Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Maidenhead has often seen winners go on to represent the United Kingdom at the Olympic Games. The town's football team, Maidenhead United, play at York Road, which is the oldest football ground in the world continuously used by the same team. Maidenhead United were crowned champions of National League South at the end
Maidenhead Heritage Centre and Museum was founded in 1993. The centre presents the history of Maidenhead history from Roman times to the present. [ 2 ] It collects and preserves artefacts, photographs, documents, and sound recordings, to illustrate local history.
The site offered listed buildings [2] together with a quality ambiance suited to creative activity, an opportunity to preserve part of Maidenhead's heritage and close proximity to the heart of the community which would enable use of the facility to be maximised. A trust with Registered Charity status, Norden Farm Centre Trust, was established ...
The Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead is a unitary authority area with royal borough status in Berkshire, England. The borough is named after its two largest towns of Maidenhead (where the council is based) and Windsor. The borough also includes the towns of Ascot and Eton, plus numerous villages and surrounding rural areas.
Ray Mill Island is an island in the River Thames in England at Boulter's Lock near Maidenhead, Berkshire. Laid out gardens on Ray Mill Island Weir and kayak flume from the top of the island, looking towards the weir at Boulter's Lock. It is immediately to the east of Boulter's Island, separated by the former millstream.
The entrance. York Road is a football stadium in Maidenhead, Berkshire, England.The home ground of Maidenhead United, it is acknowledged by The Football Association and FIFA to be the oldest continuously-used senior association football ground in the world by the same club, having been home to the club since 1871. [1]
The park was originally part of the estate belonging to Ockwells Manor Estate. [5] The Park was opened to the public during the 1980s. [5] In 1999 part of the site was declared as a local nature reserve by the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead.
Carpenter's Wood is a 21.4-hectare (53-acre) Local Nature Reserve west of Maidenhead in Berkshire. It is owned by the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead and managed by The Woodland Trust. [1] [2] The site consists of two adjacent woods, Carpenter's Wood and Dungrovehill Wood.