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A brickfield is a field or other open site where bricks are made. [1] Land may be leased by an owner to a brickmaster, by whom the manufacture of bricks may be conducted. [ 2 ] Historically, the topsoil was typically removed and the clay beneath was stripped and mixed with chalk and ash to make bricks .
Cranham Brickfields is an 8.5 hectare Local Nature Reserve and a Site of Borough Importance for Nature Conservation, Grade I, in Cranham in the London Borough of Havering.It has an area of woodland with a pond, wildflower meadows, and a grassed area with a children's playground.
Brickfields Country Park is a park in Aldershot in Hampshire described as one of the smallest country parks in Britain. The park is owned and maintained by Rushmoor Borough Council. [1] Situated off Boxalls Lane, in Aldershot, Brickfields Country Park was reclaimed from the remains of a Victorian brickworks and clay diggings.
Brickfield and Long Meadow is a 3.9 hectare Local Nature Reserve in Earls Colne in Essex, England. There is access by footpaths from Park Lane, Church Hill and the Coggeshall Road. [1] The site was donated by the Hunt family by a Conveyance and Trust Deed dated 20 January 1987. [2] [failed verification]
A brickfield is an open site where bricks are made. Place names are often formed from the word. ... England. Brickfields, Bletchley, an area in Buckinghamshire;
McKenzie Brickfield: 1840-1845 – was halfway along the old Moat Road, about where the go-cart track is now. This field was taken over by George Smeed in 1860. Ashington Brickfield: 1843-1845 – was where the present All Saints Church was built. The field extended North East to the now Dolphin Road and Westward on the other side of Church Road.
Brickfields Recreation Ground is a sports stadium and multi-sport complex in Devonport, Plymouth, England.It is run by EveryoneActive on behalf of Plymouth City Council, and is the home ground of Rugby Union team Plymouth Albion of the National League 1, who moved there in 2003, after leaving their old ground at Beacon Park.
Brickfield and Brickfields became common place names for former brickfields in south east England. The children's building toy called "Brickyard" (stylized as B RICKY a RD ) is named after the place. See also