Chacewater (Kerley Hill) Wesleyan Methodist Chapel is shown on mid-Victorian maps at the far end of Trelawney Road, a left-hand turn when going up Kerley Hill from Chacewater. Today it is marked as ...
Chacewater Reading Room is in the centre of Chacewater, on the north side of Fore Street, twenty metres west of the Station Road junction. The foundation stone was laid in 1893 by Mr J Passmore ...
The History Files underwent a large-scale style refurbishment between 2007-2008 which resulted in the general layout standards which are still employed today. Since then there has been an ongoing ...
Said to be one of the most attractive late 1800s churches in Cornwall, it is very un-Cornish in appearance. Under its steep ...
The former St Andrew Marsh Green was (and still is) located on the south side of the main lane in this small village, with the war memorial on its western flank. It is shown here half hidden by the ...
Skinners Bottom Primitive Methodist Chapel (and Sunday School) (Second Site) sits further down the lane from the first site (see links), when heading down the right-hand track at the staggered ...
The concept of a preserved river valley park was first presented to the city of Edmonton, Alberta, in 1907 by landscape architect Frederick Gage Todd. Prior to that the river valley had been developed ...
White Rose Bible Christian Chapel (First Site) and Sunday school is found when heading towards Chacewater from the west, and taking the difficult right-hand turn back on itself (High Street) up the ...
The former Britons, their post-Roman civilisation having collapsed to a very large extent, had transformed in just two centuries into the Early Welsh, their language changing considerably to reflect ...
Many of the Late Bronze Age cultures of Europe are shown here. The primary focus is on the Urnfield culture and its regional offshoots, and the two main non-Mediterranean Bronze Age systems. It was ...
With the expulsion of Roman officials in AD 409 (see feature link), Britain again became independent of Rome and was not re-occupied. The fragmentation which had begun to emerge towards the end of the ...
Pontus was the name of the north-eastern province of Anatolia in the second half of the first millennium BC. This was a long and narrow strip of land on the southern coast of the Black Sea (Pontus ...