Teignmouth Abbey
Teignmouth Abbey was an abbey in Devon, England.
Teignmouth Abbey was an abbey in Devon, England.
Teessaurus Park is a 10 acre urban grassland recreational area and sculpture park opened in 1979 in the Riverside Park light industrial estate, Middlesbrough, on the southern bank of the river Tees. It was built on a former slag heap in what was the…
The Teesdale Way is a long distance walk between the North Sea coast of North Yorkshire and the Cumbrian Pennines in England.
Tedburn St Mary is a village situated approximately 8 miles west of Exeter, Devon, England. It has a population of approximately 1500. The village is the principal population centre of the electoral ward called Teignbridge North.
Tean Road Sports Ground is a cricket ground in Cheadle, Staffordshire, England (not to be confused with the Cheadle in Greater Manchester) that hosted the Derbyshire v Glamorgan Refuge Assurance League game in 1987. Aside from that, the ground has p…
Tealham and Tadham Moors (grid reference ST420450) is a 917.6 hectare (2267.3 acre) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest south of Wedmore in Somerset, notified in 1985.
Taylors Avenue is a football stadium in Carrickfergus, County Antrim, Northern Ireland. It is the home stadium of local football team Carrick Rangers F.C.. Taylors Avenue has a capacity of 6,000. There are two covered stands, with the rest of the gr…
Taunton Priory, or the Priory of St Peter and St Paul, was an Augustinian monastery founded c.
Tattingstone White Horse is a hamlet on East Side of Alton Water, in the Babergh District, in the English county of Suffolk. For transport there is the A137 road nearby. Nearby settlements include the town of Ipswich and the village of Tattingstone.
Tattershall railway station was a station in Tattershall, Lincolnshire.
Tattershall College was a grammar school in Tattershall, Lincolnshire. The college was established in 1439 and the building which still stands today was constructed between 1454 and 1460. This building was built by the 3rd Baron Cromwell for the edu…
Tattenhall Road railway station was a railway station situated a mile to the north of the village of Tattenhall, Cheshire on the Chester and Crewe Railway that was built in 1840 linking Chester to the north-west with Crewe to the south-east.
Tarrenhendre is a mountain in Snowdonia, North Wales.
Tarrant Abbey was an abbey in Tarrant Crawford, Dorset, England.
Tarbolton railway station was a railway station about a mile and a quarter from the village of Tarbolton that it served, in South Ayrshire, Scotland. The station was part of the Ayr to Mauchline Branch of the Glasgow and South Western Railway and wa…
Tarbet (Scottish Gaelic, An Tairbeart) is a hamlet in Sutherland, on the west coast of Scotland. It is the nearest port of contact to the Scottish Wildlife Trust's national nature reserve of Handa Island, and a small ferry operates between the two. …
Tarbet (Scottish Gaelic: An Tairbeart or Tairbeart Loch Nibheis) is a place on the south shore of Loch Nevis in Scotland, about 6 miles east of Mallaig. The name 'tarbet' (or 'tarbert') refers to a portage or isthmus, in this case it is between Loch…
Tanhouse is a residential area of Halesowen in the West Midlands of England.
Tanera Be(a)g or Tanara Beag is an uninhabited island in the Summer Isles off north west Scotland.
Tan-y-Manod railway station was a railway station in North Wales. It opened as part of the narrow gauge Festiniog and Blaenau Railway on 29 May 1868. On 1 September 1882 the standard gauge Bala Ffestiniog Line reached Llan Ffestiniog from the south.…
Tan-y-Bwlch (Welsh for Under the pass/gap) is located near Penparcau village on the outskirts of Aberystwyth, in Wales, and consists of a fairly new nature reserve. It was designated in 1999 following a public meeting which attracted more than 100 l…
Tamworth was a rural district in the English Midlands from 1894 to 1965.
Tamnaherin (possibly from the Irish: Tamhnach Caorthainn) is the name of a townland and small housing estate in County Londonderry, Northern Ireland. In the 2001 Census it had a population of 123 people.
Tamerton Foliot was a railway station, built by the Plymouth, Devonport and South Western Junction Railway (PDSWJR) on its line from Lydford to Devonport Kings Road and Plymouth Friary on the section that is now the Tamar Valley Line.
Tame Valley Junction (grid reference SO976936), also known as Doe Bank Junction, is a canal junction at the western limit of the Tame Valley Canal where it meets the Walsall Canal, south of Walsall, in the West Midlands, England.
Talywain (Welsh: Talywaun) is situated between Garndiffaith, Abersychan and Pentwyn in Torfaen in south east Wales, within the historic boundaries of Monmouthshire.
Tallington railway station was a station in Tallington, Lincolnshire on the Great Northern Railway between Grantham and Peterborough. It was closed in 1959, however the former goods yard is still open and is used by the Dow-Mac works at Tallington f…
Talla Water is a river in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, near Tweedsmuir. It feeds the Talla Reservoir, and is a tributary of the River Tweed.
Talacre railway station served the village of Talacre, near Prestatyn on the North Wales Coast Line. It opened around 1848, by the Chester and Holyhead Railway, which was later amalgamated into the London & North Western Railway.
Tairlaw Linn is a waterfall of Scotland, near Straiton, South Ayrshire.
Tair Carn Uchaf (Welsh for "Upper Three Cairns") is a hill in the Brecon Beacons National Park in the county of Carmarthenshire, southwest Wales.
Tahay (Scottish Gaelic: Taghaigh) is an island in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland. The name originates from the Old Norse tagg-øy meaning island with a prominent hill.
Tadpole Bridge is a road bridge across the River Thames in Oxfordshire, England, carrying a road between Bampton to the north and Buckland to the south.
Taddiport is a hamlet in North Devon, England, near Great Torrington. The name is believed to derive from toad, a place where toads were found. In the Middle Ages it was a leper colony. A field system next to the hamlet is still divided up as for th…
TAG Theatre Company is a theatre company established in 1967 in Glasgow, Scotland as the outreach arm of the Citizens' Theatre in Glasgow, and was known as the Citizens' Theatre for Youth.
Sylvia's Meadow, a Site of Special Scientific Interest, is a nature reserve owned and managed by Cornwall Wildlife Trust.