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Location of the national forest. The National Forest Company is a not-for-profit organisation established in April 1995 as a company limited by guarantee. [4] It is supported by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra), with the aim of converting one third of the land within the boundaries of the National Forest (52 sq mi, 33,000 acres) to woodland, by encouraging ...
Cromer (/ ˈ k r oʊ m ər / KROH-mər) is a coastal town and civil parish on the north coast of the English county of Norfolk. [2] It is 23 miles (37 kilometres) north of Norwich, 116 miles (187 kilometres) north-northeast of London and four miles (six kilometres) east of Sheringham on the North Sea coastline.
This is a list of some of the forests in the United Kingdom. Care should be taken to distinguish extensive wooded areas from royal forests which may never have been particularly wooded within historical times.
Pavilion Theatre on the end of Cromer Pier Ticket for the Pavilion Theatre on Cromer Pier, Show: The Manfreds. Cromer Pier is a Grade II listed seaside pier [1] in the civil parish of Cromer on the north coast of the English county of Norfolk, 25 miles (40 km) due north of the city of Norwich in the United Kingdom. [2]
The Craighead institute has offices in both Bozeman and Moose and is run by Frank's son Lance. [1] Frank's papers are now held by the library at Montana State University. [16] John Craighead lived in Missoula, Montana. He turned 100 in August 2016. [17] He died in South Missoula a little over a month later, on September 18, 2016. [18]
No windmill is shown on John Seller's map dated 1676 or Herman Moll's map dated 1700. [2] Despite the omission from the latter map, tree-ring counts on the Mainpost show that the tree was felled in the spring of 1679, [3] and a partially cut-away date on another timber reads 1681. [4] In 1719, Matthew Crane was the miller.
Cromer High railway station was the first station opened in Cromer, situated to the south on the outskirts of the town on a steep escarpment. [1] Built initially by the short-lived East Norfolk Railway , the station (along with the line) was incorporated into the Great Eastern Railway , who had operated the services from the beginning. [ 1 ]