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"Whitchurch Silk Mill Trust weaves silk on Victorian machinery in the Georgian watermill of Whitchurch Silk Mill, Hampshire. The mill is open to the public who come from across the UK and abroad. The charity educates visitors about silk, retains and develops the skills of silk weaving and restores its historic machinery."
Whitchurch is a town in the borough of Basingstoke and Deane in Hampshire, England. It is on the River Test , 13 miles (21 km) south of Newbury, Berkshire , 12 miles (19 km) north of Winchester , 8 miles (13 km) east of Andover and 12 miles (19 km) west of Basingstoke .
The Ratcliff or Baker Hill Site is a 16th-century Huron-Wendat ancestral village located on one of the headwater tributaries of the Rouge River on the south side of the Oak Ridges Moraine in present-day Whitchurch–Stouffville, approximately 25 kilometers north of Toronto.
Tufton Warren is a hamlet close to the town of Whitchurch, Hampshire, England.It is in the civil parish of Hurstbourne Priors.The nearest town close to it is Whitchurch, which lies approximately 2.1 miles (3.4 km) north from the hamlet.
The "Jean-Baptiste Lainé" or Mantle Site in the town of Whitchurch–Stouffville, north-east of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, is the largest and most complex ancestral Wendat-Huron village to be excavated to date in the Lower Great Lakes region. [1]
Private footpath, Hurstbourne Park estate, 2008. Hurstbourne Park is a country house and 1200-acre estate near Whitchurch, Hampshire, England.. The park and garden are Grade II listed with Historic England since May 1984, "A late C18 landscape park and pleasure ground surrounding a late C19 house with formal terracing which incorporates a wooded deer park of C14 origin and surviving features ...
The first municipal building in Whitchurch was an old town house in the centre of The Square; after it became dilapidated, it was demolished in the 1780s and the lord of the manor, Viscount Midleton, who was both a local member of parliament and an Irish peer, offered to pay for a new structure. [2]
History; Original company: Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway: Pre-grouping: Didcot, Newbury and Southampton Railway: Post-grouping: Great Western Railway: Key dates; 4 May 1885 () Opened as Whitchurch: 1 July 1924: Renamed Whitchurch (Hants) 4 August 1942: Closed: 8 March 1943: Re-opened as Whitchurch (Hants) 26 September 1949: Renamed ...