Ardington and Lockinge
Ardington and Lockinge is a civil parish within the Vale of White Horse district located about 2 miles (3 km) east of Wantage, Oxfordshire.
Reading (/ˈrɛdɪŋ/ RED-ing) is a large town and unitary authority area in the ceremonial county of Berkshire, England. It was an important centre in the medieval period, as the site of Reading Abbey, a monastery with strong royal connections. The town was seriously affected by the English Civil War, with a major siege and loss of trade, and played a pivotal role in the Revolution of 1688, with that revolution's only significant military action fought on the streets of the town. The 19th century saw the coming of the Great Western Railway and the development of the town's brewing, baking and seed growing businesses.
Population: 244,070
Latitude: 51° 27' 22.50" N
Longitude: 0° 58' 16.07" E
Ardington and Lockinge is a civil parish within the Vale of White Horse district located about 2 miles (3 km) east of Wantage, Oxfordshire.
Lock Island is an island in the River Thames in England connected to Shepperton Lock, near Shepperton. There is a stretch of open ground where refreshments are served, making the island a popular place to visit or stop and rest. The Thames River Pol…
The Chair Making Museum was based in Kitchener Road, High Wycombe, England, at the works of its sponsor Stewart Linford. The museum housed a collection of antique Windsor Chairs and the tools used to create them through the ages.
Letcombe Football Club is an English football club based in Letcombe Regis, Oxfordshire.
Langham Pond is a Site of Special Scientific Interest in Surrey, England.
LBIC @ Brunel University (formally London International College of Business and Technology at Brunel University) is a for-profit college (owned and operated by Navitas Limited, an Australian-owned educational business) that operates under a formal a…
Kenton Court Meadow is a cricket ground in Sunbury-on-Thames, Surrey (formerly Middlesex).
The Jolly Farmer is a four-exit, partly traffic light-controlled roundabout on the A30 (London Road) on the boundary between Camberley and Bagshot in Surrey, United Kingdom. It derives its name from a gold-robbing farmer, William Davies or William D…
The Imperial Crypt at St Michael's Abbey, Farnborough, is the burial place of the exiled Emperor Napoleon III of France and his wife, Eugénie de Montijo.
Howbery Park is a 36-ha park located adjacent to the River Thames in Crowmarsh Gifford near Wallingford, UK. Its main feature is an English manor house built in about 1850 by English Member of Parliament (MP) William Seymour Blackstone. Blackstone f…
The Hospital of St John the Baptist was a hospital in High Wycombe in Buckinghamshire, England between 1180 and 1548. It was situated on the main road that ran from Oxford to London (what is now the A40) east of the town centre.
Holyport F.C. are a football club based in Holyport, near Maidenhead, England.
Hollyhock Island is an uninhabited island, about 50 metres long, in the River Thames in England on the reach above Penton Hook Lock.
High Wycombe Eden Bus Station is situated in High Wycombe town centre and is attached to the Eden Shopping Centre.
Hedsor Water is a stretch of the River Thames near Cookham, Berkshire which runs to the north of Sashes Island.
Hardwick Court Farm, Hardwick Court when a manor, is a large farm with farmhouse in the west of Chertsey, Surrey, England and was first established during the Saxon period. A Saxon main road to Chertsey once ran through it but is now reduced to just…
Hanney was an ancient ecclesiastical parish about 3 miles (5 km) north of Wantage in the Vale of White Horse. It included the villages of East Hanney and West Hanney (known collectively as "The Hanneys") and Lyford.
Handy Cross is the name of a hamlet in the parish of Little Marlow, Buckinghamshire. It is located on Marlow Hill, on the old road between Marlow and High Wycombe.