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Muir Hill (Engineers) Ltd was a general engineering company based at Old Trafford, Manchester, England.It was established in the early 1920s and specialised in products to expand the use of the Fordson tractor, which in the pre-war days included sprung road wheels, bucket loaders, simple rail locomotives, and in particular in the 1930s they developed the dumper truck.
By 2023, Muir Group comprised six subsidiaries, including construction, homes, timber systems, property development, and property investment arms, as well as owning and operating Deer Park Golf and Country Club in Livingston; [20] by this point, the company had developed £1.5 billion's worth of commercial buildings across the UK and had built ...
In September 2023, Housing Minister Rachel Maclean publicly called out Churchill Living for issuing a slew of new leases with ground rent in an attempt to circumnavigate the ground rent ban in April 2023. Maclean stated Churchill Retirement Living had issued a slew of new leases – 400, according to the minister – just before the new ground ...
The name derives from a mansion built on the edge of Wardie Muir (Moor). In 1794 William Davidson died and left the mansion and estate to his nephew Rev Thomas Randall of St Giles Cathedral, on condition that he assumed the name of Thomas Randall Davidson (which he did). His son William Davidson (1783-1865) inherited the mansion in 1827 when ...
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James Muir died in 1801 and the house was sold by his Trustees to the Gallaway family. The house passed through the hands of many different occupiers but remained in the ownership of the Gallaway family from 1803 until 1953, when it was sold by the Gallaway Trustees to Mrs. Olive McGilvray with the following burdens:
Birch Grove stands on the edge of the Ashdown Forest near Chelwood Gate in East Sussex, although the house itself is in West Sussex.It is a Grade II listed building though the Historic England listing record makes clear that this is for its historical associations rather than any intrinsic architectural merit. [1]
Muir of Dinnet is a national nature reserve (NNR) situated close to the village of Dinnet in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. The reserve extends 1166 hectares from the River Dee to Culbean hill, and encompasses a wide range of habitats including dry heath, raised bog, woodland, and two lochs: Loch Kinord and Loch Davan . [ 4 ]