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United Kingdom & Ireland Travel Articles

Travel notes and articles for England, Wales, Scotland, Northern Ireland, and Ireland. Articles posted must be approved by the Admin before they are published.
Owston Ferry is a small village on the west bank of the River Trent, about ten miles north of Gainsborough. As its name implies, Owston ferry has been an important crossing point on the River Trent since ancient times. Before good roads and rail links, the river was also an important trade route between Gainsborough and Hull. It was originally two settlements, Owston (from the old Norse for east farmstead) and based on the higher ground to the west of the Trent where the church is, and West Kinnard’s Ferry on the river bank. This was a corruption of King Edward, who granted a market charter and annual fair in the C14th. It wasn’t called Owston Ferry until around 1900. A motte and bailey castle was built after the Norman Conquest to...
Deservedly voted the best small market town in the UK in the 2016 Great British High Street Awards. Hebden Bridge is a thriving small market town in the Upper Calder Valley. This is an area of steep wooded river valleys with terraced houses climbing up the hillsides. The roads zig zag up the hillsides and are buttressed to stop them sliding downwards. The main development of splendid C18th and C19th buildings is concentrated around Hebden Water and the old packhorse bridge. In medieval times, the valley bottoms were too swampy, so the original settlement of Heptonstall was built on the top of the hill. It became a thriving medieval township with a mixed economy based on agriculture and domestic manufacture of cloth. A packhorse...
The Brontes and the Railway Children. A hilltop village set above the steep Worth Valley on the edge of the windswept Pennine Moors, you can almost feel the spirit of the Bronte sisters here. The cobbled streets of the old town climb up to the Church and Parsonage at the top of the hill. Below, spread out along the valley bottom, are the mills that provided employment and prosperity in the C19th, served by the Keighley and Worth Valley railway. Haworth is very much on the tourist trail and is visited by thousands of people for its connections with the Bronte sisters. Younger visitors are probably more interested in the Railway Children connections as many of the scenes of the iconic 1970 film were shot in the area. The Keighley and...
Off the tourist beat but well worth a visit. Most people ignore Barton upon Humber as they zoom over the Humber Bridge. When the bridge opened in 1981 (late and over budget), it was the longest single span suspension bridge in the world and soon became a major tourist attraction. Set on the south bank of the river, Barton upon Humber is an attractive small town with a long history. The towers of Barton’s two churches can be seen from the A15. St Peter's is the oldest, dating from the C10th and has one of the best preserved Anglo-Saxon towers in England. Now no longer is use, it is in the care of English Heritage and only open on summer Sundays. After it closed, excavations revealed a major Anglo-Saxon cemetery with nearly 3000...
Sweyn Forkbeard and the Mill on the Floss. Ignored by the tourists, Gainsborough is a market town in the north west corner of Lincolnshire. It is a pleasant small town with a lot going for it. It has a long history and was one of the capital cities of Anglo-Saxon Mercia. Sweyn Forkbeard and his son Canute defeated the Anglo-Saxon Army of Ethelread the Unready here in 1013. Sweyn was killed when he was thrown by his horse in Gainsborough a few weeks later and has rather disappeared from history as Canute became King of England. Now his name is remembered by the Wetherspoons pub on Silver Street. After that excitement, Gainsborough returned to its role as a rural backwater. The Domesday Book records a population of 80 farmers and...
Banbury is an attractive market town in the Oxfordshire countryside made famous by the medieval nursery rhyme "Ride a cock-horse to Banbury Cross". Ride a cock-horse to Banbury Cross, To see a fine lady upon a white horse; Rings on her fingers and bells on her toes, And she shall have music wherever she goes. This first appeared in print in the mid C18th and the ‘fine lady’ is thought to be a member of the Fiennes family, who were ancestors of Lord Saye and Sele who own nearby Broughton Castle. The statue of a fine lady on a black horse was commissioned by the council in 2006. There is still a Banbury Cross at the bottom of Horse Fair, but is Victorian, erected to commemorate the wedding of Queen Victoria’s eldest daughter to the...
Castle, church, an old hospital and some lovely gardens. Lonely Planet listed Warwick as one of top ten places to visit in Europe in 2016. The area has been inhabited since early neolithic times, so there is a lot of history attached to the town. A castle was built just after the Norman Conquest to subdue the north. The Earls of Warwick were powerful noblemen during Medieval times. The Great Fire of Warwick in 1694 destroyed most of the town, so most of the architecture is Georgian or later, although the medieval street plan survives. WARWICK CASTLE standing on a cliff above the River Avon still has the original Norman motte although the formidable facade dates from the C14th. In the C17th it was no longer needed as a defensive...
Shakespeare and lots more. Stratford upon Avon is on nearly every tourist’s tick list because of the Shakespeare connection, with millions of visitors who want to visit the place where Shakespeare was born and see his grave. It is hard to avoid the Shakespeare influence and the shops exploit it to the full. The Shakespeare Properties are run by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust which runs five properties with links to the Shakespeare family. Tickets are valid for 12 months and are slightly cheaper if bought on line. The most popular property is the BIRTHPLACE itself, a lovely timber frame building on Henley Street. Shakespeare may not recognise the building as it was extended after his death and was extensively restored by the...
Kippers to Count Dracula. With Dracula, Captain Cook, Whitby Jet and fish and chips, Whitby has something for everyone as well as narrow cobbled streets to explore and the iconic 199 steps. It is an attractive settlement nestled along the mouth of the River Esk and in summer months this is a popular spot for crabbing. The remains of the abbey and the even older St Mary’s Church are set high above the east cliff. These were what inspired Bram Stoker to write his Gothic Novel ‘Dracula’. The Goth culture still survives with the Dracula Experience and the popular twice yearly Goth weekend. The headland has been settled since the Bronze Age. There was a Roman Signal Station here in the C3rd, which has since fallen into the sea. By...
There's more to Durham than the Cathedral and Castle. This is probably the most popular image of Durham. The cathedral and castle occupy the centre of a deep incised meander in the River Wear and are the place most people head to first. The usual route is from the market place along Saddler Street with its small shops and The Bailey. This is the heart of the original university with Hatfield, St Chads College, St Johns College and St Cuthbert’s Society. It is lined with attractive Georgian Brick Houses. The Assembly Rooms are here and still used for performances by the University. The Church of St Mary le Bow dates from the C17th and is now the Durham Museum and Heritage Centre. The tiny Church of St Mary the Less is the chapel...
One of the best folk museums in the country. Folk museums are cropping up all over the country. Some are better than others and Beamish must rank among the best with its mix of agricultural, industrial and social history. In fact, there is too much to see properly in a single visit and fortunately the ticket is valid for twelve months. By the 1950s, the traditional industries and communities in the North East were declining and disappearing rapidly. Frank Atkinson, the director of the nationally renowned Bowes Museum at Barnard Castle, was very concerned about the loss of the region’s culture, traditions and heritage. He felt the region was in danger of losing its identity, what made it special and different to the rest of the...
Romans, medieval walls, black and white architecture and a cathedral. Chester may not be an automatic choice when it comes to picking a holiday destination, but it is a city with a long history and a lot to attract the tourist, whether it is for the day or longer. It has the only complete set of city walls, the oldest racecourse, largest Roman amphitheatre in Britain, plus a 1000 year old cathedral (#4 ), 700 year old unique shopping rows and a town crier. Then there is the zoo which is ranked one of the best in the country. There are boat trips (#2) on the River Dee as well as an open top bus. Chester’s position made it a strategic outpost of the Roman Empire. This was the base of the 20th Legion who built a walled fortress on a...
One of the best folk museums in the country. The Black Country is an area of the West Midlands which was rich in coal, ironstone, limestone and fireclay and is the first industrial landscape anywhere in the world and later the most industrialised region of Britain. This is where Thomas Dudley first mastered the technique of smelting iron with coal instead of wood charcoal and making iron enough for industrial use. With the arrival of steam power and canals this became the greatest iron producing district not only in Britain, but also the world. The population exploded as people came here for work. It was the largest industrial landscape seen anywhere working around the clock. The name dates from the 1830s and covers an area...
Most people rush past Carlisle on their way between England and Scotland, but few take the time to stop here. This is a shame as Carlisle has a lot to offer the tourist and is also an excellent base to explore the surrounding countryside. The Northern Lakes, North Pennines, Hadrians’ Wall and South West Scotland are all easily reached from Carlisle. For millenia, the Solway Gap has been the main route up the west coast between England and Scotland. This has been the ‘debatable land’ with control changing hands regularly. The Romans built a fort here at the western end of Hadrian’s Wall to control the border and movement across it. The Normans built a stone castle which is still in use 900 years later and has withstood more sieges than...
Names of historic eras in Britain. Historic eras are visible in the present day through their architectural remains. We experience the layers of history when we stand in a prehistoric stone circle in Wiltshire and look over to our car parked on the nearby road. Most of the United Kingdom has been settled since Prehistoric times and all the historic eras have left something for us to see. Many guidebooks describe a time period as "Georgian" or a church as "Norman with a Perpendicular tower" assuming the reader knows these terms for historical periods and architecture. The main periods of history and architecture in Britain are listed below. I know that we all know this, but I still get confused by the term "century". For example, the...
Brief history of the British Letter Box. We have letter boxes in the US, but most of us put our outgoing mail in our mailbox, put up the red flag and the mail carrier takes it when delivering the day's mail. In England the Royal Mail delivers to your front door but does not take outgoing mail. Instead we walk to the nearest red letter box. These are scattered throughout towns, sometimes built into a garden wall or the wall of an old house. It is called the "Royal" Mail because originally it was only used by Royals. King Charles I opened it up to non-Royals in 1635. The 1840 Postal Reform created a universal affordable postage rate and stamps making the Royal Mail accessible to everyone. To mail a letter you went to the nearest...
A small sample of some of the great specialist food shops, pubs and restaurants. Focused very much on specialists, so no supermarkets or chains. These are places that are unique to Norwich and places we use pretty regularly. Just two layers - city centre, for places very much walkable within the centre, plus a suburbs layer for places you could walk to, but might choose to take car, bicycle, taxi etc. I'll look to add some more places, such as the Fat Cat pub, Lakenham creamery ice-cream, etc. Google Map View: https://www.google.com/maps/d/embed?mid=1VNYBdx1joRKpXqbXDC5YUrjVg2k Norwich Cathedral cloisters in the snow
Kingston-upon-Hull (or Hull as it is more usually called) is tucked away in the bottom right hand corner of Yorkshire is well off the usual tourist itinerary. Since winning the coveted European City of Culture for 2017, it has made tremendous strides to rediscover itself and put its name very firmly on the map. The city has been detattified and there is a wide and varied programme of events 
throughout the year. This began with a massive firework display and you can’t ignore Hull now... 


 Although the area has been inhabited since neolithic times, the settlement at the mouth of the River Hull, didn’t really develop until the C12th when the monks of nearby Meaux Abbey needed a port to export wool. They built a quay near the junction...
On the tourist map for 900 years. Little Walsingham is a timeless small village of brick, flint and timber frame houses based around the village pump house in the depths of rural Norfolk. In the Middle Ages, Little Walsingahm was one of the four great shrines and places of pilgrimage alongside Rome, Santiago del Compostella and Jerusalem. All the kings of England from Henry III to Henry VIII visited it. Then came the Dissolution of the Monasteries, and Walsingham became a rural backwater until the arrival of a new Anglo Catholic vicar in the 1920s, who built a new Shrine Church and Little Walsingham was firmly back on the pilgrim and tourist route. But there is more to the village than that... The story begins in 1061 when...
Again, you are spoilt for choice and this is a very brief section covering some of my favourites. The north east was the centre of early Christianity and Lindisfarne Priory was founded in the C7th by St Aidan and St Cuthbert was Prior here. The beautifully illustrated Lindisfarne Gospels were written here in the C8th. The church survived the Dissolution of the Monasteries, becoming the parish church, but the rest of the priory buildings are now in ruins.The small museum has a collection of carved Celtic stones. The border countries were fought over by the English and Scots for centuries and there are many ruined castles. Prudhoe castle stands high above the banks of the River Tyne. Proud Dunstanburgh with its links to John of Gaunt...

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