Buxton School (Leytonstone)
Buxton School, (formerly Cann Hall Primary School and Tom Hood School), is a co-educational all-through school located in Leytonstone, London, England.
Writtle lies 1 mile (1.6 km) west of Chelmsford, Essex, England. It has a traditional village green complete with duck pond and a Norman church and was once described as 'one of the loveliest villages in England, with a ravishing variety of ancient cottages'. The village is now home to Writtle College, one of the UK's oldest and largest land-based colleges and a partner institution of the University of Essex, the grounds of which once housed a Royal hunting lodge, later the possession of the De Brus and De Bohun families. The suggestion that Writtle is the birthplace of Robert the Bruce, as well as his father Robert de Brus, 6th Lord of Annandale, is contested though its possession and use by both is incontrovertible. Today Writtle hosts the annual southern V Festival within the grounds of Comyn's Hylands Park. At the 2001 census, it had a population of 5,632.
Population: 4,749
Latitude: 51° 43' 44.62" N
Longitude: 0° 25' 45.77" E
Buxton School, (formerly Cann Hall Primary School and Tom Hood School), is a co-educational all-through school located in Leytonstone, London, England.
Throgmorton Street is a minor road in the City of London between Lothbury in the west and Old Broad Street to the east.
The Salisbury is a Grade II* listed pub on Grand Parade in Harringay, north London.
Stroud Green railway station is a former station in the Stroud Green area of north London. It was located between Finsbury Park station and Crouch End station on a bridge over Stapleton Hall Road. The station had platforms (now demolished) cantileve…
Stansted Mountfitchet railway station serves the village of Stansted Mountfitchet in Essex, England.
St John's Abbey, also called Colchester Abbey, was a Benedictine monastic institution in Colchester, Essex, founded in 1095. It was dissolved in 1539.
St.
St Mary’s Chapel in Holly Place, Holly Walk, Hampstead, London, NW3 6QU, is now known as St Mary's Church.
St Bartholomew the Less is an Anglican parish in the City of London and the church of St Bartholomew's Hospital within the ancient hospital precincts.
Saint Augustine's, Kilburn, is an Anglican church in the area of Kilburn, in North London, United Kingdom.
Shoreditch Park is an open space in Hoxton, in the London Borough of Hackney. It is bounded by Poole Street (to the north), Rushton and Mintern Streets (south) and New North Road (west) and Pitfield Street (east). The park derives its name from the …
Sandy's Row Synagogue is a historic Grade II listed synagogue in the East End of London.
Rye House railway station is in the Rye House area of Hoddesdon in Hertfordshire, England.
Runwell Hospital was a hospital in Essex operated by South Essex Partnership University NHS Foundation Trust until its final closure on 23 April 2010. From February 2008 until its closure, Runwell Hospital provided solely forensic mental health serv…
The Royal Corinthian Yacht Club was founded at Erith, Kent in 1872 and since the 1930s has been based at Burnham-on-Crouch, Essex. The Club provided the crew for the Endeavour in Thomas Sopwith's America's Cup Challenge in 1934 after a strike of Sop…
Rochford is a local government district in Essex, England. It is named for one of its main settlements, Rochford, though the major centre of population in the district is the town of Rayleigh.
The River Roach is a river that flows entirely through the English county of Essex. It flows through the town of Rochford and joins the River Crouch between Wallasea Island and Foulness Island.
RAF Stansted Mountfitchet was a Royal Air Force station during the Second World War. Located near the village of Stansted Mountfitchet in the District of Uttlesford in Essex, 48 km (30 mi) north-east of central London.