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Horsham Museum is a museum at Horsham, West Sussex, in South East England. [1] It was founded in August 1893 by volunteers of the Free Christian (now Unitarian) Church and became part of Horsham District Council in 1974. It is a fully accredited museum and serves both Horsham and its district with the support of the Friends of Horsham Museum ...
Many councils also have kerbside collection of bulky waste. There may be different kinds of collection, e.g.: Large branches; E-waste (e.g. TVs, computers) which the council may recycle; Hard rubbish (anything else too big or too heavy for the wheelie bin) For bulky waste, residents are asked to place items directly on the kerbside.
Rising Universe, more commonly known locally as the Shelley Fountain, was a large kinetic water sculpture in Horsham, West Sussex, England. It was created by the sculptor Angela Conner and installed in 1996 to commemorate the bicentenary of the birth of the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley , who was born near Horsham.
Horsham Town Hall is a municipal building in the Market Square in Horsham, West Sussex. Established by the mid-17th century (and rebuilt several times since), it was used as a market house, a facility for dispensing justice and a meeting place for the local town council. In 2013 the old Town Hall was converted into a restaurant. [1]
Horsham is the capital of the region and hosts events from sport to cultural interests. The Horsham golf course is known as country Victoria's best, as awarded from the pro-am circuit. The region is the site of lakes and a Wimmera River system and in normal seasons is popular with fishing, boating, swimming and water enthusiasts.
NCO Group, Inc., based in Horsham, Pennsylvania, United States, [2] is a business process outsourcing company and collection agency that provides accounts receivable management, customer relationship management and back office solutions [buzzword] for its clients.
The central part of the Horsham urban area, roughly corresponding to the pre-1974 Horsham Urban District, is an unparished area. [9] The rest of the district is divided into civil parishes. None of the parishes has been formally designated a town by its parish council, although Billingshurst, Henfield, Pulborough and Steyning are post towns.
From 1923 the Rev. W. M. Peacock started to model the school on public school lines, introducing (among other things) four houses (see below), The Horsham Grammar School Magazine (later to become The Collyerian), and a school song. By 1926 it was a single-stream school of 220 boys with a sixth form of "less than a dozen", and ten teaching staff.