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St Pauls (also written St Paul's) is an inner suburb of Bristol, England, lying just northeast of the city centre and west of the M32.It is bounded by the A38 (Stokes Croft), the B4051 (Ashley Road), the A4032 (Newfoundland Way) and the A4044 (Newfoundland Street), although the River Frome was traditionally the eastern boundary before the A4032 was constructed. [1]
Portland Square, Bristol. Portland Square (grid reference ST594737) is a Grade I listed square in the St Paul's area of Bristol. [1] It was laid out in the early 18th century as one of Bristol's first suburbs. Built upon a flat area of ground its central focus of St. Paul's Church. Shortly after construction started a number of the builders ...
Design and construction. Architect (s) Daniel Hague. St Paul's Church, a redundant church, gives its name to the surrounding St Paul's area of Bristol, England. It was built in the 1790s but fell into disuse and disrepair by its closure in 1988. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building.
Bristol City Council own or manage four major parks: The Downs, Blaise Castle, Ashton Court and Stoke Park . The Downs lie 2 miles (3 km) northwest of the city centre and totals 441 acres (1.78 km 2 ). The Downs are divided into Clifton Down to the south and Durdham Down to the north, with a main road running between them.
Getty photographer Anna Barclay took this picture of a GWR inter-city service gliding into Temple Meads at sunset. Follow BBC Bristol on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to us on ...
St. Paul's Carnival is an annual Caribbean Carnival held, usually on the first Saturday of July, in St. Paul's, Bristol, England.The celebration began in 1968 [1] as the St. Paul's Festival, in order to improve relationships between the European, African, Caribbean, and Asian inhabitants of the area.
St James' Priory, Bristol. United Kingdom. The Priory Church of St James, Bristol (grid reference ST588734), is a Grade I listed building [ 2 ] in Horsefair, Whitson Street. It was founded in 1129 as a Benedictine priory by Robert, Earl of Gloucester, the illegitimate son of Henry I. The early nave from 1129 survived the Dissolution of the ...
St Pauls Church, Bristol: 1790s Portland Square, St Pauls: I "Railings and gates of the Church of St Paul". historicengland.org.uk: St Peter's Church, Castle Park: 12th century Castle Park A Saxon foundation, bombed in 1940. Ruined. Maintained as a monument to the civilian war dead of Bristol. "Church of St Peter".