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This is a list of electoral divisions and wards in the ceremonial county of Hampshire in South East England.All changes since the re-organisation of local government following the passing of the Local Government Act 1972 are shown.
Lymington and Pennington is an administrative area formed in 1974 in the New Forest district of Hampshire, England. It covers the historical settlements of Pennington village and Lymington Town , as well as smaller hamlets, and newer residential areas.
Pennington is a ward (electoral and ecclesiastical) in the civil parish of Lymington and Pennington, in the New Forest district of Hampshire, England, which is defined based on the boundaries of the earlier manor. Pennington Village is at the centre of the ward, with Upper Pennington to the north and Lower Pennington to the south.
The hospital was procured under a Private Finance Initiative contract to replace the old Lymington Hospital in 2004. It was designed by Murphy Philipps Architects and constructed by Ryhurst [1] at a cost of £36 million. [2]
Tradition holds that the pub in nearby Boldre, the Red Lion, is named after a creature of local folklore, the Stratford Lyon.Supposedly a giant red lion with a wild mane, yellow eyes, large teeth, and huge stag-like antlers, pulled from the ground by John Stratford (verderer) in a wood in South Baddesley named Haresmede in the late 14th or early 15th century.
Lymington Town railway station serves the town of Lymington in Hampshire, England. It is 97 miles 57 chains (157.3 km) down the line from London Waterloo and is the only intermediate station on the Lymington Branch Line from Brockenhurst .
Major William Barton Wallop, born 24 Dec 1781, died Dec 1824, married Elizabeth Ward, daughter of Major Ward Hon. Bennet Wallop (29 January 1745 – 12 February 1815), married and had issue Hon. Catharine Wallop (3 January 1746 – May 1813), married on 3 October 1770 Lt.-Col. Hon. Lockhart Gordon , son of John Gordon, 3rd Earl of Aboyne and ...
The New Forest Wildlife Park (formerly The New Forest Otter, Owl and Wildlife Conservation Park) is located on the edge of The New Forest close to the towns of Ashurst and Lyndhurst.