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Architect's drawing of house #208 Parkway built for the 1911 exhibition of Romford Garden Suburb at Gidea Park. Source The book of the exhibition of houses and cottages, Romford garden suburb, Gidea Park, p. 97. Date 1911 Author The Exhibition Committee of Romford Garden Suburb-Gidea Park.
Gidea Park is approximately 15 miles (24 km) east of Charing Cross and 1 mile (1.6 km) east of Romford town centre. It is south-west of the Gallows Corner junction where the A12, A127 and A118 roads meet. Harold Wood is to the east of Gidea Park, Ardleigh Green and Emerson Park are to the south-east, and Hornchurch is to the south.
Gidea Park railway station is on the Great Eastern Main Line, serving the neighbourhood of Gidea Park in Romford, located in the London Borough of Havering, east London. It is 13 miles 41 chains (21.7 km) down the line from London Liverpool Street and is situated between Romford and Harold Wood .
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Moreover, in the article I'm about to create, the history segment I have written will not fit, but it fits in the Gidea Park article. Gidea Park's history goes back further than 1911 and the Romford Garden Suburb estate; it was a very notable area, not least because it was the seat of Cooke's, and latterly, a leading liberal politician.
Gidea Hall in 1908. Gidea Hall was a manor house in Gidea Park, the historic parish and Royal liberty of Havering-atte-Bower, whose former area today is part of the north-eastern extremity of Greater London. The first record of Gidea Hall is in 1250, and by 1410 it was in the hands on one Robert Chichele. [1]
Google Play Books, formerly Google eBooks, is an ebook digital distribution service operated by Google, part of its Google Play product line. Users can purchase and download ebooks and audiobooks from Google Play, which offers over five million titles, with Google claiming it to be the "largest ebooks collection in the world".
Google Books (previously known as Google Book Search, Google Print, and by its code-name Project Ocean) [1] is a service from Google that searches the full text of books and magazines that Google has scanned, converted to text using optical character recognition (OCR), and stored in its digital database. [2]