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Since August 2010, Norwich 5k parkrun has taken place on Saturday morning at 9 am, and often on Christmas and New Year's Days, with a record attendance of 1360 on Christmas Day 2019. [ 4 ] Beginning March 2015, a 2k junior parkrun has taken place on Sunday morning at 9 am for children aged 4 to 14.
The Eaton Park Miniature Railway (EPMR) is situated in Eaton Park, in Norwich, Norfolk. Construction began in 1957 and the 365-foot (111 m) loop of elevated 3 + 1 ⁄ 2 in (89 mm) and 5 in (127 mm) gauge track opened in May 1960, with public being carried on Summer Sundays. In the 1970s the line was extended to 955 feet (291 m). [1]
In April 2011, the park became the city's first eco-park with funding from the Big Lottery Fund and support from local schools and the community. [ 12 ] Sewell Park 52°38′44″N 1°17′52″E / 52.6455°N 1.2977°E / 52.6455; 1.2977 is located approximately 1.5 miles (2.4 km) north of the city centre adjacent to Constitution
Eaton is a suburb of the city of Norwich, in the Norwich district, in the county town of Norfolk, England. Anciently the superiority of manor of Eaton, and its lands, was held by the FitzAlan family who in the reign of King Henry 1st granted it to the Priory and convent of Norwich. [ 1 ]
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The Eaton Family Residence-Jewish Center of Norwich is a historic home, now unaffiliated [2] Jewish synagogue and community center, located at 72 South Broad Street in Norwich, Chenango County, in New York, in the United States. The house was built in 1914 for R. D. Eaton to house his family, one of the most prominent families in Central New York.
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Waterloo Park is a Grade II* listed public park in Norwich, Norfolk. It forms one of a set of public parks established in Norwich in the 1930s by Captain Arnold Sandys-Winsch that were built by unemployed men using government funding. The original open space, then known as the Catton Recreation Ground, was opened as Waterloo Park in May 1904.