Ledbury Town Halt railway station
Ledbury Town Halt was one of two stations serving the town of Ledbury. It was situated at the junction of Bridge Street and Bye Street, just to the north of the point where Bridge Street crossed the line.
Ross-on-Wye (Welsh: Rhosan ar Wy) is a small market town with a population of 10,089 (according to the 2001 census), falling to 9,574 at the 2011 Census. in south eastern Herefordshire, England, located on the River Wye, and on the northern edge of the Forest of Dean.
Population: 10,310
Latitude: 51° 55' 0.01" N
Longitude: -2° 34' 0.01" W
Ledbury Town Halt was one of two stations serving the town of Ledbury. It was situated at the junction of Bridge Street and Bye Street, just to the north of the point where Bridge Street crossed the line.
Knightsbridge is a hamlet neighbouring Elmstone-Hardwicke and Uckington, close to Junction 10 of the M5 motorway, near Cheltenham in Gloucestershire.
Kerne Bridge railway station is a disused railway station on the Ross and Monmouth Railway constructed in the Herefordshire hamlet of Kerne Bridge which also served the village of Goodrich across the River Wye.
John Masefield High School is a secondary school with academy status located in Ledbury, Herefordshire.
Hay St Marys F.C. are a football club based in Hay-on-Wye.
Hawling is a small village in the Cotswolds of England, close to Bourton-on-the-Water and Guiting Power.
Hatterrall Hill is a rounded peak in the Black Mountains which sits on the Wales-England border, partly in Monmouthshire, Wales and partly in Herefordshire, England. Its summit at 531m is the high point of a peaty plateau which falls away steeply on…
Haresfield railway station served the village of Haresfield in Gloucestershire.
Hanley Castle was a Norman castle that stood to the south of the present site of the village of Hanley Castle, which lies 2 km north of Upton-upon-Severn, in the county of Worcestershire, England, United Kingdom.
Ham Mill Halt was opened on 12 October 1903 on what is now the Golden Valley Line between Kemble and Stroud. This line was opened in 1845 as the Cheltenham and Great Western Union Railway from Swindon to Gloucester and this was one of many small sta…
Hailes Castle was a castle in the village of Stanway, Gloucestershire in Gloucestershire, England.
Hadnock Halt railway station is a disused railway station on the Ross and Monmouth Railway which was only open for eight years, 1951 to 1959, closing when passenger services were withdrawn from the line. The platform still exists and the trackbed is…
Gwernesney (Welsh: Gwernesni) is a village in Monmouthshire in southeast Wales.
Graig Syfyrddin, also known as Edmund's Tump, is a hill [1] near Grosmont in north-eastern Monmouthshire, Wales.
Gorsley and Kilcot is a civil parish forming part of the district of the Forest of Dean in the English county of Gloucestershire.
Gorsley is an area in the southwest Midlands of England, on the border between Gloucestershire and Herefordshire.
Whitefriars, also known as White Friers or The College of Carmelites, Gloucester, England, was a Carmelite friary of which nothing now survives.
Greyfriars, Gloucester, England, was a medieval monastic house founded about 1231.