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Princes Risborough railway station
Princes Risborough railway station is a stop on the Chiltern Main Line, serving the market town of Princes Risborough in Buckinghamshire, England. It is managed by Chiltern Railways, which operates all services that stop here.
Princes Risborough railway station
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Princes Risborough railway station
Princes Risborough railway station is a stop on the Chiltern Main Line, serving the market town of Princes Risborough in Buckinghamshire, England. It is managed by Chiltern Railways, which operates all services that stop here.
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The Old Mill Inn
Local GemsThe Old Mill Inn is a public house and country inn in Pitlochry, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. A former gristmill dating to the 18th century, it won the Scottish Inn of the Year in 2016. It has won several other awards.
The Old Mill Inn
View pinNewcastle, County Down
Local GemsNewcastle is a small seaside resort town in County Down, Northern Ireland, which had a population of 8,298 at the 2021 Census. It lies by the Irish Sea at the foot of Slieve Donard, the highest of the Mourne Mountains. Newcastle is known for its sandy beach, forests, and mountains. The town lies within the Newry, Mourne and Down District.
Newcastle, County Down
View pinWeardale Way
Local GemsWeardale Way is a footpath that follows the River Wear in the North East of England. It is 73 miles long, starting at the Lindisfarne Memorial on the sea wall at Roker. It then passes through Chester-le-Street, Durham, Bishop Auckland, Wolsingham and Stanhope. The path ends outside the Post Office in the village of Wearhead in County Durham.
Weardale Way
View pinStevens Park, Quarry Bank
Local GemsStevens Park is a park of the Metropolitan Borough of Dudley, in Quarry Bank, West Midlands, England.
Stevens Park, Quarry Bank
View pinRhins of Galloway
Local GemsThe Rhins of Galloway is a double-headed peninsula in southwestern Scotland. It takes the form of a hammerhead projecting into the Irish Sea, terminating in the north at Corsewall and Milleur Points and in the south at the Mull of Galloway. It is connected to the rest of Wigtownshire by an isthmus, washed on the north by Loch Ryan and on the south by Luce Bay. From end to end, the peninsula measures 28 miles. It takes its name from the Gaelic word rinn, meaning "point".
Rhins of Galloway
View pinOverbury Court
Local GemsOverbury Court is a Georgian style country house in Overbury, Worcestershire, England. It is a privately owned Grade II* listed building.
Overbury Court
View pinMillbrook railway station (Bedfordshire)
Local GemsMillbrook railway station serves the villages of Millbrook and Marston Moretaine in Bedfordshire, England. It is on the Marston Vale Line, between Stewartby and Lidlington. Millbrook is also the principal stop for the Marston Vale Millennium Country Park.
Millbrook railway station (Bedfordshire)
View pinGreenfield Priory
Local GemsGreenfield Priory was a Cistercian priory in Greenfield, near Aby, Lincolnshire, England.
Greenfield Priory
View pinSoulseat Abbey
Local GemsSaulseat or Soulseat Abbey was a Premonstratensian monastic community located in Wigtownshire, Galloway, in the Gaelic-speaking south-west of Scotland.
Soulseat Abbey
View pinGrandtully Castle
Local GemsGrandtully Castle is an historic building in Grandtully, Perth and Kinross, Scotland. It is a Category A listed building dating to 1560. An earlier castle stood around 1 mile east and dates from 1414; only its foundations remain.
Grandtully Castle
View pinSt Austell Community Hospital
Local GemsSt Austell Community Hospital is a health facility in Porthpean Road, St Austell, Cornwall, England. It is managed by Cornwall Partnership NHS Foundation Trust.
St Austell Community Hospital
View pinBarscobe Castle
Local GemsBarscobe Castle is a 17th-century tower house in Balmaclellan, Kirkcudbrightshire, Scotland. It is a typical house of a country laird, and according to a panel above the entrance, was built in 1648. The L-plan tower was constructed using stone taken from Threave Castle. Barscobe Castle is a category A listed building.
Barscobe Castle
View pinResipole
Local GemsResipole is a settlement on the Ardnamurchan peninsula in Highland, Scotland.
Resipole
View pinSunderland (Fawcett Street) railway station
Local GemsFawcett Street railway station served the city of Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, England from 1853 to 1879 on the Penshaw branch line.
Sunderland (Fawcett Street) railway station
View pinPebworth Rural District
Local GemsPebworth was, from 1894 to 1931, a rural district in the administrative county of Gloucestershire, England. The district consisted of four parts, divided from each other by a section of Worcestershire.
Pebworth Rural District
View pinSouth Hams Hospital
Local GemsSouth Hams Hospital is a health facility in Plymouth Road, Kingsbridge, Devon, England. It is managed by University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust and formerly by Torbay and South Devon NHS Foundation Trust.
South Hams Hospital
View pinStranraer Lifeboat Station
Local GemsStranraer Lifeboat Station is located at Foreland Place, Stranraer, a port town which sits at the bottom end of Loch Ryan, on the north side of the isthmus joining the Rhins of Galloway double-headed peninsula to the mainland, formerly in Wigtownshire, now in the administrative region of Dumfries and Galloway.
Stranraer Lifeboat Station
View pinBeckford, Worcestershire
Local GemsBeckford is a small village on the main Cheltenham to Evesham Road, five miles north-east of Tewkesbury, on the Worcestershire—Gloucestershire border.
Beckford, Worcestershire
View pinMillbrook, Bedfordshire
Local GemsMillbrook is a small village and civil parish near Bedford, England. It had a population of 147 according to the 2011 Census. Millbrook railway station, on the Marston Vale Line, is about two miles (3 km) from the village. The parish church, dedicated to St Michael and All Angels, is Grade II* listed.
Millbrook, Bedfordshire
View pinBallintogher
Local GemsBallintogher is a village in County Sligo, Ireland. It is located approximately 8 kilometers southeast of the county town of Sligo on the R290 road between Ballygawley to the west and Dromahair in County Leitrim to the north-east. Known as "The Town of the Causeway", Ballintogher is situated near Lough Gill, and the "Lake Isle of Innisfree" made famous by the poet W. B. Yeats.
Ballintogher
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