Ad
related to: burgh house events centre
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Rudyard Kipling's last outing in 1936 was to Burgh House, to visit his daughter. [1] From 1937–46 Burgh House was unoccupied. It was bought and restored by Hampstead Borough Council in 1946. The barrack blocks in front of the building were pulled down and in 1947 it reopened as a community centre with a Citizen's Advice Bureau in its basement.
Cultural attractions in the area include the Freud Museum, Keats House, Kenwood House, Fenton House, the Isokon building, Burgh House (which also houses Hampstead Museum), and the Camden Arts Centre. The large Victorian Hampstead Town Hall was recently converted and extended as an arts centre. [6]
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
C. Campbeltown Sheriff Court; Clackmannan Tolbooth; Coatbridge Municipal Buildings; Corinthian Club; County Buildings, Aberdeen; County Buildings, Alloa; County ...
The burgh hall was designed by Harry Edward Clifford in the Scottish Baronial style [4] and built with dark red sandstone from the Ballochmyle Estate in Ayrshire. [5] A ceremony was held at which Maxwell laid a memorial stone to commemorate the opening of the burgh hall and also the opening of Maxwell Park, which he had also gifted to the local ...
Rutherglen (/ ˈ r ʌ ð ər ɡ l ɪ n /; Scots: Ruglen, Scottish Gaelic: An Ruadh-Ghleann) is a town in South Lanarkshire, Scotland, immediately south-east of the city of Glasgow, three miles (five kilometres) from its centre and directly south of the River Clyde.
Burh and burg were Old English developments of the Proto-Germanic word reconstructed as *burg-s, cognate with the verb *berg-an [1] ("to shut in for protection"). [2] They are cognate with German Burg, Dutch burcht and Scandinavian borg and, in English, developed variously as "borough", [1] "burg", [3] and (particularly in the East Anglian region of England and Scotland) "burgh".
Burgh by Sands is a civil parish in the Cumberland district in Cumbria, England.It contains 55 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England.Of these, one is listed at Grade I, the highest of the three grades, three are at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade.