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The Swan Inn is a Grade II listed former public house on the High Street (dating back to the 16th century [1] in Ruislip, Middlesex. It then became a branch of the Café Rouge restaurant chain but this closed at the end of 2022. It has recently been bought by a new deveoper and something new should open there by the end of 2023.
St Ninian's Parish Church, Including Boundary Walls, Gatepiers And Railings, Vicars Road, Stonehouse 55°41′52″N 3°59′10″W / 55.697657°N 3.986144°W / 55.697657; -3.986144 ( St Ninian's Parish Church, Including Boundary Walls, Gatepiers And Railings, Vicars Road, Stonehouse
The railway was closed in 1965. There are two closed lines at Stonehouse, one to Dalserf and the other to Strathaven. There was a junction in Stonehouse where the Coalburn branch diverged from the line to Strathaven. Today, the nearest railway station for Stonehouse is at Larkhall. South Lanarkshire Council have recently undertaken a ...
Stuart Olof Agrell (1913–1996), optical mineralogist renowned for his involvement in the Apollo programme, was born in Ruislip. [2]Alexander Fleming (1881–1955), biologist and Nobel Prize winner for the discovery of penicillin, was Regional Pathologist at Harefield Hospital, 1939; this is recorded on a blue plaque at the main entrance door to the hospital.
There had been mills on the site for many years but the current mill was built in 1813 and expanded around 1825. [5] The mill was powered by water in the River Frome. [5] A lodge house was built for the owners in 1815, [3] at the same time as some ancillary buildings for storage and supply of the mill. [4]
Stonehouse railway station served the village of Stonehouse, in the historical county of Lanarkshire, Scotland, from 1866 to 1965 on the Lesmahagow Railway. History [ edit ]
The Auctioneer (now The Lost Hour), an unbranded Stonegate pub in Greenwich, London. The company was formed in 2010 by the private equity firm TDR Capital, after it purchased 333 pubs from Mitchells & Butlers. [3]
The election was fought under the boundaries created by the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies. [3] Due to population growth, England elected 10 more MPs than in 2019. [4]