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The ward of Sherwood (which includes some adjacent neighbourhoods) is represented by Nottingham City Council and has three Labour Party councillors. [3] It lies in the Nottingham East parliamentary constituency, which from 1992 until 2010 was represented by MP John Heppell, and from 2010 by Chris Leslie, who was elected with a majority of 6,969. [4]
In the early part of the twentieth century, horse-drawn trams ran along Mansfield Road to the stables and depot between St. John's Church and Watcombe Road. Later, this line was extended to Sherwood and upgraded to electric trams. The tram depot was replaced by Carrington Lido (open air swimming pool) and, later still, by a town-house development.
There is a further group of 12 two-bedroom houses that were built earlier in 1889, in Sherwood, as Sir John Robinson alms houses in honour of his son's 21st birthday. [ citation needed ] References
The Newark and Sherwood part of Rainworth is a parish in its own right, while the Mansfield part is unparished. Rainworth is part of Newark and Sherwood and Mansfield councils with the border being near the bridge over Rainworth Water on Southwell Road East. The Mansfield area is part of the Ransom Wood ward and is represented by Labour's John ...
This tunnel was once home to a rifle club. This portal is found at the south end of Porchester Road on the opposite side of Carlton Road, Nottingham. [3] Thorneywood Tunnel is a 408-yard-long tunnel south of Sherwood Tunnel with its north portal in a short cutting off Mickleborough Avenue, Nottingham. [3] This portal has also been covered with ...
Spion Kop is a small residential and former industrial area in Nottinghamshire, England, stretching for a few hundred metres on both sides of the main A60 road surrounded by open farmland. It is in the civil parish of Warsop. It is located about a mile to the south of Warsop on the A60, Mansfield Road.
A 2023 Nottinghamshire County Council report quoted a detour-length of four miles. [16] In late 2024, an eel ladder, constructed by Nottinghamshire Wildlife Trust with funding from Severn Trent Water, was created to assist in the upriver journeys of European eels, an endangered species, as they climb towards the mill-pond at the weir section ...
The foundation stones of the building on Redcliffe Road were laid on 18 October 1883 [3] and it opened for worship on 29 May 1884. It was built by the contractors George Bell and Sons of Sherwood Street, Nottingham, to the designs of the architect Abraham Harrison Goodall [4] and had extensive school accommodation underneath.