Horstead Hall
Horstead Hall was a country house in Norfolk that was demolished in the 1950s.
Norwich (/ˈnɒrɪdʒ/, also /ˈnɒrɪtʃ/) is a city on the River Wensum in England. It is the regional administrative centre and county town of Norfolk. During the 11th century, Norwich was the largest city in England after London, and one of the most important places in the kingdom.
Population: 177,636
Latitude: 52° 37' 40.19" N
Longitude: 1° 17' 54.02" E
Horstead Hall was a country house in Norfolk that was demolished in the 1950s.
Homersfield was a railway station which served the village of Homersfield in Suffolk, England, although it was situated in Alburgh on the Norfolk side of the county boundary which runs through the settlement.
Geldeston was a station in Geldeston, Norfolk – a station on the Waveney Valley Line. It was opened in the early 1860s, and closed to passengers nearly a century later in 1953. It was the penultimate station on the line, and the last in Norfolk as t…
Friars Quay is a residential development and an example of a high density, urban design of the 1970s. The development is located in the Colegate area at the centre of Norwich, Norfolk, bounded on one side by the River Wensum and by a park and two no…
Flordon railway station was a station in Flordon, Norfolk. It opened in 1849 when the line from London to Norwich was constructed.
Fishley sits a mile (1.6km) north of Acle, roughly halfway between Norwich and Great Yarmouth.
Fairhaven Woodland and Water Garden, Norfolk, England, is a registered charity, comprising 131 acres (0.53 km2) of ancient Woodland and Water Garden and including South Walsham inner Broad. Within the garden is an ancient fishpond (King Stephens fis…
Ellingham is a former railway station in Ellingham, Norfolk. It was opened in 1860 as part of the Waveney Valley Line between Tivetshall and Beccles, Suffolk. It was closed to passengers in 1953, and closed fully on April 19, 1965 when the last good…
Earsham was a railway station in Earsham, Norfolk, on the Waveney Valley Line, connecting Beccles with the Great Eastern Main Line which opened in 1860, and closed to passengers in 1953, and to goods services in 1960. It was not demolished, but lay …
Crome's Broad is situated to the east of the River Ant, north of How Hill, within The Broads National Park in Norfolk, England.
The County Ground in Lakenham, Norwich, Norfolk was a cricket ground for over two hundred years, hosting both first-class and List A cricket. Five first-class games, all involving touring international sides, were played here between 1912 and 1986, …
Coltishall railway station serves the town of Coltishall in Norfolk and is served by the Bure Valley Railway
Clayrack Drainage Windmill is located at How Hill in the English county of Norfolk. It is on the east bank of the River Ant close to How Hill, a large Edwardian building which houses the Norfolk Broads Study Centre.
Cawston was a railway station in Cawston, Norfolk. It was part of the Great Eastern Railway network for a large portion of its existence. It was on the line between County School and Aylsham.
Cawston Road Mill is a tower mill at Aylsham, Norfolk, England which has been truncated and converted for use as a holiday home.
Buxton Lamas was a railway station in Buxton with Lamas, Norfolk.
Jay's Mill, Button's Mill or Victoria Road Mill is a tower mill at Diss, Norfolk, England which has been truncated and converted to residential accommodation.
The Bure Valley Path is a 9-mile (14 km) long walking trail and cycling trail in Norfolk, England.