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The Anchor is a pub in the London Borough of Southwark. It is in the Bankside locality on the south bank of the River Thames , close to Southwark Cathedral and London Bridge station . A tavern establishment (under various names) has been at the pub's location for over 800 years. [ 1 ]
Aspley Guise is a village and civil parish in the west of Central Bedfordshire, England. In addition to the village of Aspley Guise itself, the civil parish also includes part of the town of Woburn Sands , the rest of which is in the City of Milton Keynes in Buckinghamshire .
Aspley House Aspley Guise: Country house: Pre-1749: 22 October 1952 1113948: Upload Photo: Church of St Botolph ...
The parish is first mentioned in a document of 969 setting out the boundaries of Aspley Guise, by its original name of Hysseburnan. [2] Within the Domesday Book which was commissioned by William the Conqueror (1066–1087), found that the parish of Husborne Crawley was divided into two manors.
Aspley Heath is a village and civil parish in the Central Bedfordshire district of Bedfordshire, England. [2]The village is a linear settlement. [3] It adjoins Woburn Sands, which is part of the City of Milton Keynes in Buckinghamshire; Aspley Guise lies northeast, Woburn is to the south, and Bow Brickhill and Little Brickhill to the west and south west respectively.
Anchor Inn may refer to: The Anchor Inn (Birmingham), a public house in Digbeth, Birmingham, England; Anchor Inn (Dorset), a public house in Dorset, England; The Anchor Inn (Combwich), a public house in Somerset, England; The Anchor Inn (Wheaton, Maryland), a former restaurant and business development in Wheaton, Maryland
Hope and Anchor may refer to: Hope and Anchor, Hammersmith, a pub in Hammersmith, London; Hope and Anchor Tavern, a pub in Hobart, Tasmania; Hope and Anchor, Islington, a pub in the London Borough of Islington; Hope and Anchor, Welham Green, a pub in Hertfordshire; The Seal of Rhode Island, which features the hope and anchor motif
At the main crossroads was the "Anchor" public house [1] [2] at 1,266 feet (386 m), the highest pub in Shropshire following the closure of The Kremlin at Clee Hill Village. [3] It had been a pub continuously since at least 1830, until the last landlord retired in 2020, and features in the Mary Webb novel Seven for a Secret (1922) as the ...