Forest of Arden Hotel and Country Club
The Forest of Arden Hotel & Country Club is a hotel and country club complex in England.
Kingsbury is a district of northwest London in the London Borough of Brent. The name Kingsbury means "The King's Manor". Its ancient scope stretches north and west to include Queensbury and parts of Kenton and Wembley Park in other directions. Kingsbury was in 2001 a ward and in 2011 was identifiable with the Fryent and Barnhill wards approximately. About 25% of Kingsbury is Fryent Country Park, forming the southern quarter. It is of highly mixed density, ranging from high rise to suburban to a green wildlife reserve in the country park.
Population: 4,261
Latitude: 52° 33' 39.82" N
Longitude: -1° 40' 45.70" W
The Forest of Arden Hotel & Country Club is a hotel and country club complex in England.
Foleshill railway station was a railway station in the city of Coventry, England, built by the London and North Western Railway. It was the proceeding station after Daimler Halt on the London and North Western Railway line from Coventry to Nuneaton.
Edwards Number Eight was a nightclub in Birmingham, UK. It was located on Lower Severn St between New Street Station and The Mailbox.
Edial Hall School was a school established in 1735 by Samuel Johnson at Edial, near Lichfield. Here, Johnson taught Latin and Greek to young gentlemen.
Edgbaston Archery and Lawn Tennis Society, informally known as The Archery and based in the Edgbaston area of Birmingham, England, is the oldest lawn tennis club in the world.
Daw End Railway Cutting (grid reference SK035002) is an 8.1 hectare (20.9 acre) geological site of Special Scientific Interest in the West Midlands.
The Criterion Theatre is situated in Earlsdon, Coventry, England. It puts on about seven shows a year. The Company has won the Godiva Award for best theatre in the region several times. The current patrons are Pete Waterman, music producer and railw…
Courtaulds Ground was a cricket ground in Coventry, Warwickshire. The ground was owned by Courtaulds. The first recorded match on the ground was in 1949, when it hosted its first first-class match between Warwickshire and Hampshire in the County Cha…
The Coundon Road Stadium in Coventry was the home ground for Coventry R.F.C.
The Moseley School of Art (grid reference SP078843) on Moseley Road, Balsall Heath, Birmingham, England was built as the first municipal branch School of Art in Birmingham.
Coal Pool is a housing estate in Walsall, West Midlands, England.
Clayhanger is a residential area of Brownhills, West Midlands, England.
Chuckery is a small suburb of Walsall located a mile from the town centre.
Cheswick Green is a village and civil parish within the Metropolitan Borough of Solihull in the English county of West Midlands.
Charlemont with Grove Vale is a political ward in the Metropolitan Borough of Sandwell, in the English Midlands constituency of West Bromwich East.
The Centre for International Education and Research (CIER) evolved in the 1950s, at the University of Birmingham UK, in the context of the involvement of British academics in the new international educational role of the United Nations.
Central Goods railway station was a goods-only railway station in central Birmingham, England, on a spur connected to the Birmingham West Suburban Railway. The station opened on 1 July 1887, initially with facilities to handle 375 wagons. The depot …
Castle Bromwich Hall Gardens are situated to the west of Castle Bromwich Hall, a Jacobean Mansion.