Whitwell Old Hall
Whitwell Old Hall is an early 17th-century manor house at Whitwell, Derbyshire.
Whitwell Old Hall is an early 17th-century manor house at Whitwell, Derbyshire.
Whitwell Station, on the Ventnor West branch of the Isle of Wight Central Railway, was opened on 26 July 1897 along with the other stations on the branch (with the exception of Ventnor West which opened in 1900).
Whittington, Gloucestershire is a village and rural parish in the county of Gloucestershire in England, United Kingdom.
Whittington Old Hall is a 16th-century mansion house at Whittington, Staffordshire, England, which has been subdivided into separate residential apartments. It is a Grade II* listed building.
Whittington Low Level railway station is one of two former railway stations in the village of Whittington, Shropshire, England.
Whittington Court is an Elizabethan manor house, five miles east of Cheltenham in Gloucestershire, England.
Whitsome is a small rural village in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, on the B6437, near Duns, Fogo, Ladykirk, Leitholm and Swinton.
Whitmoor Common is a Site of Special Scientific Interest in Surrey, England. It has heathland, woodland, grassland and open water.
Whitgreave is a very small village a few miles to the NNW of Stafford situated mid-way between the M6 motorway to the west and the A34 trunk road to the east.
The Whitewell Road is an interface area in north Belfast and Newtownabbey, Northern Ireland, and historically the site of occasional clashes between nationalists and loyalists. The Whitewell Road and the surrounding area is a residential community i…
Whiteway is the name given to a housing estate contained within the Southdown and Twerton electoral wards of Bath, Somerset, England. The construction of the estate began shortly before the outbreak of the Second World War. Whiteway falls within the…
Whitestake is a small village in the South Ribble district of Lancashire, England. It is situated between Farington and New Longton, and is at the boundary of the parishes of Farington, Longton and Penwortham.
Whiteside is a fell in the north-western area of the English Lake District.
Whiteley Bank, also spelled "Whitely Bank", is a small village or hamlet on the Isle of Wight, UK. It is mainly known by the crossroads, now styled as a mini-roundabout, between the A3020, B3327 and Canteen Road to Apse Heath.
Whitehill was originally a council-built district of Hamilton, Scotland, though now it is a mix between council and privately owned houses. It is situated in the northern area of Hamilton and is bounded by Blantyre to the west and Burnbank to the so…
Whitehead railway station serves Whitehead in County Antrim, Northern Ireland.
Whiteford House was an English country house built in 1775 near Stoke Climsland, Cornwall, England, UK. The house was built by Sir John Call of Whiteford on his return from India.
Whitefield's Tabernacle, Moorfields (also known as Moorfields Tabernacle) is a former church at the corner of Tabernacle Street and Leonard Street, Moorfields, London, England. The first church on the site was a wooden building erected by followers …
Whitecraig is a village in East Lothian in Scotland. It is between Musselburgh and Dalkeith, to the east of the city of Edinburgh.
Whitechapel Church, is an unusual church building located approximately half a mile north of Cleckheaton, West Yorkshire, England. It was built in 1820 on a site associated with over nine centuries of worship. It has supported Roman Catholic, Protes…
Whitebridge (Scottish Gaelic: An Drochaid Bhàn) is a small village on the southeast side of Loch Ness in northern Scotland. It is roughly 25 miles from Inverness and eight miles from Fort Augustus. Whitebridge is home to fewer than 100 people spread…
Whiteabbey railway station serves Whiteabbey in Newtownabbey, Northern Ireland.
White Nothe (meaning "White Nose") is a chalk headland on the English Channel coast at the eastern end of Ringstead Bay, east of Weymouth in Dorset, England. The area is well known for its geology and fossils.
The White Lion Inn was a public house located in Henley Street, Stratford-upon-Avon, England, an example of Elizabethan architecture that first appears in historical records in either 1541 or 1591. The building was mentioned by both Harriet Beecher …
White Grit is a small, scattered village beneath Corndon Hill in Powys, Wales, directly on the border with (and partly in) Shropshire. The nearby village of Priest Weston, despite being in England, actually lies to the west of White Grit. To the eas…
White Coomb is a hill in the Southern Uplands of Scotland. Its summit is the highest point of a network of ridges that lie north-east of the town of Moffat in the Moffat Hills. The ridges are broad, but are defended by steep valleys.
White Conduit Fields in Islington was an early venue of major cricket matches and the original home of the White Conduit Club, forerunner of Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC).
Whitchurch is a small hamlet lying on the left bank of the River Stour in Warwickshire, England, some four miles south-south-east of the town of Stratford-upon-Avon.
Whitchurch (Welsh: Tregroes, lit. "Town of the Cross") is a small village and civil parish (Plwy'r Groes, lit. "Parish of the Cross") in north-western Pembrokeshire, West Wales.
Whitchurch station serves the town of Whitchurch, Hampshire England.
Whitchurch railway station is a railway station serving Whitchurch, Cardiff, Wales.
Whitchurch Silk Mill is a watermill on the River Test, located in the town of Whitchurch, Hampshire, England. The mill was constructed in 1815 on a plot of land called Frog Island. The mill is probably on the same site as one of the four mills recor…
Whitacre Junction railway station was opened in 1864 by the Midland Railway.
Whisby Moor is a small moor situated close to the A46 road, west of North Hykeham, in the North Kesteven district of Lincolnshire, England.
Whinney Hill is a village within the borough of Stockton-on-Tees and the ceremonial county of County Durham, England.
Whin Rigg is a fell is the English Lake District, situated in the western segment of the national park, 22 kilometres south east of the town of Whitehaven. It reaches only a modest altitude of 535 m (1,755 ft) but is part of one of the Lake District…