All Saints' Church, Alton
All Saints' Church is an Anglican church in Alton, Hampshire, England.
Hindhead is a village in Surrey, England. It is the highest village in Surrey, with buildings at between 185 and 246 metres above sea level. It is best known as the location of the Devil's Punch Bowl, a beauty spot and site of special scientific interest, and as the site of the Hindhead crossroads, a formerly notorious congestion spot, where the A3 between Portsmouth and London was crossed by the A287 between Hook and Haslemere. The A3 now passes under Hindhead in the Hindhead Tunnel and its route along the Punch Bowl has been removed and landscaped, but the crossroads still exists for local traffic.
Population: 6,187
Latitude: 51° 06' 49.72" N
Longitude: 0° 44' 0.64" E
All Saints' Church is an Anglican church in Alton, Hampshire, England.
Wey Valley Meadows is a Site of Special Scientific Interest in Surrey, England.
The Wey South Path is a Long Distance Path in Surrey and West Sussex, England.
Westborough is situated in the suburbs of North Guildford. It is located next to the Park Barn Estate.
Tuxlith Chapel, also known as Milland Old Church, is a redundant Anglican church in the village of Milland, West Sussex, England (grid reference SU 825 282).
The Burys at Godalming, Surrey was used as a major cricket venue for nine first-class matches between 1821 and 1830. It was used by the Godalming Cricket Club for all of its home first-class matches and also by Surrey.
St Andrew’s Garrison Church, situated at Queens Avenue, Aldershot, Hampshire (GU11 2BY) in southern England is a large army church designed in the late 1920s by the prominent Scottish architect Sir Robert Lorimer (1864–1929).
Singleton railway station served the village of Singleton in the county of West Sussex in England. The station was on the former line between Chichester and Midhurst.
Sandhills is a small hamlet located between the villages of Wormley and Brook in Surrey, UK.
Rogate railway station, also known variously as Rogate for Harting, and Rogate and Harting, supposedly served these two villages in the county of West Sussex in England.
The River Lod is a short river draining about 52 km2 (20 sq mi) of north west Sussex. The source is on Marley Heights near Haslemere, about 140 metres above sea level. From here it flows west past Linchmere, then south to Furnace Pond, where iron ca…
Ramster Garden is an open garden, near Chiddingfold, Surrey, covering over 20 acres (81,000 m2).
Ockford Ridge is a small housing estate in south east England. Built in the early-mid-1930s, it consists of roughly 200 homes and related amenities. There is also a playground and a basketball court on a green and there was a pub called the King Alf…
Netherside Stream Outcrops is a Site of Special Scientific Interest in Surrey, England.
Morton House School was a British Public School, that is an independent fee-paying school, situated in the town of Petersfield, Hampshire, England. In 1993 it was taken over by Churcher's College and became the college's junior school. However, foll…
Midhurst (LSWR) railway station was opened on 1 September 1864 by the London and South Western Railway, the terminus of the line from Petersfield, serving the Market town of Midhurst in West Sussex. The station was closed on 4 April 1925, after the …
Lavendon Abbey was a Premonstratensian abbey in Buckinghamshire, England.
Kingsley Halt was a railway station on the Bordon Light Railway which served the village of Kingsley. The station had been constructed by the London and South Western Railway (LSWR) in the hope that the area would attract residential development, bu…