Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The pub underwent a renovation in 1951 to double the interior space. [11] In January 1953, the pub was raided by armed robbers. [12] The pub has been visited by Princess Margaret and Prince Rainier III of Monaco. [13] On the opposite side of the road (Wapping Wall) is the former Wapping Hydraulic Power Station, later an arts centre and restaurant.
The Beetle and Wedge Boathouse is a restaurant set on the site of the Moulsford ferry service, on a bank of the River Thames on Ferry Lane in Moulsford, Oxfordshire, England. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The restaurant has a riverside setting on the stretch of river immortalised in The Wind in the Willows , and also Jerome K Jerome 's chronicles of the ...
Walton-on-Thames is served by Walton-on-Thames railway station, which provides 4 trains per hour to London Waterloo, consisting of 2 semi-fast services and 2 stopping services, with the semi-fast services taking only 25 minutes to reach the terminus. This has proven pivotal to the demographics and to the nature and degree of the town's ...
Sunbury-on-Thames, known locally as Sunbury, is a town on the north bank of the River Thames in the Borough of Spelthorne, Surrey, England, 13 mi (21 km) southwest of central London. [ n 1 ] Historically part of the county of Middlesex , in 1965 Sunbury and other surrounding towns were initially intended to form part of the newly created county ...
Sunbury Lock is a lock complex of the River Thames in England near Walton-on-Thames in north-west Surrey, the third lowest of forty four on the non-tidal reaches.The complex adjoins the right, southern bank about 1 ⁄ 2 mile (0.80 km) downstream of the Weir Hotel.
The Anchor is a pub in the London Borough of Southwark. It is in the Bankside locality on the south bank of the River Thames, close to Southwark Cathedral and London Bridge station. A tavern establishment (under various names) has been at the pub's location for over 800 years. [1] Behind the pub are buildings that were operated by the Anchor ...
The pub has been called "the best known of all Thames pubs". [2] The timber-framed building dates back to 1352 and is of traditional construction [3] with a thatched roof. The Barley Mow was photographed by Henry Taunt in 1877. [4] The building was Grade II listed in 1952. [5]
Farmland in Hersham. Hersham is in the borough of Elmbridge, in northwest Surrey and has no particular sub-localities except for Burwood Park, which alongside certain other addresses in the village is, when published for any purposes, due to its proximity to Walton-on-Thames railway station, done so under the name of Hersham's post town only, Walton on Thames. [7]