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New and Complete History of the Town of Kingston-upon-Hull. Gray Battle, Robert. Battle's Hull Directory, for the Year 1791. Hull: J. and W. Rawson. 1885 reprint; Tickell, John (1798). History of the Town and County of Kingston-upon-Hull. Hull. Cooke, George Alexander (c. 1800). "Hull". Topographical and Statistical Description of the County of ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Pages in category "History of Kingston upon Hull" ... Timeline of Kingston upon Hull; 0–9.
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Redirect page. Redirect to: Timeline of Kingston upon Hull
Located in the city's old town close to the River Hull, it features a number of historic buildings. Historically a high street it was once the commercial heart of the port settlement of Hull – which later shifted westwards to centre around Whitefriargate. It now forms the city's Museums Quarter.
The building was designed as the headquarters of the 1st Yorkshire (East Riding) Rifle Volunteer Corps and was completed in 1864. [1] The barracks were named after Lord Londesborough, honorary colonel of the corps. [2]
Like Anlaby Common, East Ella was once common land near the start of the large city of Hull.By the 1890s the Hull, Barnsley and West Riding Junction Railway had been constructed, east–west, across the land, and construction of terraced and court housing had taken place north-west of Spring Villa (Ditmas Avenue etc.), on the north side of Anlaby Road.
The Victoria Dock branch line was a branch line within the city of Kingston upon Hull that connected the Hull and Hornsea Railway to the east and the York and North Midland Railway and Hull and Selby Railway to the west, terminating at Victoria Dock Station.