadium. The
    20 KB (3,068 words) - 08:49, 1 July 2016
  • ...ry, bowling green, tennis courts, pitch and putt course and tea rooms. The Park has been awarded the Green Flag Award, the national standard for parks and ...ire|Wansford]] by way of Orton Mere and the 500 acre Ferry Meadows country park, and leased it to the Peterborough Railway Society.<ref>Rhodes, John ''The
    20 KB (3,101 words) - 23:18, 16 November 2018
  • ...English Football. The Belgrade Theatre was also constructed along with the Herbert Art Gallery. The 1970s, however, saw a decline in the British motor industr The Herbert Art Gallery and Museum is a major art gallery in the city centre. About fou
    20 KB (3,190 words) - 12:45, 27 April 2021
  • ...t [[Poole]] in [[Dorset]] has spread to meet Bournemouth at the border. 24 Herbert Road in Bournemouth forms the westernmost point of Hampshire. ...recreation. The award-winning Central Gardens are a separate major public park, leading for several miles down the valley of the [[River Bourne, Hampshire
    21 KB (3,346 words) - 17:48, 14 January 2021
  • ...available for filming. In 1913 a new Town Bridge was constructed. Central Park was purchased in 1919, and is now one of the focal points of the town. Elec [[File:Herbert Ingram Statue, Boston - geograph.org.uk - 77747.jpg|right|thumb|160px]]
    19 KB (3,202 words) - 10:35, 16 February 2019
  • ...uk/pdf/CathaysPark.pdf|format=PDF|title=Geological Walks in Wales: Cathays Park|publisher=Geologists Association South Wales|accessdate=2008-10-22}}</ref> ...It was subsequently made part of Kibbor hundred. Around this same time the Herbert family became the most powerful family in the area.<ref name="Cardiffians"/
    38 KB (5,993 words) - 20:11, 20 March 2020
  • ...he north of the town at Caesar's Camp which, with the northern part of the Park, lies on gravel beds. There are a number of swallow holes in the Park where this stratum meets the chalk. The historic core of the town lies on g
    27 KB (4,407 words) - 22:43, 28 January 2016
  • ...nal Heritage List for England|num=1300689|desc=Barn and Horse Gin, Chilton Park Farmhouse|access-date=4 April 2016|fewer-links=yes}}</ref> ...ed to in the HBO series ''Band of Brothers'' as the location where Captain Herbert Sobel was sent to train non-combat military support personnel who needed pa
    7 KB (1,061 words) - 09:09, 7 August 2018
  • The cathedral was started in 1096 by Bishop Herbert de Losinga and constructed out of flint and mortar and faced with a cream c ...rom the site of present-day Pulls Ferry), all the way up to the east wall. Herbert de Losinga then moved his See]] there to what became the cathedral church f
    34 KB (5,393 words) - 12:57, 30 March 2016
  • ...entury, but was not recorded until the early 11th century. In 1101, Bishop Herbert de Losinga of Thetford began the first mediæval town between two rivers, t ...ll, grime and bustle of the town centre. Harding's Pits is another public park and lies to the south of the town. It is an attractive informal area of op
    15 KB (2,577 words) - 17:57, 28 January 2016
  • ...[Pembrokeshire]]. They are all within the [[Pembrokeshire Coast]] National Park. In 1923, the petrologist Herbert Henry Thomas identified that bluestone from the hills corresponded to that
    3 KB (436 words) - 23:33, 3 November 2011
  • ...ymons|first=Vivian|title=The Moving Church |origyear=1956 |year=|publisher=Herbert Jenkins|location=London|language=|isbn=|pages=}}</ref> - designed by Richa The old "south camp" is now occupied by the Biggin Hill Business Park, Airport Industrial Estate and various private flying clubs. There are furt
    5 KB (731 words) - 11:57, 3 December 2015
  • ...he [[Chilterns]]. The Marden Estate once owned much of the area and Marden Park (now Woldingham School) still stands in extensive grounds in the valley alo ...ecided to donate a new St Paul's to the village, which was designed by Sir Herbert Baker in a mediæval style and built of flint and stone in 1933. The letter
    5 KB (781 words) - 09:31, 30 January 2021
  • ...fish-hooks, fishing tackle, motorcycles and springs, the latter notably by Herbert Terry and Sons. ...0. Housing developments such as Church Hill, Matchborough, Winyates, Lodge Park and Woodrow were created to accommodate the large overspill from an industr
    9 KB (1,414 words) - 18:13, 3 December 2013
  • ...e the conquest.<ref>John Roberts, archaeologist for the Snowdonia National Park Authority, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/local/northwestwales/hi/people_and_places *Harold Hughes and Herbert North (Bangor, 192) ''The Old Churches of Snowdonia'', p.&nbsp;152-155.
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  • ...few miles to the south lies the edge of the [[North York Moors]] National Park. ...ut the long continuous streets are all north of Parliament Road and Albert Park. Further out of town there are more recent suburban streets with various la
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  • ...ain art gallery is housed in the grand Edwardian Cartwright Hall in Lister Park. The National Media Museum celebrates cinema and movies, and is the most vi ...for the annual Mela&nbsp;— a celebration of eastern culture, and Bowling Park in East Bowling is the site of the annual Bradford Carnival celebrating loc
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  • ...[[Bedfordshire]] and [[Buckinghamshire]], in a valley close to [[Ashridge Park]]. The nearest town is [[Tring]]; Tring railway station, 1 mile west, is i *[http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/18252 Hertfordshire], by Herbert W Tompkins, 2nd Edition, 1922, from Project Gutenberg
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  • ...'. After the Government of Ireland Act 1914 was passed the Prime Minister, Herbert Asquith, secured an amending Act to avoid rebellion in Ulster, which provid [[File:Croke park hogan stand.jpg|thumb|right||[[Croke Park]] stadium is the headquarters of the [[Gaelic Athletic Association]].]]
    38 KB (5,693 words) - 12:21, 7 May 2014
  • Loudwater House in Loudwater, which had a park of 150 acres,<ref name=prince>{{cite book |title=Parks in Hertfordshire Sin ...anding in 2008.<ref>{{cite book |title=Hertfordshire |last=Tompkins |first=Herbert Winckworth |year=2008 |publisher=BiblioBazaar |isbn=978-1-4375-3233-3 |page
    4 KB (543 words) - 22:06, 25 September 2012
  • ...nd they have been included all within the [[Pembrokeshire Coast]] National Park. In 1923 the petrologist Herbert Henry Thomas identified that bluestone from the Prescelly Hills corresponde
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  • ...and restaurants. It also has several large green parks such as Grovelands Park which covers ninety-two arces and contains a beautiful boating-lake of seve *Football: Romans AFC who play at Grovelands Park
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  • ...ed on the outskirts in the private estate of the Grade II* listed Woodhall Park. |first=Herbert H. | last=Tompkins
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  • Two Prime Ministers have spent part of their childhood in Huddersfield: Herbert Asquith (Liberal) and Harold Wilson (Labour). Wilson is commemorated by a s ...uke and Duchess of Albany). It is a fine example of a Victorian era public park with water cascades, bandstand and woodland.
    11 KB (1,693 words) - 16:52, 29 January 2016
  • ...wn of [[Caerphilly]] which had emerged to the south of it and a large deer park in the nearby Aber Valley.<ref>{{harvnb|Renn|2002|pp=15, 20}}; {{cite web | ...21P169>{{harvnb|Renn|2002|p=21}}; {{harvnb|Newman|2001|p=169}}</ref> Henry Herbert, 2nd Earl of Pembroke used the castle for his manorial court.<ref>{{harvnb|
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  • ...mining. It remains the largest town actually within the Dartmoor National Park, with a population of around 3,500. ...r and two aisle. The fifteenth century church tower features sculptures by Herbert Read, who also carved the oak reredos. One window has stained glass by C. E
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  • ...a level, and promotes itself as "the gateway to the Peak District National Park". It had a total resident population of 32,428 in 2001 according to the cen ...e Woods and Sidebottoms. The Woods built the public baths and laid out the park. Partington built the library. Partington built the cricket pavilion, so Sa
    30 KB (4,759 words) - 14:21, 27 January 2016
  • ...eld Island. St. Herber't Island is named after a C. 7th priest hermit, St Herbert of Derwentwater.
    3 KB (515 words) - 09:03, 16 November 2018
  • ...son.asp?id=232,15,2,15,232,0 HMP & YOI Ashfield]</ref> on a small business park. At the Dissolution of the Monasteries the manor was granted to William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke from whom it was acquired by Sir Maurice Denys (d.156
    8 KB (1,288 words) - 19:55, 5 December 2019
  • ...tory" /> The oldest building in the area is a Tudor mansion, owned by the Herbert family, on the hillside at Cogan Pill,<ref name="SG County History" /> now ...ison thieves, rustlers and vagabonds. It was located roughly where the car park now stands at the rear of the NatWest Bank in Plymouth Road.
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  • ...e seizure of the abbey, King Henry presented it and the estates to William Herbert in around 1544; he was later made Earl of Pembroke in 1551. ==William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke==
    16 KB (2,685 words) - 21:38, 8 August 2015
  • ...established themselves in 1632 at Whittleswick, which was renamed Trafford Park.<ref>{{Harvnb|Johnston|1967|pp=32–34.}}</ref> ...and the plan provides for improvements which include the A57 – Trafford Park link at Barton and provisional support for a further expansion of the [[Man
    26 KB (3,816 words) - 07:15, 19 September 2019
  • ...into the metropolis. The street crossing that was known as Little Chelsea, Park Walk, linked Fulham Road to King's Road and continued to the Thames and loc In 1718, the Raw Silk Company was established in Chelsea Park, with mulberry trees and a hothouse for raising silkworms. At its height in
    24 KB (3,591 words) - 10:17, 30 January 2021
  • The town has a caravan park, as well as guest houses and bed and breakfast accommodation for visitors.< File:amblebirds.jpg|Birds on the grass in the car park leading on to the 'little shore'
    19 KB (2,849 words) - 13:12, 7 June 2016
  • ...ht Hundred Years of Harlington Parish Church in the County of Middlesex'', Herbert Wilson, MA, Rector, Uxbridge, 1909.</ref> ...line of the Great Western Railway was also built across the former Dawley Park (by then Dawley Wall Farm). However, Hayes & Harlington railway station (ju
    16 KB (2,355 words) - 10:23, 21 April 2017
  • ...led 'le prison tower'. There was also a dovecote, a garden, a forest and a park." ...ve, the hotel descended to his son, Edward, who changed the family name to Herbert, his mother’s maiden name, and took his father’s subsidiary title of Ea
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  • What is reckoned to be Britain's smallest park, Prince's Park, is located next to Christ Church on the junction of Farewell Lane and Chur In September 2009 it was announced that a Burntwood man, Terry Herbert, had discovered a hoard of Saxon treasure with a metal detector in a field
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  • ...the A170 road, so that the western part of the town is within the National Park and subject to its planning rules. ...ley, and follows a horseshoe loop around the [[North York Moors]] National Park for 110 miles through to [[Filey]]. The town square is a popular meeting p
    13 KB (2,023 words) - 17:33, 5 September 2013
  • ...retch of woodland managed by the town council, was formerly part of a deer park and contains the Grade II remains of the manor. It contains areas of both a ...ef name="dnb">{{citation |last=Harrod |first=Tanya |contribution=Read, Sir Herbert Edward (1893–1968) |title=Dictionary of National Biography |publisher=Oxf
    7 KB (1,006 words) - 18:54, 8 September 2013
  • ...9th century, for cricket. Yorkshire and England cricketers Sir Len Hutton, Herbert Sutcliffe, Ray Illingworth and Matthew Hoggard all learned to play in Pudse ...dense smogs. This is believed to have led to jokes that pigeons in Pudsey Park flew backwards in order to keep the soot out of their eyes.
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  • Herbert E. Balch continued the work from 1904 to 1914,<ref>{{Cite web| title=A Pott A 1000-year-old skeleton of a woman was discovered in the caves by Herbert E Balch in 1912, and has also traditionally been linked to the legendary wi
    24 KB (3,836 words) - 11:17, 19 September 2019
  • ...estGallowayForestParkPenninghamePond Forestry Commission - Galloway Forest Park]</ref> ...otland - Museum of Antiquities of Scotland, has - Bronze implements, (Sir Herbert Eustace Maxwell, 1885) lists (item 48) 8 x 21in. and (item 49) 2 x 21in bro
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  • |picture=The Rose Garden , Town Park, Tralee - geograph.org.uk - 332932.jpg |picture caption=Roses in Tralee's town park
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  • *Edgbaston Reservoir, formerly known as Rotton Park Reservoir, provides a header supply for the [[Birmingham Canal Navigations] ...otably one of the Arts & Crafts houses number 21 Yateley Road, designed by Herbert Tudor Buckland, and built for his own use.
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  • ...ship and castle to Sir Edward Herbert (d. 1595), second son of Sir William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke, in 1579. Sir Edward's wife was a Roman Catholic and ...wis was inherited by his Protestant kinsman, Henry Arthur Herbert of Oakly Park, Ludlow, who was made Earl of Powis by King George II.
    9 KB (1,487 words) - 11:05, 18 July 2014
  • ...Monreith]], the area called Kirkmaiden and two mansions, namely Glasserton Park and Physgill, together with Woodfall Gardens.<ref>http://www.woodfall-garde ...ith-bell rang from the depths of Luce Bay. The church is opposite the car park of St. Medans Golf Club.
    12 KB (1,893 words) - 21:04, 12 August 2014
  • ...glan site was surrounded by the large deer parks of Home Park and Red Deer Park, the latter being enclosed at the end of the period.<ref name=Kenyon2003P11 William's son adopted the surname 'Herbert' and continued to rise in prominence, supporting the House of York during t
    34 KB (5,520 words) - 10:18, 31 January 2016
  • ...Bedfordshire Historical Record Society, Quarto Memoir, 1922 vol. 1, by G. Herbert Fowler, p.72</ref> It is the only working mill left in Stotfold and is a g *Football: Stotfold FC, who play at Roker Park
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  • ...stle]] and Llanarth Estate Office, Ty Gwynt and Pit House. The castle, the park and The Clytha Arms public house,<ref name=Arms>[http://www.clytha-arms.com ...me to the Monmouthshire Polo Club, founded in 1872 by Reginald and Francis Herbert.<ref>Horace A. Laffaye, ''Polo in Britain: A History'', Jefferson, North Ca
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  • |name=Clytha Park |picture=Clytha Park 1.jpg
    3 KB (486 words) - 07:12, 6 May 2016
  • Sir William Herbert, Knight of [[Raglan Castle]] was granted the manors of Tretower Castle and ...nd early twentieth century when much of Llangynidr was part of the Glanusk Park estate.<ref name="intro"/>
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  • Carrick's Town Clock was erected in 1784. A public park was created in the Fair Green in the 1860s. The town fair continues to this ** Carrick-on Suir Handball and Racquetball Club, Davin Park Indoor courts, Clonmel Road.
    15 KB (2,304 words) - 12:41, 2 August 2017
  • ...School; previously called Dolforwyn CP School - a village shop, a caravan park, a growing number of new houses, a community centre/playing fields, two par ...1921 killed 17 passengers, including the Cambrian Railways chairman, Lord Herbert Vane-Tempest of [[Machynlleth]].
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  • ...ng just south of [[Stamford]] in Lincolnshire. The house and its extensive park are within the northernmost confines of [[Northamptonshire]], bunded by the ...l, later 1st Baron Burghley, Lord High Treasurer to Queen Elizabeth I, Its park was laid out in a later age by Capability Brown.<ref>{{cite book|authorlink
    12 KB (1,741 words) - 17:45, 21 November 2014
  • ...mansion built by Sir John Nicholl and set in an extensive park. Within the park is the Iron Age hillfort known as Chapel Hill Camp. Within the embankments ...Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust] PRN: 00228m. Cadw SAM: GM025: Mynydd Herbert Round Barrow</ref>
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  • ...territory was revoked and its military significance began to decline. The Herbert family took over the property in 1550, remodelling parts of the main range ...url=http://www.coflein.gov.uk/pdf/CPG211/ | title=Cardiff Castle and Bute Park | accessdate=4 November 2012 | author=Royal Commission on the Ancient and H
    54 KB (8,319 words) - 21:35, 27 December 2019
  • ...ilt from fragments of the north transept of Netley Abbey moved to Cranbury Park in the 1760s.]] ...the house.<ref name=Thompson19/><ref>{{cite web |title=History of Cranbury Park, Hampshire |url=http://www.britannia.com/history/chouses/cranbury.html|fir
    42 KB (6,816 words) - 17:04, 21 April 2016
  • ...grand country house in [[Northamptonshire]], standing within Cottesbrooke Park, all within the wider Cottesbrooke Estate. ==The park==
    5 KB (743 words) - 20:34, 14 May 2015
  • ...e rubbish dumps that surrounded the site had been converted into a Country Park, with the landscape being regenerated with sedge, grass, birch and oak. The ...character as Raedwald, King of East Anglia. Other attendees included Terry Herbert, who had discovered the Staffordshire Hoard in 2009, members of the Kidderm
    15 KB (2,368 words) - 13:03, 3 May 2018
  • In the second half of the 18th century the park was landscaped. This included sweeping away the village of Great Witley, wh ...t Samuel Daukes, who had already altered his London house, Dudley House on Park Lane and the church at Great Witley, to remodel the house in Italianate sty
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  • |name=Bletchley Park |picture=Bletchley Park - Draco2008.jpg
    24 KB (3,347 words) - 19:22, 30 January 2016
  • ...f corvée. In the late 12th century, the Abbot Adam Samson forced the Dean Herbert to destroy the new windmill he had built without permission. Adam said: "By ...in conjunction with [[English Heritage]]. The abbey ruins lie within the park. A friends ground supports the maintenance and improvements to the gardens.
    10 KB (1,586 words) - 09:03, 19 October 2015
  • ...ns of the architect Roger Morris (1695–1749) in collaboration with Henry Herbert, 9th Earl of Pembroke, one of the "architect earls". Pembroke, then Lord Herbert, based the design of Marble Hill to a large degree on Andrea Palladio's 155
    3 KB (467 words) - 23:59, 9 November 2015
  • ...], built in the 'Jacobethan' style in the nineteenth century, but within a park designed in the eighteenth century by Capability Brown. The 5,000 acre esta Highclere is the country seat of the Earl of Carnarvon, a branch of the Herbert family.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.highclerecastle.co.uk/index.html|titl
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  • ...], [[Middlesex]]. It was once covered by woodland and used as a royal deer park. ...) often hunted on the Chase after she was granted the estate of West Lodge Park by her brother Edward VI in 1547. <ref name=enf/> In a charter of 1166-89
    3 KB (431 words) - 13:24, 15 January 2016
  • ...vicinity: near Morley Cross; east of Keys Beck; near Hazle houses; at July Park; and at Castle Hill.{{sfn|Knox|1855|p=157}} ...ling" in four additional sections along a route past Hazle Head and Julian Park.{{sfn|Hayes|1964|pp=58–61}}
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  • ...nd the gift was rejected. Proposals to move to Charing Cross or St James's Park had a similar fate; the allure of tradition and the historical and politica ...of seven commissioned works. The other major contributors were John Rogers Herbert, finishing in 1864 but having had some commissions cancelled, Charles West
    41 KB (6,397 words) - 22:38, 26 December 2019
  • '''Kiveton Park''', informally '''Kiveton''', is a village in the [[West Riding of Yorkshir ...on Road) and is served by two railway stations: Kiveton Bridge and Kiveton Park. The [[Chesterfield Canal]] lies to the south, while the villages of [[Todw
    6 KB (897 words) - 13:53, 22 June 2016
  • ...rch of England church, St Mary's, was built, next to the path from the car park down to the seafront.<ref>[http://www.thelizard.info/st_marys.htm Cadgwith, The ''Herbert Sturmey'' arrived on station in 1932. She was 37 feet long and 9-foot 3" by
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  • In 1680 the homicidal Philip Herbert, 7th Earl of Pembroke murdered a watchman, William Smeeth, after a drunken ...of the High Road beside Chiswick Common, and half a mile west is Chiswick Park, north of the Green.
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  • ...29 December 1940 during the "Second Great Fire of London" by photographer Herbert Mason, from the roof of the Daily Mail in Tudor Street showing the cathedra ...ear=1985 |title=St Paul's and the City |publisher=Michael Joseph |location=Park Lane Press, London |isbn=0-7181-2629-7}} — With numerous photographic pl
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  • ...hich has been lowered. The canal continues a little further, passing under Herbert Street Bridge and over Upper Clydach Aqueduct, before disappearing into a c ...side Trebanos Lock was disused by 1898.<ref name=osmap1878/> By Coedgwilym Park, the canal turns briefly to the west, to pass under the B4603 Pontardawe Ro
    28 KB (4,532 words) - 09:07, 21 September 2016
  • ...opical plants. There are also remnants of the formal gardens in the public park. ...ing land, remained rural until Archibald Cameron Corbett bought the Eltham Park Estate and developed it with well-built suburban housing between 1900 and 1
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  • ...to the area, attracted by the nearby [[Ham Hill, Somerset|Ham Hill Country Park]], and [[Montacute House]] (now owned by the [[National Trust for Places of ...Ilchester, and is revealed by the housing layout but the route across the park has been lost. This and the track to Ham Hill may possibly mark a Roman rou
    19 KB (2,952 words) - 09:58, 7 November 2016
  • ...t''' is a large village and parish situated in the [[New Forest]] National Park in [[Hampshire]]. It is a popular tourist attraction, despite local traffic ...Herbert may have been the ancestor of the Lyndhurst family, beginning with Herbert Lyndhurst, who held the bailiwick and manor of Lyndhurst in the 12th and 13
    15 KB (2,404 words) - 13:12, 14 November 2016
  • ...or of Chadderton and Foxdenton passed from Richard de Trafford of Trafford Park to Geoffrey de Trafford, who adopted the surname of Chadderton, thus foundi ...k8>{{Harvnb|Lawson|Johnson|1990|p=8}}.</ref> In&nbsp;1990, the new Firwood Park, on the west side of Chadderton, was said to be the largest private housing
    38 KB (5,724 words) - 06:59, 19 September 2019
  • ...Manchester School Board was laid in Vine Street, Hulme, on 11 June 1874 by Herbert Birley, chairman of the board, and the school was opened on 9 August 1875. Public parks are St George's Park in the northwest and Hulme Park (29 acres) established near Jackson Crescent in 2000.<ref>[http://www.manch
    19 KB (3,020 words) - 18:25, 27 September 2021
  • ...h of the [[Staffordshire]] border, close to the [[Peak District]] National Park. Arthur Herbert Procter, Victoria Cross recipient, was parish vicar of Bosley from 1931 to
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  • |name = Trent Park |picture=Trent Park House - geograph.org.uk - 71113.jpg
    17 KB (2,569 words) - 12:25, 14 April 2017
  • ...th the [[Ulster Folk and Transport Museum]] and the [[Ulster-American Folk Park]] to form the '''National Museums and Galleries of Northern Ireland'''. *Herbert T Malcolmson early 20th-century James Sheals bird mounts (Ireland).
    13 KB (1,888 words) - 23:36, 26 December 2019
  • |designer=Sir Herbert Baker and Alfred Dryland The new bridge was designed in reinforced concrete by architect Sir Herbert Baker and engineer Alfred Dryland, with additional input from Considère Co
    8 KB (1,204 words) - 10:59, 20 January 2018
  • ...]. It joins the town centre of Kingston to [[Hampton Court Park]], [[Bushy Park]], and the village of [[Hampton Wick]] on the Middlesex side. In 2005 it wa ...e Saxons tymes they toke from the very clive of Comeparke [cliff of Coombe Park] side to build on the Tamise side; and sette a new bridge hard by the same.
    9 KB (1,418 words) - 08:18, 19 September 2019
  • ....co.uk/news/view/6844 Jubilee Gardens to be extended across Hungerford Car Park]' – London-SE1.co.uk</ref> The site is located next to the [[Royal Nation ...ritain, held in 1951. In what was described as "a tonic for the nation" by Herbert Morrison, the government minister responsible for the event, the Festival o
    11 KB (1,675 words) - 19:14, 6 June 2017
  • ...estern shore of [[Derwentwater]] and within the [[Lake District]] National Park. It is a mile and a half by road from [[Keswick]]. At the 2011 census the p ...ite, theorised that the mouldings were sold to people ''en route'' to [[St Herbert's Island]] from Nichol End, Portinscale's embarkation point on Derwentwater
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  • ...mediæval parish church, which was heavily restored and remains within the park.<ref>{{britlist|221599|Church of St Martin, Houghton}}</ref> ...Quatuor Coronatorum|date=1924 |page= 117|accessdate=7 April 2014|quote=Mrs Herbert Jones is quoted in "Volume 8, Transactions from the Norfolk Archeaological
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  • ...village is at the edge of the [[Lake District]] fells (and of the National Park) as the hills approach close to the coast here. ...any old curiosities, brought from Dalegarth; and stands in a finely wooded park, with picturesque features, and commanding extensive views. A Roman camp is
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  • ...6 metres across. Two further mounds, one on Griffin's Brook near Woodlands Park Road and another at the foot of Bell Hill, were radiocarbon-dated to c. 107 ...as St Lawrence Road during landscaping. The original grand entrance gates, park-keeper's residential lodge, gardeners' workshops and nursery greenhouse all
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  • ...England can be said in any respect to have similar features to the western park, which I have seen this day, it is Lowther Hall in Westmoreland, which (whe In 1878 he married Lady Gladys Herbert a very famous socialite. She has been described as “one of the profession
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  • ...a lending library and then Lloyds Bank. The facade was removed to [[Heaton Park]] in 1912, when a bank, 53 King Street was erected on the site.<ref>{{cite ...ef> Work began on the extension in 1934 and was completed by 1938. Charles Herbert Reilly, a contemporary architecture critic, thought the extension was 'dull
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  • ...(playground + field), Gravel Pit Lane (playing field), Locko Park (country park), Spondon Woods (woods + scrub), Stoney Cross (woods + scrub), Willowcroft ...a large detached Georgian mansion on Sitwell Street. The Stone Archways in Park Road mark the entrance to the now demolished Spondon House. The Enoch Stone
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  • ...resley. In 1536 it was dissolved and the building of a private house and a park in 1607 destroyed the last traces of it. The site is a scheduled monument.< Swineshead is the birthplace of Herbert Ingram, founder of the Illustrated London News and MP for Boston, who was i
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  • ...beasts" or "wild deer park" and refers to the deer park (now [[Croxteth]] Park) established there by King Edward the Confessor. West Derby became the main ...te (nicknamed "The Rosies" by some locals). The site is now a small public park, the shape and dimensions of which are similar to that of a Roman barracks
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  • **All Saints, Oakfield Park ...C. have speculated for a long time about building a new stadium in Stanley Park.
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  • ...rea of 2,839 acres of which seven acres are within the [[Exmoor]] National Park. ...ushford; crossed by the New Bridge dating from 1870, which led to [[Pixton Park]],<ref>{{NHLE|12045966|New Bridge}}</ref> and the Weir Bridge which dates f
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  • ...ce''' was a cast-iron and plate-glass structure originally built in [[Hyde Park]], [[Middlesex]], to house the Great Exhibition of 1851. From 1854 it was r |title = The Crystal Palace of Hyde Park
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  • In 1895 Herbert May founded a Roman Catholic mission at his home, Newland Lodge.{{sfn|Cross ...ng magnet factory, Siemens Magnet Technology Ltd. There is also a business park on the village outskirts.
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  • ...visitors. It has been home to writers and celebrities including Jane Emily Herbert, Maeve Binchy, Hugh Leonard, Bono, Van Morrison and Enya. ...killiney-hill-park Dun Laoghaire-Rathdown County Council – Killiney Hill Park]</ref>
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  • ...rmanently.<ref name="streete"/> On 24 August 1942, a German fighter pilot, Herbert Bischoff, was captured after being shot down and crash landing in a field a ...ll ages and skill levels.<ref>{{cite web|title=Take off for Westgate Skate Park |publisher=Thanet Council |url=http://www.thanet.gov.uk/news/press_release_
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  • ...ing at a loss. Correspondence with the Southern Railway in 1930 led to Sir Herbert Walker stating that there was no chance of the line making a profit, and th ...lway for Queen Victoria. Exhibited at The Great Exhibition of 1851, [[Hyde Park]]. Used as a director's saloon and later as a first class carriage. Sold to
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  • ===Springfield Park and River Lea=== [[File:Upper clapton springfield park 1.jpg|thumb|250px|Springfield Park from the High (pedestrian) bridge over the Lea. (October 2005)]]
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  • Construction of a new building in the civic complex of [[Cathays Park]] began in 1912, but owing to the First World War it did not open to the pu ...collection of 20th-century art includes works by sculptors Jacob Epstein, Herbert Ward and Eric Gill and painters including Stanley Spencer, the British Impr
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  • '''Hanstead House''' or '''Hanstead Park''' is a country house estate in [[Hertfordshire]], near [[Bricket Wood]], a The park has been a stud, a college, and a corporate training centre, and is now own
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  • ...or military service - ''de Domino Herberto filio Petri - a tenants of Lord Herbert.''<ref>''Liber Scutari''</ref> ...se was purchased for £26,000 by the economist David Ricardo of [[Gatcombe Park]], who was buying a number of estates at the time, not least [[Bromsberrow
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  • ...green bowling green and a skate park.<ref name=wbcStansfield /> Tithebarn Park, north-west of the town centre, was built on the site of a former railway h |title=Jean Stansfield Memorial Park
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  • ...ntury. At the same time the River Glyme was dammed to form the lake in the park.<ref name=Crossley/> The house was remodelled in 1846.{{sfn|Sherwood|Pevsne Prince Bandar bin Sultan of Saudi Arabia has owned Glympton Park and its estate since 1992.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.independent.co.
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  • ...hall. In August 1940, the estate was taken over by his first cousin, Major Herbert Broke Turnor. ...than stables was re-erected and the stone frontispieces still stand in the park. This carries the dates 1676 and 1704, representing their original erection
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  • ...th of the motorway, along with Dauntsey Church at the entrance to Dauntsey Park; to the south are Greenman's Lane, Sodom and Dauntsey Lock. Dauntsey Lock i [[Dauntsey Park House]], north of the church and overlooking the Avon, has a 14th-century c
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  • |town=Wembley Park ...ginally called '''Wembley Town Hall''', is a former town hall in [[Wembley Park]] in [[Middlesex]]. The building is T-shaped, with a long façade on Forty
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  • ...ge that crossed the River Ayr at the Haugholm is now located near the Dean Park in [[Kilmarnock]], straddling the Kilmarnock Water. *Cuthbertson, D. C. ''Autumn in Kyle and the Charm of Cunninghame''. London : Herbert Jenkins.
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  • ...Herbert.) In 1907 the Dublin International Exhibition was held in Herbert Park. ...ho refused to participate in the Rising, lived down the road at 19 Herbert Park. During the Irish war of independence, Michael Collins, Commander-in-Chief
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  • *Football: Belmont Football Club, with its home ground in Herbert Park
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  • ...ick drew their water from this brook, outside what is now the Chequers car park, leaning over a railing to scoop the water using what Moreau refers to as a ...nk=Louis Francis Salzman |last2=Page |first2=William |last3=Salter |first3=Herbert E |last4=Lobel |first4=Mary D |last5=Crossley |first5=Alan |year=1939 |titl
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  • ...labour that the unbroken serenity of the surface was restored.''<ref>Deer Park http://www.dlrcoco.ie/CCDA/Parks/Deerpark.htm</ref></blockquote> ...ime by the Fitzwilliam agent Barbara Verschoyle and her husband, then Lord Herbert of Lea, and later by Sir Neville Wilkinson, from 1903 to 1914.
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  • |name=Clumber Park |picture=Limetree Avenue, Clumber Park - geograph.org.uk - 1052852.jpg
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  • Herbert H Skinner was the vicar from 1927 to 1933, and early in his term of office, ...d Sanderson's Bank South Drain, which are pumped into the Warping Drain by Park Drain Pumping Station, located just to the east of the parish boundary.{{sf
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  • ...ll Camp lies near the western boundary of the parish, partly within Dinton Park.<ref>{{NHLE|1005673|Wick Ball Camp, The Common|type=monument}}</ref> ...Later other land was purchased by the Wyndham family, which created Dinton Park. All Pembroke and Wyndham land was sold in the 20th century.<ref name=wch>{
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  • ...illage green park area to the south of these. Other parks include the Elms Park football and cricket ground, St Mary's, Vicarage Lane Playing Field, and Se Residential areas include the Elms Park estate, Manor Park, the newer Wheatley Fields estate, and Brook Hill which is a thin line of r
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  • ...ldest daughter was Henrietta Anna Howard-Molyneux-Howard who married Henry Herbert, 3rd Earl of Carnarvon in 1830. ...wn as Elsie. Elsie used the Manor at Teversal for refugees. His son George Herbert, 5th Earl of Carnarvon, and his wife Almina were associated with Howard Car
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  • |name=Bowes Park |picture caption=Myddleton Road, Bowes Park
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  • ...lton]], on the A31 road. It is at the edge of the [[South Downs]] National Park on a long-distance walking route known as the [[Pilgrims' Way]]<ref>[http:/ ...n empty, but busy, place. The Roman Road or King's Highway through Chawton Park Wood came through the Four Marks, and was later the Alton to Winchester tur
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  • Funtley has a park laid to grass with a children's playground, and a meadow managed for conser ...freshment room was taken down to give the licensee supervision over both. Herbert Henry and Richard John, whose Wallington Brewery, had to sell everything on
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  • Around 1536, King Henry VIII granted Chalke to Sir William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke during the Dissolution of the Monasteries. In 1560 Qu ...is located in Knighton Road and has a football pitch, tennis courts, skate park and also a Multi-Use Games Area (MUGA) for table tennis, short mat bowls, p
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  • ...dale Park Fitness Club.<ref>[http://www.syndalepark.com/index.html Syndale Park]</ref> ...e was privately leased by Robert Streynsham (a former secretary of William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke), and then passed through his family.<ref name=hasted
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  • ...ational Trust]] along with a visitor's centre, public facilities and a car park. ...no longer exist.<ref name="Ogle ca 1920" >{{cite book |last1=Ogle |first1=Herbert W. |title=Brimham Rocks, the wonder of Nidderdale |date=1920 |publisher=Fre
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  • ...ver 500,000 visitors each year, to its heritage centre, historic sites and park. In 1910 a local amateur photographer, Herbert Parkin, took photographs of families paddling in the local reservoir (water
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  • ...Criccieth]], the families of Rhiwaedog, Clenenneu, Ystumcegid, Brynkir and Park."</blockquote> The family who resided at Park (Parc) came to be known as the '''Anwyl of Park''' family, with ''Anwyl'' taking various spellings over the years. The sons
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  • ...included four professors in the university's faculty for that subject – Herbert Butterfield, David Knowles, Michael Postan and Denis Brogan.<ref>{{cite boo ...the 19th century. During that period it achieved fame as the smallest deer park in Britain. After the First World War the deer sickened and passed their il
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