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The name "Cat and the Fiddle" was a common name for inns, including one known to have been at Old Chaunge, London by 1587. [6]The earliest recorded version of the poem resembling the modern form was printed around 1765 in London in Mother Goose's Melody with the lyrics:
The Cat and Fiddle Inn is a former public house in the English Peak District, close to the border between Cheshire and Derbyshire. It sits on the A537 road from Macclesfield to Buxton, which runs across a high and remote area of moorland. A section of the road is known as the "Cat and Fiddle Road" after the inn.
The Cat and Fiddle is a road in England between Buxton, Derbyshire and Macclesfield, Cheshire, named after the Cat and Fiddle Inn public house at its summit. Formed by parts of the A537 , A54 and A53 , it is famous for its scenic views across the Greater Manchester conurbation, the Peak District National Park and the Cheshire Plain , and for ...
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This issue went away with the introduction of SPECS3 which can be set up to be forward facing as well as rear facing allowing motorcyclists to be caught. A prime example of a site setup for this is the A537 Cat-and-Fiddle site. [7] The cameras are often painted yellow and have been given the nickname "yellow vultures". [8]
The Cat and Fiddle Arcade is a shopping mall and hub located in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia and covers a city block made up of about 17 buildings [7] at 49-51 Murray Street. It is famous for its musical clock , which plays the Hey Diddle Diddle nursery rhyme hourly [ 8 ] [ 9 ] with glockenspiel and vibraphone , [ better source needed ] and is a ...
Tolkien's version features "a tipsy cat that plays a five-stringed fiddle". "The Man in the Moon Stayed Up Too Late" is J. R. R. Tolkien's imagined original song behind the nursery rhyme "Hey Diddle Diddle (The Cat and the Fiddle)", invented by back-formation.
Axe Edge Moor is the major moorland southwest of Buxton in the Peak District, England.It is mainly gritstone (Namurian shale and sandstone).Its highest point (551 metres (1,808 ft)) is at grid reference.