15401 M Hadrians Wall Map Leaflet 420X792mm AW2 Editable
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Map for Day out One Hadrian's Wall Classic
Welcome to Hadian’s Wall Country a UNESCO Arriva & Stagecoach KEY Map for Day Out One World Heritage Site. Truly immerse yourself in Newcastle - Hexham - Carlisle www.arrivabus.co.uk/north-east A Runs Daily the history and heritage of the area by exploring 685 Hadrian’s Wall Classic Tickets and Passes National Trail (See overleaf) by bus and on foot. Plus, spending just one day Arriva Cuddy’s Crags Newcastle - Corbridge - Hexham www.arrivabus.co.uk/north-east Alternative - Roman Traveller’s Guide without your car can help to look after this area of X85 Runs Monday - Friday Military Way (Nov-Mar) national heritage. Hotbank Crags 3 AD122 Rover Tickets The Sill Walk In this guide to estbound These tickets offer This traveller’s guide is designed to help you leave Milecastle 37 Housesteads eet W unlimited travel on Parking est End een Hadrian’s Wall uns r the AD122 service. Roman Fort the confines of your car behind and truly “walk G ee T ont Str ough , Hexham Road Approx Refreshments in the footsteps of the Romans”. So, find your , Lion and Lamb journey times Crag Lough independent spirit and let the journey become part ockley don Mill, Bowes Hotel eenhead, Bypass arwick Bridge Eldon SquaLemingtonre Thr Road EndsHeddon, ThHorsler y Ovington Corbridge,Road EndHexham Angel InnHaydon Bridge,Bar W Melkridge,Haltwhistle, The Gr MarketBrampton, Place W Fr Scotby Carlisle Adult Child Concession Family Roman Site Milecastle 38 Country Both 685 and X85 of your adventure. hr Sycamore 685 only 1 Day Ticket £12.50 £6.50 £9.50 £26.00 Haydon t 16 23 27 -
Roman Britain
Roman Britain Hadrian s Wall - History Vallum Hadriani - Historia “ Having completely transformed the soldiers, in royal fashion, he made for Britain, where he set right many things and - the rst to do so - drew a wall along a length of eighty miles to separate barbarians and Romans. (The Augustan History, Hadrian 11.1)” Although we have much epigraphic evidence from the Wall itself, the sole classical literary reference for Hadrian having built the Wall is the passage above, wrien by Aelius Spartianus towards the end of the 3rd century AD. The original concept of a continuous barrier across the Tyne-Solway isthmus, was devised by emperor Hadrian during his visit to Britain in 122AD. His visit had been prompted by the threat of renewed unrest with the Brigantes tribe of northern Britain, and the need was seen to separate this war-like race from the lowland tribes of Scotland, with whom they had allied against Rome during recent troubles. Components of The Wall Hadrian s Wall was a composite military barrier which, in its nal form, comprised six separate elements; 1. A stone wall fronted by a V-shaped ditch. 2. A number of purpose-built stone garrison forti cations; Forts, Milecastles and Turrets. 3. A large earthwork and ditch, built parallel with and to the south of the Wall, known as the Vallum. 4. A metalled road linking the garrison forts, the Roman Military Way . 5. A number of outpost forts built to the north of the Wall and linked to it by road. 6. A series of forts and lookout towers along the Cumbrian coast, the Western Sea Defences . -
Cumbrian Railway Ancestors B Surnames Surname First Names
Cumbrian Railway Ancestors B surnames Year Age Surname First names Employment Location Company Date Notes entered entered Source service service Babbs John Porter Barrow Goods FUR 08/08/1895 Entered service on 20/- pw 1895 26 FR Staff Register Babbs John Parcels Porter Barrow Central FUR 25/06/1900 From Barrow Goods on 22/- pw 1895 26 FR Staff Register Babbs John Labourer Buccleuch Jct to Goods Dep FUR 16/09/1907 Entered service 1907 38 Furness PW staff register p 6 Babbs John P.Way Askam FUR 00/03/1908 AMB Listed as available mobilisation for Babbs John P Way Labourer Askam FUR 06/08/1914 RAIL 214/81 entrenchmen works Babe William Signalman Carlisle MID 14/11/1876 New appointment. Still in post in 1898 RAIL 491/1024 Babe William Signalman Carlisle MID 00/00/1902 Died RAIL 491/1026 Backhouse James Porter Barrow ? FUR 00/00/1851 Age 32 b.Whitehall Census Backhouse Luke Clerk Askam FUR 10/10/1881 Entered service on 5/6 pw 1881 15 FR Staff Register Transferred from Askam Iron Works on Backhouse Luke Office Boy Dalton FUR 15/05/1882 1881 15 FR Staff Register 7/6 pw Backhouse Luke Clerk Foxfield FUR 20/02/1883 Transferred from Dalton on 10/- pw 1881 15 FR Staff Register Backhouse Luke Clerk Ulverston FUR 29/10/1883 Transferred from Foxfield on 12/6 pw 1880 15 FR Staff Register Backhouse Luke Clerk Ulverston FUR 08/05/1886 Resigned 1880 15 FR Staff Register Backhouse R Underman Lake Side LMS 05/05/1928 In service with LMS on May 5 1928 Furness PW staff register p 26,25 Bacon A. -
Tyne Estuary Partnership Report FINAL3
Tyne Estuary Partnership Feasibility Study Date GWK, Hull and EA logos CONTENTS CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ...................................................................................................... 2 PART 1: INTRODUCTION .................................................................................................... 6 Structure of the Report ...................................................................................................... 6 Background ....................................................................................................................... 7 Vision .............................................................................................................................. 11 Aims and Objectives ........................................................................................................ 11 The Partnership ............................................................................................................... 13 Methodology .................................................................................................................... 14 PART 2: STRATEGIC CONTEXT ....................................................................................... 18 Understanding the River .................................................................................................. 18 Landscape Character ...................................................................................................... 19 Landscape History .......................................................................................................... -
Sunderland - Newcastle - Hexham - Carlisle Sundays
Sunderland - Newcastle - Hexham - Carlisle Sundays Middlesbrough d - - 0832 - - 0931 - - 1031 - Hartlepool d - - 0903 - - 1001 - - 1101 - Horden d - - 0914 - - 1012 - - 1112 - Sunderland d - - 0932 - - 1030 - - 1130 - Newcastle a - - 0951 - - 1050 - - 1150 - d 0845 0930 0955 1016 1035 1055 1115 1133 1155 1215 Dunston - 0935 - 1021 - - 1121 - - 1220 MetroCentre a 0852 0939 1002 1025 1043 1102 1124 1141 1202 1224 d 0853 - 1003 - - 1103 - - 1203 - Blaydon 0857 - 1007 - - - - - 1207 - Wylam 0903 - 1013 - - 1111 - - 1213 - Prudhoe 0908 - 1017 - - 1115 - - 1218 - Stocksfield 0912 - 1022 - - 1120 - - 1222 - Riding Mill 0917 - 1026 - - 1124 - - 1227 - Corbridge 0921 - 1030 - - 1128 - - 1231 - Hexham a 0927 - 1036 - - 1134 - - 1237 - d 0927 - 1037 - - 1135 - - 1237 - Haydon Bridge 0937 - 1046 - - 1144 - - - - Bardon Mill 0943 - 1052 - - 1150 - - - - Haltwhistle 0950 - 1100 - - 1158 - - 1256 - Brampton 1005 - 1115 - - - - - 1311 - Wetheral 1014 - 1124 - - - - - 1320 - Carlisle a 1024 - 1134 - - 1232 - - 1330 - Middlesbrough d - 1131 - - 1230 - - 1331 - - Hartlepool d - 1201 - - 1300 - - 1401 - - Horden d - 1212 - - 1311 - - 1412 - - Sunderland d - 1230 - - 1329 - - 1430 - - Newcastle a - 1250 - - 1349 - - 1450 - - d 1235 1255 1315 1333 1355 1415 1428 1455 1515 1535 Dunston - - 1321 - - 1420 - - 1521 - MetroCentre a 1243 1302 1324 1341 1402 1424 1436 1502 1524 1543 d - 1303 - - 1403 - - 1503 - - Blaydon - - - - 1407 - - - - - Wylam - 1311 - - 1413 - - 1511 - - Prudhoe - 1315 - - 1418 - - 1515 - - Stocksfield - 1320 - - 1422 - - 1520 - - Riding Mill -
Railways List
A guide and list to a collection of Historic Railway Documents www.railarchive.org.uk to e mail click here December 2017 1 Since July 1971, this private collection of printed railway documents from pre grouping and pre nationalisation railway companies based in the UK; has sought to expand it‟s collection with the aim of obtaining a printed sample from each independent railway company which operated (or obtained it‟s act of parliament and started construction). There were over 1,500 such companies and to date the Rail Archive has sourced samples from over 800 of these companies. Early in 2001 the collection needed to be assessed for insurance purposes to identify a suitable premium. The premium cost was significant enough to warrant a more secure and sustainable future for the collection. In 2002 The Rail Archive was set up with the following objectives: secure an on-going future for the collection in a public institution reduce the insurance premium continue to add to the collection add a private collection of railway photographs from 1970‟s onwards provide a public access facility promote the collection ensure that the collection remains together in perpetuity where practical ensure that sufficient finances were in place to achieve to above objectives The archive is now retained by The Bodleian Library in Oxford to deliver the above objectives. This guide which gives details of paperwork in the collection and a list of railway companies from which material is wanted. The aim is to collect an item of printed paperwork from each UK railway company ever opened. -
[CUMBERLAND.] BRAMPTON. 120 POST OFFICE Liddle Joseph, Blacksmith Commercial
[CUMBERLAND.] BRAMPTON. 120 POST OFFICE Liddle Joseph, blacksmith coMMERCIAL. Holliday Nathan, farmer Mitchison Robert, joiner, Green spot Barnes John, Travellers' Rest Pattinson Robert, farmer, Whitrigg ho Wbiterigg. Crozier Thomas, farmer V ever Sarah (Mrs.), shopkeeper Pattinson Mr. Robert, Whitrigg hall Glaister John & William, farmers V ever William, farmer BRAMPTON is a township, parish, small market town, National school was completed in 1857, at a cost of £1,260, and polling place for the eastern division of Cumberland, and has an average attendance of 150 children. The English distant 9~ miles-east-north-east from Carlisle, 50~ west from Presbyterian school is attended by about 60 scholars. The Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 305 north-north-west from London, Infant school has an average attendance of 100 children. and H from Milton station on the Newcastle and Carlisle This township is situate in the Eskdale Ward, union of its railway; it is bounded on the north by Deuton, Lanercost, own name, eastern division of the county, and diocese of and Walton ; on the east by Northumberland; on the south Carlisle, and according to the historian Camtlen, this town by Hayton, Castle Carrock, and Geltsdale Forest, and on the was formerly the site of the Roman station Bremetenracum, west hy Irthington. The town is situated between the rivers which some modern writers, with more probability, have Irthing and Gelt, tributaries of the Eden, about 1 mile south fixed as Old Penrith. The town sustained an extensive of the former, and 2~ from the point where they unite, and siege during the wars of Edward II., of which, as well as of lies about 2 miles south of the Roman wall, in a deep its e!ll'lier importance it still exhibits evident marks. -
ROMANO- BRITISH Villa A
Prehistoric (Stone Age to Iron Age) Corn-Dryer Although the Roman villa had a great impact on the banks The excavated heated room, or of the River Tees, archaeologists found that there had been caldarium (left). activity in the area for thousands of years prior to the Quarry The caldarium was the bath Roman arrival. Seven pots and a bronze punch, or chisel, tell house. Although this building us that people were living and working here at least 4000 was small, it was well built. It years ago. was probably constructed Farm during the early phases of the villa complex. Ingleby Roman For Romans, bath houses were social places where people The Romano-British villa at Quarry Farm has been preserved in could meet. Barwick an area of open space, in the heart of the new Ingleby Barwick housing development. Excavations took place in 2003-04, carried out by Archaeological Services Durham University Outbuildings (ASDU), to record the villa area. This included structures, such as the heated room (shown above right), aisled building (shown below right), and eld enclosures. Caldarium Anglo-Saxon (Heated Room) Winged With the collapse of the Roman Empire, Roman inuence Preserved Area Corridor began to slowly disappear from Britain, but activity at the Structure Villa Complex villa site continued. A substantial amount of pottery has been discovered, as have re-pits which may have been used for cooking, and two possible sunken oored buildings, indicating that people still lived and worked here. Field Enclosures Medieval – Post Medieval Aisled Building Drove Way A scatter of medieval pottery, ridge and furrow earthworks (Villa boundary) Circular Building and early eld boundaries are all that could be found relating to medieval settlement and agriculture. -
Hadrian's Wall Partnership Board Meeting Minutes Friday 24Th January 2020
Frontiers of the Roman Empire World Heritage Site Partnership Board Meeting Friday 24th January 2020 North Tyneside Council 13h00 – 15h00 Present: Jane Gibson (Chair), Jane Meek (Vice Chair), Andrew Birley (Vindolanda Trust), Steve Bishop (North Tyneside Council), Mike Collins (Historic England), Bill Griffiths (Tyne and Wear Archives and Museums), Richard Hingley (Durham University), Graham Kennedy (Allerdale Borough Council), Andrew Mackay (Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery), Andrew Poad (National Trust), Tania Robinson (South Tyneside Council), Andrew Rothwell (Newcastle City Council), Wendy Scott (Northumberland County Council), Andrea Selley (English Heritage), Christine Venus (Natural England) and Pauline Wall (Northumberland National Park Authority) Apologies: Julie Betteridge (Copeland Borough Council), Sue Clarke (Cumbria Tourism), Alison Hatcher (Cumbria County Council), Mike Jeffrey (Northumberland County Council), Katie Read (Copeland Borough Council), Janice Rose (Northumberland County Council), Nigel Walsh (Northumberland County Council), Duncan Wise (Northumberland National Park Authority) In Attendance: Nick Henderson (Development Officer), Denise Hewitson (Administration Assistant) and John Scott (Management Plan Coordinator) Description Action 1. Chair’s Welcome and Apologies Jane G thanked Steve B for hosting this meeting at North Tyneside Council. She also thanked Paul Hanson, CEO at North Tyneside Council for welcoming the Board to his offices and for getting us off to such an energetic start. Paul Hanson acknowledged everyone for their involvement, time and hard work supporting the project. He felt that Hadrian’s Wall is deeply engrained in the region and is extremely important to North Tyneside as a whole. He stated that Mary Glindon, MP is still an avid supporter of Segedunum and the Wall is well respected by MPs across the north. -
Display PDF in Separate
V nvironment agency plan EDEN, ESK & SOLWAY ENVIRONMENTAL OVERVIEW SEPTEMBER 1999 ▼ ▼ E n v ir o n m e n t A g e n c y ▼ DATE DUE - / a n o | E n v ir o n m e n t A g e n c y / iZ /D l/O 'if NATIONAL LIBRARY & INFORMATION/SERVICE HEAD 0 FFICE Rio House,/Waterside Drive, Aztec We«. Almondsbury, Bristol BS32 4UD GAYLORD PRNTED IN USX Contents Summary.............................................................................................................................................................1 1. Introduction.......................................................................................................................................... 3 2. Air Quality........................................................................................................................................... 6 3. Water Quality....................................................................................................................................... 9 4. Sewage Effluent Disposal................................................................................................................ 21 5. Industrial Discharges to Air and Water..........................................................................................25 6. Storage Use and Disposal of Radioactive Substances..................................................................28 7. Waste Management.......................................................................................................................... 30 8. Contaminated Land..........................................................................................................................36 -
North East(Opens in a New Window)
North East 263 Allen Banks and Staward Gorge ORANgm4W 1942 Bardon Mill, Hexham, Northumberland T 01434 344218 E [email protected] Gorge of the River Allen with ornamental and ancient woodland F4 Grounds 0 Parking level car park with some loose surface. The overflow car park area is grassed Accessible toilet in main block at Allen Banks Car Park Grounds Some level ground along river bank with loose surface path, however due to nature of site, the land is primarily uneven with many steep gradients Cherryburn HOIFGsm4 1991 Station Bank, Mickley, Stocksfield, Northumberland NE43 7DD NE T 01661 843276 E [email protected] Cottage and farmhouse, the birthplace of Thomas Bewick Note Contact property in advance for any advice required 78F4gE45 Building 031 Grounds 3 Parking in main car park, 100 yards from house. Gravel car park and drive. Cobbled farmyard. Drop-off point Accessible toilet outside main building, easy level access 264 Building Level entrance, ramp available. Ground floor has 3 steps and 2 steps to rear exit, portable ramp available Grounds Some uneven terrain, loose gravel paths, slopes, uneven cobbles. Some visitors may require assistance from their companion Other features Touch wood engravings; smell the printers ink; listen to the press room demonstrations; picnic in the garden (accessible picnic tables); listen to the birds; enjoy the farmyard smells: donkeys, sheep, poultry and cat! Please telephone in advance of a visit; also to enquire about traditional music events Cragside HOIGPAsrm4W 1977 Rothbury, Morpeth, Northumberland NE65 7PX T 01669 620333 F 01669 620066 E [email protected] Extraordinary Victorian house, gardens and estate – the wonder of its age Note Please contact in advance to help us plan your visit. -
Henshaw Parish Council
HENSHAW PARISH COUNCIL Minutes of (Virtual) Meeting held on Monday 22 March 2021 via Microsoft Teams Present; Councillors J Oliver (Chair), S. Armstrong, V Gibson, A. Saunders, D. Finlayson, J. Benson, County Councillor A. Sharp, M. A. Smith (Clerk). 1. Introduction and Welcome. The Chair welcomed everyone to the meeting. 2. Apologies for Absence. Cllr C Kennedy. 3. Declarations of Interest. None received. 4. Public Questions. None received. 5. Minutes of the previous meeting held on Monday 22 March 2021. 5.1 These were read and approved and the Clerk was authorised to sign the approved version. 6. Matters arising and actions from previous minutes. 6.1 All matters were covered in the meeting. 7. General Amenities (Footpaths, Access, Seating and Lighting). 7.1 The overgrown hedging restricting the footpath east of Broadacres has been passed to the County Council Highway’s team. 7.2 The footpaths from Henshaw School to Bardon Mill are scheduled for repair in April. 7.3 Additional bottle banks outside Redburn Park have not yet been delivered but the twice weekly collections appear to be keeping the bins from being overfilled. 7.4 Council seating to be inspected and repaired as necessary – including those on the Pitman’s Trail and Bardon Mill Village Green. 7.5 The streetlight on the Henshaw junction from the A69 needs the tree branches cutting back as do the ones on the road from Redburn to Bardon Mill. 7.6 Clerk to check if the phonebox at Towhouse is still to be ‘decommissioned’. Parish have requested to buy this for £1 and use it to house a new defibrillator.