Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Name Description Location Date Conservation Status Notes Ash Hill: Long barrow: Swinhope: Scheduled Ancient Monument: Ash Holt: Long barrow: Swallow: Scheduled Ancient Monument
The feast day of Augustine of Canterbury, first Archbishop of Canterbury: Lancashire: 27 November: 1996 Friends of Real Lancashire: Lincolnshire (Lincolnshire Day) 1 October: 2006 Commemorates Lincolnshire Rising 1536 Middlesex: 16 May: c2003: John Randall originated early day motion [6] Norfolk: 27 July: 2018
Cabourne, Cadney, Cadney cum Howsham, Caenby, Caenby Corner, Cagthorpe, Caistor, Calcethorpe, Calceby, Cammeringham, Candlesby, Canwick, Careby, Carlton-le-Moorland ...
High Street in Lincoln, Lincolnshire, England extends from the St Catherine's roundabout and ends approximately 1.2 miles further north at The Strait. The historic High Street has evolved through many changes over its 2000 year history, encompassing Roman roads and settlement, medieval buildings, markets, places of worship, civic buildings, bridges, the arrival of the railways and heavy industry.
Lincolnshire has long been a primarily agricultural area, and it continues to grow large amounts of wheat, barley, sugar beet, and oilseed rape. In south Lincolnshire, where the soil is particularly rich in nutrients, some of the most common crops include potatoes, cabbages, cauliflowers, and onions. Lincolnshire farmers often break world ...
The Charmouth Mudstones form the lower ground to the west and the lowest part of the "cliff" whilst the Lincolnshire Limestone forms the plateau surface to the east of the scarp. [7] [8] The two gaps in the ridge at Lincoln and at Ancaster are interpreted as indicating the former course of the eastward flowing proto-Trent.
The Grapes on Southgate in Sleaford can remain open until 7 December, unless an appeal is made.
From prehistory, the Lincolnshire coast was an important centre for the production of salt. At its peak in the 1950s, Grimsby was the largest and busiest fishing port in the world. In 1953, a storm tide overwhelmed Lincolnshire's sea defences, and the county was flooded as far inland as Alford. More than 300 people were killed in Lincolnshire ...