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Dunorlan Park is a park and grounds in Royal Tunbridge Wells, UK.. Totalling approximately 78 acres (32 ha) [1] and containing a 6-acre (2.4 ha) lake, the grounds were landscaped by Robert Marnock for Henry Reed, the merchant and philanthropist who owned the estate and the now-demolished house that once overlooked it.
Map all coordinates using OpenStreetMap. ... Tunbridge Wells: House: Dated 1738: 20 October 1954 ... Church of St Martin of Tours Ashurst, Speldhurst: Church:
The Pantiles is a Georgian colonnade in the town of Royal Tunbridge Wells, Kent, England. Formerly known as "The Walks" and the (Royal) "Parade", it leads from the well that gave the town its name. The area, developed following the discovery of a chalybeate spring in 1606, has become a popular tourist-attraction.
High Brooms railway station is on the Hastings line in the south of England and serves High Brooms and Southborough in the borough of Tunbridge Wells, Kent. It is 32 miles 70 chains (52.9 km) down the line from London Charing Cross. The station and all trains serving it are operated by Southeastern.
The River Bourne begins its course west of Oldbury Hill on the Greensand Ridge in the parish of Ightham and enters the Medway upstream of East Peckham, near Tonbridge. The River Teise (pronounced tice or teeze) begins in Dunorlan Park in Tunbridge Wells [1] and flows eastwards through Lamberhurst, passing Bayham Abbey.
Mayfield and Five Ashes is a civil parish in the High Weald of East Sussex, England.The two villages making up the principal part of the parish lie on the A267 road between Royal Tunbridge Wells and Eastbourne: Mayfield, the larger of the two villages is ten miles (16 km) south of Royal Tunbridge Wells; with Five Ashes being 2.5 miles (4 km) further south. [3]
A halt served by the local railway was established in 1907, and was used until 1952. The Spa Valley Railway, a heritage railway, now connects the High Rocks pub beyond the High Rocks turnstiles to Tunbridge Wells, Groombridge and Eridge (on the London-Uckfield line of Southern Railway).
The source of the Teise is in Dunorlan Park in Tunbridge Wells. [1] From there the river flows eastwards past Bayham Abbey and then through Lamberhurst. 2 miles (3.2 km) downstream of Lamberhurst the small River Bewl, on which is the reservoir Bewl Water, joins the Teise.