Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Peahen from Holywell Hill. There has been an inn on the site since the fifteenth century. The original half-timbered building served as one of a number of coaching inns on Holywell Hill which runs into St Albans from the south. [3] From the late 1600s, St Albans was a major stop for coaches heading north from London through Barnet. This ...
Back of White Hart Inn, Southwark by Philip Norman.. The White Hart Inn was a coaching inn located on Borough High Street in Southwark. [1] The inn is first recorded in 1406 but likely dates back to the late fourteenth century as the White Hart was the symbol of Richard II. [2]
St Albans has many old coaching inns (pictured: The White Hart, Hollywell Hill) Before the 20th century, St Albans was a rural market town, a Christian pilgrimage site, and the first coaching stop of the route to and from London, accounting for its numerous old inns. Victorian St Albans was small and had little industry.
View history; Tools. Tools. move to sidebar hide. ... The White Hart 23 Holywell Hill, St Albans: Inn: ... The White Hart. More images. 13 Fishpool Street
White Hart Road is the name given to a section of hill land road enclosed from common land in the parish of Caerhun high above the village of Rowen, in the Conwy Valley. It was planned as a new part of the Royal Mail coach road from Llanbedr y Cennin to Abergwyngregyn before the A55 coast road was built linking Chester to Holyhead around ...
Mike Hill, a production supervisor from CEI, removes a protective coating Thursday from an Alcoholics Anonymous exhibit at the Akron History Center. In the middle is A.A. co-founder Dr. Bob Smith ...
The remains of a well structure have been found at the bottom of Holywell Hill. However, this well is thought to date from no earlier than the 19th century. [9] The date of Alban's execution has never been firmly established. The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle lists the year 283, [10] but Bede places it in 305.
It is, based upon the writing of Matthew Paris, believed to have been founded in AD948 by Abbot Ulsinus of St Albans. [1] Although there are now some questions about the exact date of its foundation (and the date of Abbot Ulsinus), it is reasonably clear that, together with St Michael's and St Peter's churches, the church was built at about that time to receive pilgrims and to prepare them for ...