Feltham Urban District
Feltham was an urban district in Middlesex, England from 1904 to 1965.
Send is a village and civil parish in the Guildford borough of the English county of Surrey. Send acquired its name during the Great English Vowel Shift[dubious – discuss] from the word sand, which was extracted at various periods until the 1990s for construction and other purposes at pits in the outskirts of the parish. The north of Send is at the southern-eastern edge of the Bagshot Formation.
Population: 6,597
Latitude: 51° 17' 19.50" N
Longitude: 0° 31' 35.98" E
Feltham was an urban district in Middlesex, England from 1904 to 1965.
Farncombe railway station opened in 1897 as a minor stop on the Portsmouth Direct Line between Guildford and Godalming, England.
Farlington School is an independent school day and boarding school for girls aged three to eighteen in Horsham, West Sussex, England.
The Club was formed in 1881 as Eton Wick. Eton Wick originally played at Dorney Common, moving to their present ground in 1904. The club at the end of the 1952–53 season were promoted to the Windsor, Slough and District League First Division, and be…
Eton was a rural district in the administrative county of Buckinghamshire, England. It was named after but did not contain Eton, which was an urban district.
The Epsom Cluster, also referred to as the Horton Estate, was a cluster or group of five large psychiatric hospitals situated on land to the west of Epsom.
The Hundred of Elmbridge or Elmbridge/Emley Hundred was a geographic subdivision (called a "hundred") in the north of the county of Surrey, England.
The Electric Theatre is a theatre located in Guildford, Surrey, England, which has gained a widespread reputation for promotion of the musical arts at all levels from community workshops to concerts by internationally well-known artists.
Dorking was a parliamentary constituency centred on the towns of Dorking and Horley in Surrey.
Decca Sports Ground is a cricket ground in Tolworth, London (formerly Surrey).
County Hall is the main government building for the county of Surrey in England. It was opened 13 November 1893, and is located in Kingston upon Thames. County Hall is a landmark in Kingston and contains a clock tower entrance, sculptures, plaques o…
Colnbrook railway station was a station on the now closed railway line between West Drayton and Staines West, on the western edge of London, England. It opened in 1884 to serve the village of Colnbrook, perhaps anticipating that one day it would gro…
St Nicholas Church in Thames Ditton, Surrey, England, is a Grade-I listed building Anglican parish church that has parts that date back to the 12th century.
Chertsey Lock is a lock on the River Thames in England, on the northern Middlesex bank near Chertsey (which is on the opposite side of the river) in north-west Surrey. The lock is about 200 yards upstream of the picturesque Chertsey Bridge.
Chennestone Primary School is a large state primary school located in Sunbury-on-Thames, Surrey, England.
The Catholic National Library (formerly the Catholic Central Library) is a large Roman Catholic library currently located at St Michael's Abbey in Farnborough, Hampshire, founded in 1912. It is known for its 70,000 books and periodicals, and the bro…
Carshalton was a local government district in north east Surrey from 1883 to 1965 around the town of Carshalton.
Carlisle Park, Carlisle Road, is a multi-use recreational area in Hampton, London, in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames of bowling club, seven tennis courts, two separate playgrounds (one for very young children, one for other children), a …