Rossett Hall
Rossett Hall is a Grade II listed Georgian manor house situated in the village of Rossett, North Wales. It was built in 1750 by John Boydell (1720–1804) as a country retreat for his family.
REKS-əm; Welsh: Wrecsam; Welsh pronunciation: [ˈwrɛksam]) is a town in north Wales. It is the administrative centre of the wider Wrexham County Borough, located in the east of the region. It is situated between the Welsh mountains and the lower Dee Valley alongside the border with Cheshire, England. As the largest town in the north of Wales, it is a major centre of the region's administrative, commercial, retail and educational infrastructure.
Population: 43,649
Latitude: 53° 02' 47.90" N
Longitude: -2° 59' 28.75" W
Rossett Hall is a Grade II listed Georgian manor house situated in the village of Rossett, North Wales. It was built in 1750 by John Boydell (1720–1804) as a country retreat for his family.
Rhydycroesau is a tiny village on the English-Welsh border, west 3.25 miles on B 4580 of Oswestry.
Plaskynaston Lane is a demolished football stadium in Cefn Mawr, Wrexham, Wales. It was the home stadium of Cefn Druids A.F.C. of the Cymru Alliance.
Pentrebychan (variously spelled as either one word or two, with the literal Welsh language meaning of "little village") is a semi-rural hamlet in the county borough of Wrexham, Wales
Wrexham has two main town parks, these being Bellevue Park and Acton Park, and open parkland at Erddig. With the rapid development of the town in the 19th century, the need for a formal park for the growing population was identified. However it was …
Northop Hall Girls FC is a girls only football club based in Northop Hall, Flintshire in North Wales. The club's senior women's team joined the top level Welsh Premier League in 2011–12. The withdrew from the league midway in the 2013/14 season beca…
Northop Hall Cricket Club Ground is a cricket ground in Northop Hall, Flintshire. The first recorded match on the ground was in 1908, In 1985 Welsh Schools played Scotland Under-19s. In 1992, Wales Minor Counties played a MCCA Knockout Trophy match …
Mollington railway station was on the Chester and Birkenhead Railway near to the village of Mollington in Cheshire, England. The station opened on 23 September 1840 at the same time as the railway line and closed to passengers on 7 March 1960 due to…
Milton Green is a hamlet, 8 miles south-south-east of Chester, in the unitary authority of Cheshire West and Chester and the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England.
Maelor Way is a key long distance footpath, running 38 kilometres / 24 miles from the Offa's Dyke Path National Trail at Bronygarth to the Shropshire Way, Sandstone Trail, Llangollen Canal, South Cheshire Way, and the Marches Way all at Grindley Bro…
Llandegla Forest (Welsh: Coed Llandegla) is a forest of planted conifers covering 6.5 square kilometres in Denbighshire, north-east Wales. It is situated to the south-east of the village of Llandegla at the north-western edge of Ruabon Moors. The fo…
Lache is a proposed railway station a few miles west of Chester on the Shrewsbury to Chester Line. According to the Scott Wilson Report compiled for the Chester to Shrewsbury Rail Partnership, Lache is one of the most promising sites on the line for…
Kaleyard Gate is a postern gate in Chester city walls, Cheshire, England (grid reference SJ406665).
Johnstown & Hafod was a minor station on the Great Western Railway's London to Birkenhead main line. Although the station is gone the railway is still open today as part of the Shrewsbury to Chester Line.
John Summers High School (formerly Deeside High School) is an English medium mixed comprehensive secondary school in the town of Queensferry, Wales, near the border with England. It teaches children aged 11-18. Sixth form education, (16-18), was pro…
Hordley is a small and rural village and civil parish in North Shropshire, Shropshire, England.
Gwersyllt railway station serves the area of Gwersyllt in the town of Wrexham in North Wales.
Gresford (for Llay) Halt was a small railway station located on the Great Western Railway's Paddington to Birkenhead line a few miles north of Wrexham in Wales and halfway up the notorious Gresford bank. It was of timber construction and the platfor…