Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This PNG image has a thumbnail version at File: Hotel Wentworth, New Castle, N.H, by Davis Bros..jpg.. Generally, the thumbnail version should be used when displaying the file from Commons, in order to reduce the file size of thumbnail images.
The Wentworth by the Sea is a historic grand resort hotel in New Castle, New Hampshire, United States. It is one of a handful of the state's surviving Gilded Age grand hotels, and the last located on the seacoast. The Wentworth by the Sea is a member of Historic Hotels of America, the official program of the National Trust for Historic ...
The history of the hotel dates back to 1855, when the Wentworth Hotel was first opened as a boarding house on Lang Street further to the west in inner Sydney. Owned and run by the Maclurcan family, the Wentworth Hotel eventually grew to become one of the city's premier hotels, alongside The Australia Hotel (opened 1891) on Castlereagh Street, and the Hotel Metropole (opened 1880) on Bent ...
Two smaller geological SSSI units lie on the southern edges. Aldeburgh Brick Pit, of 0.84-hectare (2.1-acre), shows a clear stratigraphy of Red Crag deposits above Corralline Crag. [19] Aldeburgh Hall Pit is a shallow pit 0.8 ha (2.0 acres) in area, featuring a section of Corralline Crag. It is seen as one of the best sites in Britain for ...
x. AOL works best with the latest versions of browsers. You're using an out-of-date or unsupported browser and some AOL features may not work properly.
The original hotel on the site was built by General Marshall C. Wentworth, a US Civil War veteran, [1] [2] and designed by Charles Frederick Whittlesey in the Spanish Mission Revival-style. [3] It opened in February 1907 as the Hotel Wentworth , but the structure was only partially complete, with the first four stories finished and a temporary ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
The Aldeburgh branch line was a railway branch line linking the town of Saxmundham on the East Suffolk line and the seaside resort of Aldeburgh. There were intermediate stops at Leiston and Thorpeness. Part of the line remains in use for nuclear flask trains servicing Sizewell nuclear power station.