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Crewe_Hall_(front_view),_Cheshire.jpg (640 × 427 pixels, file size: 59 KB, MIME type: image/jpeg) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
NGC 3532; Observation data (J2000 epoch); Right ascension: 11 h 05 m 33 s [1]: Declination: −58° 43.8′ [1] Distance: 1,321 [2] ly (405 pc): Physical characteristics; Other designations: NGC 3532, [1] Caldwell 91, Cr 238, Mel 103, C 1104-584, Cl* 1104-584, CL 1104-584, Lacaille II.10, [3] Football Cluster, Wishing Well Cluster [4] [5] [6] [7]
Crewe North Junction: Built in 1939 and designed to withstand the Luftwaffe bombs of World War II, the box is constructed out of concrete and has an 46 cm (18") thick roof and 38 cm (15") thick walls. Located between the West Coast Main Line and Crewe-Chester line, its location is perfect for viewing passing mainline trains.
A wishing well is a term from European folklore to describe wells where it was thought that any spoken wish would be granted. The idea that a wish would be granted came from the notion that water housed deities or had been placed there as a gift from the gods.
The majority of services are operated by D&G Bus, with First Potteries, Mikro Coaches and Stagecoach Merseyside & South Lancashire also using the station. [4]D&G Bus operate 8 routes from Crewe Bus Station [5] including regular services in and around Crewe as well as to the nearby towns of Congleton, Macclesfield, Nantwich, Newcastle-under-Lyme, Northwich, Sandbach and Winsford.
Sir Randolph Crewe. Crewe was the seat of the de Crewe (or de Criwa) family in the 12th and 13th centuries; they built a timber-framed manor house there in around 1170. [4] [6] [7] The manor passed to the de Praers family of Barthomley in 1319 by the marriage of Johanna de Crewe to Richard de Praers.
Crewe Carriage Sidings (alternatively Crewe Carriage Depot, and also as Crewe L&NWR) [2] [3] is a stabling point located in Crewe, Cheshire, England, on the eastern side of the West Coast Main Line, between that line and the line to Alsager, to the south of Crewe station.
Until the Grand Junction Railway established a railway station in 1837, Crewe was a "tiny township with a few farms". [2] There are only two listed buildings dating from before the arrival of the railway: a much altered farmhouse that probably originated in the 16th century [ 3 ] and a timber-framed farmhouse dating from the late 17th century ...