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sQuidcard: Available as a standalone card, store loyalty card, or as an optional application on a smartcard id from partner organisations. June 2008. Boston: Cash Top Up Card: Brylaine Travel: 2018 Bournemouth: Glo Smartcard: Yellow Buses: Rolled out in 2010, Replaced by Yellow Buses "smartcard" July 2018. [73] The Key: More Bus: 2010 The Key ...
Contactless smartcards are being progressively introduced to replace paper ticketing on the buses of Great Britain. The ITSO standard has been developed as a national standard to cover all types of public transport.
Surrey is the most wooded county in England, with 22.4% coverage compared to a national average of 11.8% [6] and as such is one of the few counties not to recommend new woodlands in the subordinate planning authorities' plans.
The pipe maker Eduard Bird bought his burghership in Amsterdam in 1638, recording his birthplace as Stoock in Surrey. This seems to refer to Stokes-next-to-Guildfort. [7] Catherine Ann Dorset (1752–1834), a British author of poems for children, was born in Stoke next Guildford in 1752 and baptized on 17 January 1753.
This is a list of towns, villages and most notable hamlets and neighbourhoods in Surrey, a ceremonial and administrative county of England.. For lists relating to parts of London formerly in Surrey, see the London Boroughs of Croydon, Kingston upon Thames (Royal Borough), Richmond upon Thames, Lambeth, Merton, Southwark, Sutton and Wandsworth.
Sunbury-on-Thames, known locally as Sunbury, is a town on the north bank of the River Thames in the Borough of Spelthorne, Surrey, England, 13 mi (21 km) southwest of central London. [ n 1 ] Historically part of the county of Middlesex , in 1965 Sunbury and other surrounding towns were initially intended to form part of the newly created county ...
Malden and Coombe was a local government district in Surrey, England from 1866 to 1965. New Malden Local Government District was formed in 1866 under the Local Government Act 1858 from part of the ancient parish of Kingston upon Thames. [1] It was governed by a local board of 12 members. [2]
Shackleford is a village and civil parish in the Borough of Guildford, Surrey, England centred to the west of the A3 between Guildford and Petersfield 32 miles (51 km) southwest of London and 5.2 miles (8.4 km) southwest of Guildford. Shackleford includes the localities of Eashing, Hurtmore, Norney and Gatwick.