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Portholland
Portholland is a settlement in Cornwall, England, UK. It is on the south coast in the civil parish of St Michael Caerhays. The name Portholland comes from the Cornish language elements porth, meaning 'cove' or 'harbour', and Alan, a personal name.
Portholland
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Portholland
Portholland is a settlement in Cornwall, England, UK. It is on the south coast in the civil parish of St Michael Caerhays. The name Portholland comes from the Cornish language elements porth, meaning 'cove' or 'harbour', and Alan, a personal name.
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Croxteth Hall
Local GemsCroxteth Hall is a country estate and Grade II* listed building in the West Derby suburb of Liverpool, England. It is the former country estate and ancestral home of the Molyneux family, the Earls of Sefton. After the death of the seventh and last Earl in 1972, the estate passed to Liverpool City Council, which now manages the remainder of the estate following the sale of approximately half of the grounds. The remaining grounds, Croxteth Park, were at one time a hunting chase of the Molyneux fam
Croxteth Hall
View pinSimonswood
Local GemsSimonswood is a civil parish in the West Lancashire district of Lancashire, England. At the 2001 census, the population was 130, increasing to 151 by the 2011 census.
Simonswood
View pinAuldcathie
Local GemsAuldcathie is a suburb to the west of Winchburgh in West Lothian, Scotland.
Auldcathie
View pinKnightsridge
Local GemsKnightsridge is an area of the town of Livingston in West Lothian, Scotland. Knightsridge lies to the north of the town.
Knightsridge
View pinHeadbolt Lane railway station
Local GemsHeadbolt Lane is a railway station in Kirkby, Merseyside, England, which opened on 5 October 2023.
Headbolt Lane railway station
View pinTrewarthenick
Local GemsTrewarthenick is a hamlet in the civil parish of Tregony in Cornwall, England, United Kingdom.
Trewarthenick
View pinUphall
Local GemsUphall is a village in West Lothian, Scotland. It forms a conurbation with Broxburn to the east, Dechmont to the west and the major town of Livingston to the south west. Uphall is 30 miles from Glasgow and 14 miles from Edinburgh in the Scottish Lowlands. Uphall Station and Pumpherston are separate villages that lie to the south of Uphall.
Uphall
View pinKirkby High School
Local GemsKirkby High School is a Knowsley based co-educational secondary school educating pupils aged 11–16 years of age in the Kirkby area of Merseyside, England.
Kirkby High School
View pinKillough railway station
Local GemsKillough railway station was on the Downpatrick, Killough and Ardglass Railway, which ran from Downpatrick to Ardglass in Northern Ireland.
Killough railway station
View pinDrumshoreland railway station
Local GemsDrumshoreland railway station was a railway station in West Lothian, Scotland. It was located on the Edinburgh and Bathgate Railway.
Drumshoreland railway station
View pinNewbridge chariot
Local GemsThe remains of an Iron Age chariot burial were found near the Bronze Age burial mound at Huly Hill, Newbridge in Scotland, 14 km west of Edinburgh city centre, in advance of development at the Edinburgh Interchange. The chariot was the first of its kind to be found in Scotland and shows Iron Age Scotland in direct contact with the European Continent. The Newbridge chariot was buried intact, a method consistent with the burial practices of Continental Europe rather than Scotland.
Newbridge chariot
View pinKirkby Ski Slope
Local GemsKirkby Ski Slope was an artificial ski slope that was built in Kirkby, near Liverpool, England, in the 1970s. The ski slope never opened and was source of considerable controversy around how it was built and funded.
Kirkby Ski Slope
View pinWigginton Road Cricket Ground
Local GemsWigginton Road Cricket Ground in York is a former cricket ground. Its one and only first-class match was held in June 1890 between Yorkshire and Kent.
Wigginton Road Cricket Ground
View pinWinchburgh railway station
Local GemsWinchburgh railway station served the village of Winchburgh, West Lothian, Scotland from 1842 to 1930 on the Edinburgh and Glasgow Railway, now the Glasgow–Edinburgh via Falkirk line. It was located in a cutting about 200 m (660 ft) to the north of the Winchburgh Tunnel, and 900 m (3,000 ft) south-east of Winchburgh Junction. The station was about 400 m north of the village, close to the modern Duntarvie Castle Road bridge, which opened in 2024.
Winchburgh railway station
View pinKirkliston
Local GemsKirkliston is a village and parish to the west of Edinburgh, Scotland, historically within the county of West Lothian but now within the City of Edinburgh council area limits. It lies on high ground immediately north of a northward loop of the Almond, on the old road between Edinburgh and Linlithgow, having a crossroads with the road from Newbridge to Queensferry and beyond to Fife. The B800 is variously named Path Brae, High Street, Station Road, and Queensferry Road as it passes through the to
Kirkliston
View pinY Felinheli
Local GemsY Felinheli, formerly known in English as Port Dinorwic, is a village and community beside the Menai Strait between Bangor and Caernarfon in Gwynedd, northwest Wales.
Y Felinheli
View pinSkelton, York
Local GemsSkelton is a village and civil parish in the unitary authority of the City of York, in North Yorkshire, England. It is four miles (6.4 km) north-north-west of the city of York, west of Haxby, and on the east bank of the River Ouse. Skelton was in the ancient royal Forest of Galtres and covers 977.3 hectares (3.77 mi2). Skelton was made a conservation area in 1973.
Skelton, York
View pinSt Patrick's College, Belfast
Local GemsSt Patrick's College, Bearnageeha was a Roman Catholic secondary school for boys aged between 11 and 19 situated on the Antrim Road, Belfast, Northern Ireland.
St Patrick's College, Belfast
View pinEarswick
Local GemsEarswick is a village and civil parish in the unitary authority of the City of York in North Yorkshire, England. It lies between Huntington and Strensall about 4 miles (6.4 km) north of York.
Earswick
View pinCullybackey High School
Local GemsCullybackey College is a co-educational, non-selective post-primary school in the village of Cullybackey, County Antrim, Northern Ireland. It was established in 1968 under its former name of Cullybackey High School. In 2013 the Governors decided to rename the school to Cullybackey College.
Cullybackey High School
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