43,772 Articles of interest in United Kingdom
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York Student Television (abbreviated YSTV) is England’s oldest student television station. Founded in 1967, the station is based at the University of York, with its studio in James College. YSTV once held the world record for longest continuous tele…
York Cemetery is a cemetery located in the city of York, England. Founded in 1837, it now encompasses 24 acres (97,000 m2) and is owned and administered by The York Cemetery Trust with support of the Friends of York Cemetery. It is situated on Cemet…
Yoke is a fell in the Lake District in Cumbria, England. It has a height of 706 m (2,316 ft) and is situated in the far eastern sector of the national park, 7 kilometres north east of the town of Ambleside. Yoke is the southern extremity of the long…
Ynystawe (also Ynysdawe in Welsh; Welsh pronunciation: [ɨ̞nɨ̞s.taʊ.ɛ]) is a small village in the City and County of Swansea in Wales, in the electoral ward of Morriston. It is centred half a mile (1 km) north of Junction 45 of the M4 motorway, betwe…
Ynys Cantwr is a small tidal island south of Ramsey Island, Pembrokeshire, Wales.
Yeovil Olympiads Athletics Club was the first track and field athletics club in Yeovil, Somerset, England.
Yeoveney Halt was a railway station of a minimalist nature on the Staines & West Drayton Railway (which became part of the Great Western Railway in 1900). It was opened in June 1887 as Runnymede Range Halt on a restricted basis (as a private station…
Yealmpton station was a stone built railway station in Devon, and was the terminus of the Plymouth to Yealmpton Branch built to the south and across the River Yealm from the town of Yealmpton.
Yealand Storrs is a hamlet in the English county of Lancashire.
Yeading Brook 16 miles (26 km) is a tributary of the River Crane, in West London. It rises in major part from the Headstone Manor moat, and in minor part from a small stream flowing from Pinner Park (which is also the source of the River Pinn). It f…
Ye Olde Cinder House is a house on Station Road in West Hallam, Derbyshire and is made of ‘cinder'.
Yazor is some 8 miles (13 km) north west of the city of Hereford on the A480 road and about 1 mile (2 km) east of Offa's Dyke. If was formerly served by Moorhampton railway station located in the parish.
Yaxham is a railway station in the village of Yaxham in the English county of Norfolk.
Yarrow Reservoir - named after the River Yarrow - is a reservoir in the Rivington chain in Anglezarke, Lancashire, England, and has a storage capacity second to Anglezarke Reservoir.
Yarpole is a small village in the civil parish of Croft and Yarpole in rural north Herefordshire, England located between Leominster and Ludlow, Shropshire.
The Yarmouth to Beccles Line was a railway line which linked the Suffolk market town of Beccles with the Norfolk coastal resort of Yarmouth. Forming part of the East Suffolk Railway, the line was opened in 1859 and closed 100 years later in 1959.
Yarlside is a hill in the Howgill Fells, Cumbria (historically Westmorland), England.
Yanworth is a small rural parish located in the county of Gloucestershire, England 14 miles south east of Cheltenham and 88 miles North West of London. It has a population of 300, decreasing to 112 at the 2011 census. The village itself is part of t…
Yalding railway station is on the Medway Valley Line in Kent, England, and serves Yalding. Train services are provided by Southeastern.
Y Traeth (English: The Beach) is a multi-use stadium in Porthmadog, Wales. It is currently used mostly for football matches as the home ground of Porthmadog F.C.. The stadium has a capacity of 2000 people, with 500 seated. The Traeth saw its largest…
Y Llethr is the highest mountain in the Rhinogydd range of Snowdonia, in north Wales. The summit consists of a flat grassy top marked only by a small cairn (artificial cone of stones).
Y Gyrn is a top of Pen y Fan in South Wales, situated in the Brecon Beacons National Park.
Y Gaer (Latin: Cicucium) is a Roman fort situated near modern-day Brecon in Mid Wales, United Kingdom. Y Gaer is located at grid reference SO00332966 (Landranger 160).
Wyville with Hungerton, or Hungerton-cum-Wyville is a village and civil parish in the South Kesteven district of Lincolnshire, England, and situated approximately 5 miles (8 km) south-west from Grantham The whole parish covers about 1,670 acres (6.8…
Wynn Hall is a 17th-century house in the old hamlet of Bodylltyn in Ruabon, Wrexham, Wales standing at the junction of the Penycae Road and Plas Bennion Road. It was built in about 1649 by William Wynn. During the English Civil War he served on the …
Wymering is a residential area of the city of Portsmouth in the English county of Hampshire.
Wylam Bridge is a road bridge in Northumberland, England linking the residential area of North Wylam and neighbouring villages of Heddon-on-the-Wall, and Horsley with the railway station in South Wylam as well as west Gateshead, including the villag…
Wyham cum Cadeby (otherwise Wyham with Caldeby) is a depopulated civil parish in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England. The nearest village is Ludborough, about 1 mile (1.6 km) to the east on the A16 road, and the nearest town, Louth, 5…
Wycombe was, from 1894 to 1974, a rural district in the administrative county of Buckinghamshire, England.
Wyberslegh Hall (sometimes spelled Wybersley Hall) is a large house dating from the 16th century, on the edge of the village of High Lane in Greater Manchester, England. Now in private ownership, Wyberslegh Hall was formerly the home of eldest sons …
Wrotham School is a coeducational secondary school and sixth form with academy status, near Sevenoaks, Kent, England. It has about 700 registered students, with about 120 in the sixth form. In Feb 2012 the school was placed in the top 3% nationally.
Wright's Flour Mill is located at Wharf Road Ponders End which is part of the London Borough of Enfield.
Wright's Almshouses is a terrace of six former almshouses now located on Beam Street (SJ654525) in Nantwich, Cheshire, England. The building was originally erected at the junction of Hospital Street and London Road in 1638 by Edmund Wright (later Si…
The Wrexham-Rhos transmitting station is a digital television relay of Moel-y-Parc, and forms part of the Wales television region. Despite its name, the station is situated in Moss Village and serves the town of Wrexham, the northern area of Wrexham…
Gold North Wales and Cheshire (originally Marcher Gold and later Classic Gold Marcher) was a British independent local radio station broadcasting to Wrexham, Chester, Flintshire and some of the Wirral, and was part of the Gold radio network. It is t…
Wretham and Hockham railway station was a station in Norfolk serving the villages of Wretham and Hockham. It was on the Great Eastern Railway branch line between Swaffham and Thetford.