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In 2007 Rightmove bought 67% of Holiday Lettings Limited. [6] In May 2008, HBOS, one of the founding investors, sold its stake in Rightmove. [7] According to Forbes, Rightmove operates on a two-sided model which serves a vast "audience" for property listings on one side and 20,000 advertisers of available properties on the other side. [8]
Oratory Priest's House, 141 Hagley Road II* 1851 Terence Flanagan: Perrott's Folly, Waterworks Road II* 1758 Unknown 17 & 19 Rotton Park Road II* 1894–1895 Joseph Lancaster Ball: St Augustine's Church: II* 1868 & 1876 J. A. Chatwin: St Philip's Sixth Form College (part) II* 1861–1862 Henry Clutton: Knutsford Lodge, 25 Somerset Road II* 1861 ...
Traces of a Roman road and of a Roman camp called locally "the Gaer" are near the River Severn, in a township of the parish called Thornbury. [3] In 1868, the National Gazetteer said of the parish FORDEN, a parish in the hundred of Cawrse, county Montgomery, North Wales, 3 miles N. of Montgomery, and 4 S.E. of Welshpool, its post town.
In 1845, the Leighton Hall estate was purchased from the Corbett family of Longnor Hall, Shropshire, by the Liverpool banker, Christopher Leyland. In 1847, he gave it as a wedding present to his nephew John Naylor (1813–1889), who then proceeded to rebuild the house and estate at a reputed cost of £275,000, plus an additional £200,000 on the farm technology. [5]
Welshpool (Welsh: Y Trallwng ⓘ) is a market town and community in Powys, Wales, historically in the county of Montgomeryshire. The town is four miles (six kilometres) from the Wales–England border and low-lying on the River Severn .
Below is a list of the stately homes, historic houses, castles, abbeys, museums, estates, coastline and open country in the care of the National Trust in Wales, grouped into the unitary authority areas. Many areas of land owned by the trust, both open-access and closed to the public, are not listed here.
The road was one of several from "Welch Gate and Cotton Hill" (sic) turnpiked on 1758. [1] Between Buttington and Halfway House the original course of the road was abandoned after it was disturnpiked in 1837. It was replaced by a new road built along the foot of Moelygolfa (hill), built in 1801. This Turnpike Trust ended in 1877. [2]
Llanerchydol Hall. Llanerchydol Hall is located in parkland between the A458 to Llanfair Caereinion and A490 to Llanfyllin.The hall, a 15,440 square feet (1,434 m 2) largely intact early 19th-century picturesque Gothic Revival house, is a Grade II* listed building, [2] [3] and its well preserved park and gardens are listed, also at Grade II*, on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of ...