Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Gloucester County, New York; Political history 1,540 square miles (4,000 km 2) partitioned from Albany County, New York: 1770-03-16 [1] Gained land from Cumberland County, and exchanged land with Charlotte County, raising the total county land to 3,390 square miles (8,800 km 2) 1772-03-24 [2]
Chosen Hill (grid reference) (or Churchdown Hill) rises above Churchdown [1] in Gloucestershire, England, and is the site of a 11.5-hectare (28-acre) nature reserve. [ 2 ] The hill commands good views over the scarp and the Severn Vale and there is a network of paths for walkers.
The railway line between Cheltenham and Gloucester opened on 4 November 1840, the final section of the Birmingham and Gloucester Railway (B&G) which had been authorised in 1836. [1] At first, there were no intermediate stations , but on 9 August 1842 the first station at Churchdown was opened by the B&G; it proved to be temporary, being closed ...
Churchdown is a large village in Gloucestershire, England, situated between Gloucester and Cheltenham in the south of the Tewkesbury Borough.. The village has two centres. The older (Brookfield or "village") centre is in Church Road near St Andrew's Church; the more modern centre is in St John's Avenue near St John's Churc
Four 16 year old males attended court in Gloucester. [5] 16 year old Jonathan McGovern, of Grove Road in Churchdown, received six months on Friday 17 March 1978. [6] John Gaisford of Thompson Way, in Innsworth, received 7 years on 4 May 1978, under Section 53 of the Children and Young Persons Act 1933. He had brought a container of petrol. [7]
This is a list of electoral divisions and wards in the ceremonial county of Gloucestershire in South West England.All changes since the re-organisation of local government following the passing of the Local Government Act 1972 are shown.
Doughton Manor, photographed in 1914. Doughton Manor is a country house in Doughton, in the civil parish of Tetbury Upton, in the Cotswold district of Gloucestershire, England.
Brunel's Bristol and Gloucester Railway passes within 2 miles (3.2 km) of Wotton-under-Edge, following a curve to the west to stay on the gentler Vale of Berkeley and avoid Wotton Hill, Nibley Knoll and Stinchcombe Hill as it heads north. It carries a wide mix of local, intercity and freight trains.