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A house and two shops in brick with a dentilled eaves band, a tile roof, three storeys and four bays. The house in the left bay has a doorway with a gabled porch and a casement window to the right. In the other bays is a shop front with a central round-arched passageway. Above the shop front is a continuous fascia on console brackets.
Suburbs of Shrewsbury refers to residential areas within the town of Shrewsbury, Shropshire, England. Many had been separate villages until the growth of the town.
Attingham Park / ˈ æ t ɪ ŋ əm / is an English country house and estate in Shropshire. Located near the village of Atcham, on the B4380 Shrewsbury to Wellington road. It is owned by the National Trust and is a Grade I listed building. Attingham Park was built in 1785 for Noel Hill, 1st Baron Berwick, replacing a
This is a list of National Trust properties in England, including any stately home, historic house, castle, abbey, museum or other property in the care of the National Trust in England. Bedfordshire [ edit ]
Cross Houses is a village in Shropshire, England, the largest village in the Parish of Berrington. It is located on the A458 road and is 4 miles south east of Shrewsbury . Cross Houses is also the name of a hamlet south-west of Bridgnorth .
The village has a crescent of council-built houses, called Church Close (originally Rural Cottages). They were built in 1949, [ 1 ] close to St Thomas' Church. The latter was built (with Edward Haycock as architect) as a daughter church to the then parish church at Pontesbury in 1840 and closed by 1985, since when it has been a private home [ 2 ...
The reason for the dedication is unclear, as there is no written record of Eata coming so far south. However, there is a crop photograph from the 1970s of a field in Attingham Park showing the site of a Saxon palace identical to one excavated near Hexham. "Atcham" is a contraction of "Attingham", meaning "the home of Eata's people".
Albrighton Hall near Shrewsbury, Shropshire, is a house which is Grade II* listed on the National Heritage List for England. [1] It was built in 1630 [2] for the Ireland family and remained in this family for the next five generations until 1804. It was then the home of several notable people until 1953. In the 1990s it was converted into a hotel.
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