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Unused buildings at Berkeley Street, Sandyford (also a site used by Woodside Secondary School until 1999), were identified, and reopened in August 2006 as Glasgow Gaelic School, providing Gaelic medium education for pre-5, primary and secondary pupils.
Upload another image See more images 111 High Street And 2 And 4 Blackfriars Street, The Black Bull 55°51′30″N 4°14′32″W / 55.858409°N 4.242273°W / 55.858409; -4.242273 (111 High Street And 2 And 4 Blackfriars Street, The Black Bull) Category C(S) 32720 Upload Photo 104 Argyle Street 55°51′30″N 4°15′14″W / 55.858289°N 4.253771°W / 55.858289 ...
Berkeley Castle (/ ˈ b ɑːr k l i / BARK-lee; historically sometimes spelled as Berkley Castle or Barkley Castle) is a castle in the town of Berkeley, Gloucestershire, England.The castle's origins date back to the 11th century, being designated by English Heritage as a Grade I-listed building.
Berkeley High Street. Berkeley was first recorded in 824 as Berclea, from the Old English for "birch lea". [3]Berkeley was a significant place in medieval times. It was a port and market-town, and the meeting place of the hundred of Berkeley.
Anderston Primary School (1973), a non-denominational state school, is located on Port Street in Anderston. [29] St Patrick's Roman Catholic Primary School (1962) is situated on Perth Street in Anderston. [30] Glasgow Gaelic School (1999) is a Gaelic language nursery, primary and secondary school located in Berkeley Street. [31]
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Berkeley House and its extensive grounds (later purchased by the Duke of Devonshire who rebuilt it as Devonshire House) is memorialised by Berkeley Square, Berkeley Street, Stratton Street and Bruton Street. On some early maps it appears as "Stretton Street". The street was originally a cul-de-sac, running north from Piccadilly with Devonshire ...
A 1909 Railway Clearing House map of railways in the vicinity of Berkeley Road. The station was one of the first six stations built on the Bristol and Gloucester Railway, originally a broad gauge line overseen by Isambard Kingdom Brunel, but later taken over by the Midland Railway and converted to standard gauge.