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The name Basing comes from two Old English components: Basa, the name of an Anglo-Saxon tribal leader, and the suffix -ingas, meaning "people of".This origin is shared with Basingstoke, which came from adding the additional component stoc, meaning "secondary farm/settlement", reflecting that Basing was originally the larger settlement.
Mason Creek Flower Farm is a family-owned small wedding & outside event venue as well as a working flower farm. The property is over 100 years old, with beautiful huge shade trees, a large green ...
It appears that in the late evening, Viktoria Gabriel, her seven-year-old daughter Cäzilia, and her parents Andreas and Cäzilia, were lured to the family barn through the stable, where they were murdered, one at a time. [3] The perpetrator(s) used a mattock belonging to the family farm and killed the family with blows to the head.
The farm's largest crop is sweet corn. [6] 25% of the Tuttle Farm is classified as wetland and 60% is wooded. [7] The Tuttle Farm includes a modern upscale 10,000-square-foot (930 m 2) retail facility constructed in 1987 adjoining an old New England barn, the original "Tuttle's Red Barn". [4] It now conducts business as Tendercrop Farm at the ...
The Barn Plaza shopping center, in Doylestown Township, is currently home to Kohl’s, Pure Barre, Piccolo Trattoria, Gerhard’s Appliances, Mattress Firm, Club Pilates, AFC Urgent Care and more.
Hwy.141 W. from Barnston to Chemin Caron Rd., S. on Chemin Caron Rd. & SE on Chemin de Way's Mill & the barn would be on the right hand (S.) side of the road. Holmhurst Farm, true round barn, red horizontal siding, 2 pitch conical roof, louvered cupola." [8] This is Stanley-Holmes Round Barn, on Holmhurst Farm. Round barn south of Barnston 1909 [8]
Basing House was a Tudor palace and castle in the village of Old Basing in the English county of Hampshire. [1] It once rivalled Hampton Court Palace in its size and opulence. Today only parts of the basement or lower ground floor, plus the foundations and earthworks, remain.
Old Basing was first settled around 700 by an Old English tribe known as the Basingas, who give the village its name (the meaning is "Basa's people"). [5] It was the site of the Battle of Basing on 22 January 871, when a Danish army defeated Ethelred of Wessex. It is also mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086.