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Businesses in Lambley include a general store and others dealing with the motor trade, skiing equipment, bars and catering, accountancy, architecture, horticultural nursery, boarding kennels and caravan storage. There are three pubs: the Woodlark Inn, the Robin Hood Inn and The Lambley. A crematorium, the fourth in Nottinghamshire, opened in ...
In the late 1880s, Runswick Bay was the site of an art colony. [5] The Marquess of Normanby's Mulgrave Estate [6] owns part of the land in the village which is also in the North Yorkshire Moors National Park. [7] The village is located within the Parish of Hinderwell, which at the 2011 census, had a population of 1,875 people. [8]
This is a route-map template for the Robin Hood Line, a UK railway.. For a key to symbols, see {{railway line legend}}.; For information on using this template, see Template:Routemap.
The Robin Hood Line is a railway line running from Nottingham to Worksop, Nottinghamshire, in England. The stations between Shirebrook and Whitwell (inclusive) are in the county of Derbyshire. Passenger services are operated by East Midlands Railway. The line in its present form opened to passengers in stages between 1993 and 1998.
The 5.75 miles (9.25 km) line was built by the Midland Railway from Seymour Junction [2] [3] [4] on their Doe Lea Valley line to Creswell Junction, [5] [6] immediately north of Elmton and Creswell on their Nottingham to Worksop line, now known as the Robin Hood Line. It was physically completed by January 1872, but not opened throughout until 1 ...
The closures of these lines left the area with no passenger rail services until the reopening of the former Midland Railway route, now known as the 'Robin Hood Line', in the 1990s. However, by this time British Rail had abandoned the original Midland alignment through Kirkby-in-Ashfield town centre, and the remaining freight trains instead ...
Sherwood Forest is the remnants of an ancient royal forest in Nottinghamshire, England, having a historic association with the legend of Robin Hood. The area has been wooded since the end of the Last Glacial Period (as attested by pollen sampling cores ).
The Robin Hood Way commemorates the famous folklore figure Robin Hood and starts from Nottingham Castle running to Edwinstowe. [ citation needed ] It passes through Sherwood Forest , taking in Clumber Park , Farnsfield , Greasley , Kimberley , Rainworth , Creswell Crags , Kirton and Bothamsall .