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  2. Richmond Bridge, London - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richmond_Bridge,_London

    1180951. Location. Richmond Bridge is an 18th-century stone arch bridge that crosses the River Thames at Richmond, connecting the two halves of the present-day London Borough of Richmond upon Thames. It was designed by James Paine and Kenton Couse. The bridge, which is Grade I listed, [3] was built between 1774 and 1777, as a replacement for a ...

  3. London Brick Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/London_Brick_Company

    The London Brick Company owes its origins to John Cathles Hill, a developer-architect who built houses in London and Peterborough. In 1889, Hill bought the small T.W. Hardy & Sons brickyard at Fletton in Peterborough, and the business was incorporated as the London Brick Company in 1900. [1] ". Fletton" is the generic name given to bricks made ...

  4. Richmond, London - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richmond,_London

    Richmond Palace – a view published in 1765 and based on earlier drawings. Henry I lived briefly in the King's house in "Sheanes". In 1299, Edward I, the "Hammer of the Scots", took his whole court to the manor house at Sheen, a little east of the bridge and on the riverside, and it thus became a royal residence; William Wallace was executed in London in 1305, and it was in Sheen that the ...

  5. Pembroke Lodge, Richmond Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pembroke_Lodge,_Richmond_Park

    Pembroke Lodge is a Georgian two-storey large house in Richmond Park in the London Borough of Richmond upon Thames.It sits on high ground with views across the Thames valley to Windsor, the Chilterns and hills in the Borough of Runnymede.

  6. Richmond Palace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richmond_Palace

    Richmond Palace was a Tudor royal residence on the River Thames in England which stood in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Situated in what was then rural Surrey, it lay upstream and on the opposite bank from the Palace of Westminster, which was located nine miles (14 km) to the north-east. It was erected in about 1501 by Henry VII of ...

  7. Salmons Brook - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salmons_Brook

    Salmons Brook is marked thus on Rocque's map of 1754, probably named from the family of John Salemon of Edmonton mentioned in 1274. [2]Clarendon Arch is a barrel vaulted tunnel which carries Salmons Brook below the New River at Bush Hill.