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Northamptonshire County Council was the county council that governed the non-metropolitan county of Northamptonshire in England. It was originally formed in 1889 by the Local Government Act 1888, recreated in 1974 by the Local Government Act 1972 and abolished in 2021. The headquarters of the council was County Hall in Northampton.
The Grafton Way is a 13-mile (21 km) [1] [2] (also measured at 11.5 miles or 18.5 kilometres) [3] footpath in Northamptonshire, England. It runs south east from Greens Norton to Cosgrove (or Wolverton [4]), where it meets the Knightley Way. [2] It is named after the Dukes of Grafton, major land-owners in the area in the 18th and 19th centuries. [3]
The railway line was closed in 1981 and the 13-mile (21 km) Northamptonshire section was purchased by Northamptonshire County Council with grant aid from the Countryside Commission in 1987, when work began on developing it as a linear park. The 1-mile (1.6 km) section north of the county boundary is owned by Leicestershire County Council ...
The council said it would provide about £4.2m in investment, through the Towns Fund, along with £8m from Stack, which completed its purchase of the shopping centre building on 1 August.
Many traditional Northamptonshire local stone cottages, often thatched, and other buildings line the Towcester and Stoke Roads. All, including the following, are private houses for viewing from public roads and paths only: Grafton House, Towcester Road (1797) Village Hall, Stoke Road. The original school building (rebuilt 1799 after fire)
Through Northamptonshire it bypasses the towns of Northampton, Kettering and Corby which are the three principal destinations on the A43 route. The A43 also links to the M1 motorway. The section of the road between the M40 and M1 is designated a trunk road, managed and maintained by National Highways. The remainder of the route is the ...
The original line, on which Northampton Bridge Street railway station was situated, was entirely south of the Nene while the medieval town was north of the river. St Mary's Church was built in Towcester Road in 1885 to the design of Matthew Holding. [4] There was an iron ore quarry at Far Cotton from 1883 to 1889 run by the Hunsbury Hill Iron ...
Maintained by Birmingham City Council, Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council, Coventry City Council, Warwickshire County Council, West Northamptonshire Council, North Northamptonshire Council, National Highways: Length: 75.2 mi [1] (121.0 km) Major junctions; West end: A4540 in Birmingham: M42 in Birmingham A46 near Coventry M45 near Dunchurch