Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Map of County Durham, UK with City of Durham highlighted. Equirectangular map projection on WGS 84 datum, with N/S stretched 170%: Date: 21 January 2025: Source: Ordnance Survey OpenData. Most data from Boundary-Line product. Lake data from Meridian 2 product. Inset derived from England location map.svg by Spischot. Author
County Durham, officially simply Durham (/ˈdʌrəm/), [note 1] is a ceremonial county in North East England. [3] The county borders Northumberland and Tyne and Wear to the north, the North Sea to the east, North Yorkshire to the south, and Cumbria to the west.
Some settlements, such as Sunderland and Gateshead in Tyne and Wear, are not in the present ceremonial county. Stockton and Hartlepool authorities, from when the ceremonial county designation was created in 1974 until 1996, were formerly in the Cleveland ceremonial county. Stockton's authority spans two ceremonial counties.
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
Map of County Durham within England. Category:Maps of counties of England: File usage. The following 3 pages use this file: 2009 structural changes to local ...
Early c19th estate amounted to 4000 acres and 20 farms 1801: Jones & Smith Map of County Durham depicts enclosed parkland 1817: Windlestone clock set up on New Year’s Day by John Bolton of Durham 1820: Greenwood map of County Durham. Extensive parkland depicted to south and west of hall with rides and meandering route to the hall from the south.
Newton Hall is a large housing estate in County Durham, in England. It is situated to the north of Durham, near Framwellgate Moor, Pity Me and Brasside. The East Coast Main Line runs the length of its east boundary. It is also a ward of Durham with a population taken at the 2011 census of 7323. [1]
Framwelgate (or Framwellgate) is an area of Durham, County Durham, England. [1] It is adjoined by Crossgate, North End, Framwellgate Moor and the River Wear. The origin of the place-name is from the Old English words fram and wella together with the Old Norse gata and means street by the strongly gushing spring. It appears as Framwelgat in 1352 ...