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Wensleydale is a common destination for visitors who like walking on mountains, moorland, dale-sides, and valley bottoms. Hawes and Leyburn are popular because of their age, location and facilities (pubs, shops, teashops, and hotels). Hawes is the home of rope maker (Outhwaites), where visitors can see the manufacturing process.
Snaizeholme is a small side valley of Wensleydale in the Yorkshire Dales National Park (YDNP), North Yorkshire, England.The valley is noted for its red squirrel reserve, the only place within the North Yorkshire part of the Yorkshire Dales National Park where red squirrels are known to live, and a tree re-wilding project.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Wayne County, Pennsylvania, United States. The locations of National Register properties and districts for which the latitude and longitude coordinates are included below, may be seen in a map.
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The Dales Countryside Museum is housed in the converted Hawes railway station in Wensleydale in the north of the area. [20] The park also has five visitor centres. [21] These are at: A small section of Aysgarth Falls. Aysgarth Falls; Grassington; Hawes; Malham; Reeth; Other places and sights within the National Park include: Bolton Castle ...
The museum is located beside the disused Hawes railway station in the small town of Hawes at the head of Wensleydale. [3] The museum's outdoor display includes a real steam train and carriages on the track bed of the former Wensleydale Railway. The railway station remains in its original site, now part of Museum building.
Wether Fell is mountain that divides Wensleydale in the north and Upper Wharfedale in the south. Its summit is 614 metres (2,014 ft). Its summit is 614 metres (2,014 ft). A Roman Road , the Cam High Road, passes along the southern edge of the summit reaching 1,900 feet (580 m).
The fort occupies a strategic position on the summit of Brough Hill, between the confluence of the River Bain and River Ure.It has views across Wensleydale and may have been placed to control a pass through the Pennines between Stainmore and the Ilkley/Aire gap.