Searching for "KINGS BROMLEY"

You searched for "KINGS BROMLEY" in our simplified list of the main towns and villages, but the match we found was not what you wanted. There are several other ways of finding places within Vision of Britain, so read on for detailed advice and 14 possible matches we have found for you:

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  • You have just searched a list of the main towns, villages and localities of Britain which we have kept as simple as possible. It is based on a much more detailed list of legally defined administrative units: counties, districts, parishes, wapentakes and so on. This is the real heart of our system, and you may be better off directly searching it. There are no units called "KINGS BROMLEY" (excluding any that have already been grouped into the places you have already searched), but administrative unit searches can be narrowed by area and type, and broadened using wild cards and "sound-alike" matching:



  • If you are looking for hills, rivers, castles ... or pretty much anything other than the "places" where people live and lived, you need to look in our collection of Historical Gazetteers. This contains the complete text of three gazetteers published in the late 19th century — over 90,000 entries. Although there are no descriptive gazetteer entries for placenames exactly matching your search term (other than those already linked to "places"), the following entries mention "KINGS BROMLEY":
    Place name County Entry Source
    BECKENHAM Kent Bromley; has stations on the railways, and a post office under London, SE.; and is rapidly becoming a suburb. The parish comprises 3,875 acres. Real property, in 1865, about £40,000. Pop. in 1861, 2,124; in 1865, about 3,500. The property is subdivided. Beckenham Place is the seat of A. Cator, Esq.: Kelsey Park, of P. R. Hoare, Esq.; Old Manor House, of H. Fortescue, Esq.; and Langley Park, ofGoodheart Esq. Beckenham was the residence of Brandon, Duke. of Suffolk, when visited by Henry VIII.; and Clay-Hill here was the residence of Edward King Imperial
    BLITHE, or Blythe (The) Staffordshire about 22 miles south-south-eastward, past Leigh, Chartley, Blithbury, and Kings-Bromley to the Trent, 7 miles above Burton. Imperial
    BROMLEY Kent BROMLEY , a small town, a parish, a subdistrict, a district, and a hundred, in Kent. The town stands on high ground, rising from the Ravensbourne river, adjacent to the Farnborough railway, 10 miles SE of St. Paul's, London. It commands good views to the W, SW, and S; stands in a beautiful country, with rapid increase of fine residences; is a seat of petty sessions and a polling-place; and has a railway station, a post office under London, SE, a new town hall, good inns, a church, three dissenting chapels, a college for clergymen's widows, a National Imperial
    BROMLEY (King's), or Bromley-Regis Staffordshire King's Bromley, under Lichfield. Acres, inclusive of King's Bromley Hays, sometimes deemed extra-parochial, 3,370. Real property Imperial
    Bromley Regis Staffordshire Bromley Regis . See KING'S BROMLEY. Bartholomew
    CANTERBURY Kent
    Surrey
    CANTERBURY , a city in Kent, and a diocese in Kent and Surrey. The city partly forms a district of itself Imperial
    CHESTERFIELD Derbyshire King John to William de Bruere; and passed to the Wakes, the Plantagenets, and others. The town is irregularly built; and has narrow streets, but a spacious market-place. The townhall, with market-house and covered market, is an extensive and commodious suite of buildings, erected in 1857. The parish church is cruciform, and of various dates from early English onwards; has a central spire, 230 feet high, inclining considerably from the perpendicular; and contains a beautiful screen and some fine ancient monuments. Three chantries were formerly in the church; and three ancient chapels were in other parts Imperial
    KENT Kent KENT , a maritime county; bounded on the N, by the Thames and the German ocean; on the E, by the Imperial
    Kings Bromley Staffordshire Kings Bromley , par. and seat, Staffordshire, 5 miles N. of Lichfield, 3370 ac. (including Kings Bromley Hays), pop. 567; P.O. Bartholomew
    Kings Bromley Hays Staffordshire Kings Bromley Hays , par., Staffordshire, on river Trent, 5 miles N. of Lichfield, pop. 13. Bartholomew
    KINGSWINFORD Staffordshire Bromley, Pensnett, Sheet End, and Wall Heath; and is cut ecclesiastically into the sections of Kingswinford, K. ST. Mary, Brierley Hill, Brockmoor, Pensnett, and QuarrvBank-Acres, 7, 315. Real property, with Amblecoat hamlet in Old Swinford parish, £273, 468: of which £66, 786 are in mines, £128, 936 in ironworks, £9, 550 in canals, and £1, 584 in gas works. Pop. in 1851, 27, 301; in 1861, 34, 257. Houses, 6, 489. The increase of pop. arose from the increased working of coal and ironstone mines, the erection of iron furnaces, the extension Imperial
    LICHFIELD Derbyshire
    Nottinghamshire
    Shropshire
    Staffordshire
    Kings-Bromley-Hays. Acres of the district, 71,613. Poor rates in 1863, £9,372. Pop. in 1851,25,279; in 1861,27,541. Houses Imperial
    LONDON London
    London
    King Edward's refuge for destitute girls in Mile-End-NewTown, 46; the boys' refuge, in Commercial-street, Whitechapel, 104; the Jews' orphan asylum, in Goodman'sfields, 47; the Sailors' home and the destitute sailors' asylum, in the Tower precinct, 202 and 17; Raine's asylum for girls, in St. George-in-the-East, 43; the strangers' home for Asiatics, in Limehouse, 29; the German Jews' hospital and the Portuguese hospital, in MileEnd-Old-Town, 92 and 32; the merchant seamen's orphan asylum, in Bromley Imperial
    TRENT (The) Derbyshire
    Leicestershire
    Lincolnshire
    Nottinghamshire
    Staffordshire
    Kings-Bromley, and there receives the Blythe; it proceeds thence east-by-southward, past Alrewas, to the boundary with Derby Imperial
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