Ad
related to: wood mount timperley
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Timperley Hall was a moated manor house in Timperley, Greater Manchester, England, first recorded in 1560, but almost certainly built to replace an earlier medieval structure. Very little remains of the 16th-century hall, which is not shown on the Tithe map of 1838. [ 1 ]
Timperley was formerly a township and chapelry in the parish of Bowdon, [6] in 1866 Timperley became a separate civil parish, Timperley Parish Council was established in 1894 and it became part of Bucklow Rural District, on 1 April 1936 the parish was abolished and merged with Altrincham, Hale and Sale. [7]
The station was located immediately west of the A56 Manchester Road in Broadheath near to West Timperley at a point just north of the road junction with Lindsell Road, and just south-west of the point where Timperley Brook runs under Manchester Road which forms the Broadheath - Timperley boundary. It was named West Timperley to differentiate it ...
The Bury and Tottington District Railway opened from a junction to the north of Bury to a terminus at Holcombe Brook on 6 November 1882. Among the original stations was that at Greenmount, situated 3 + 1 ⁄ 4 miles (5.2 km) from Bury.
Harold William Timperley (1890–1964) was an English author of local history and topographical studies, the most notable of which was illustrated by L. S. Lowry. In later life he worked with his wife Edith Brill , who later published her own books on the Cotswolds .
Ireland portal; This is a sortable table of the approximately 3,245 townlands of County Tipperary, Ireland. [1] [2]Duplicate names occur where there is more than one townland with the same name in the county.
Michael Wood, historian, moved at the age of eight with his family to Wythenshawe where he attended Benchill Primary School. Syd Little, comedian, part of the Little and Large double act, attended Yew Tree School in Wythenshawe. Paul Young, lead singer of Mike and the Mechanics and Sad Café, was born in the Benchill area of Wythenshawe.
The Bolton and Leigh Railway (B&LR) opened for goods traffic in 1828, followed by passenger services in 1831. [1]The railway was built as a single track line and the route included two inclines which were worked using ropes hauled by stationary engines, locomotive haulage being used on the flatter sections of the line. [2]