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Weavers Point (Scottish Gaelic: Rubha an Fhigheadair) is a headland to the north of the entrance to Loch Maddy, on the north eastern coastline of North Uist in the Western Isles of Scotland. [1] There has been a lighthouse on the headland since 1980.
Weaverham is a village and civil parish in the borough of Cheshire West and Chester and the ceremonial county of Cheshire in England. Just off the A49 , it is just to the west of Northwich and south of the River Weaver , and has a population of 6,589, [ 1 ] decreasing to 6,391 at the 2011 UK Census .
Hefferston Grange is a former country house to the southwest of the village of Weaverham, Cheshire, England. The house is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II* listed building. [1]
Duncansby Head Lighthouse Duncansby Head: 1924: Dunnet Head Lighthouse Dunnet Head: 1831 [5] Fidra Lighthouse East Lothian [6] 1885 [7] Fife Ness Lighthouse Fife Ness: 1975 [8] Girdleness Lighthouse Aberdeen: 1833 [9] Holy Isle Inner Lighthouse North Ayrshire: 1877: Holy Isle Outer Lighthouse North Ayrshire: 1905: Inchkeith Lighthouse Fife ...
Apart from the village of Weaverham, the parish is entirely rural, and contains 22 buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England as designated listed buildings. Most of the buildings are related to houses or farming, and many of the cottages originating in the 17th century are basically timber-framed .
Kinnaird Head Lighthouse : Constructed: 1787 Designed by: Thomas Smith Construction: stone Height: 22 m (72 ft) Shape: cylindrical tower with balcony and lantern rising from a castle [1] [2] Markings: white (tower), black (lantern), ochre (trim) Operator: Northern Lighthouse Board (1787–1991), Museum of Scottish Lighthouses (1991–) Heritage
Acton Bridge railway station serves the villages of Acton Bridge and Weaverham, in Cheshire, England. The station is situated on the West Coast Main Line and is served by regular trains between Liverpool Lime Street and Birmingham New Street.
Sank in 1967 after a collision, and lies at the bottom of the North Sea off Easington, Cleveland. LV86 86: 1931: J. Samuel White: Nore [42] (from 1941 until 1942), Cork [42] (from 1946 until 1962), Edinburgh Channel [43] 1974: Now used as a houseboat at Hoo Marina in Kent. [41] Light vessel no. 87 87: 1932 [45] A. & J. Inglis 914: East Goodwin ...