Searching for "KILN GREEN"

You searched for "KILN GREEN" 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 19 possible matches we have found for you:

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  • 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 "KILN GREEN":
    Place name County Entry Source
    ANTRIM Antrim kilns, stores for grain, and other appendages, the whole affording employment to a great number of the industrious poor. At Boghead, one mile distant, and on the same stream, is another paper-mill on a smaller scale: there are also several bleach-greens Lewis:Ireland
    Auchterarder Perthshire kiln, 3 flour mills, an agricultural implement factory, and a saw mill. Pop. (1791) 594, (1831) 1981, (1861) 2844, (1871) 2599, (1881) 2854. The parish contains also the villages of Aberuthven, 2¾ miles NE of the town, and Boreland Park, ¼ mile W by S; and it comprises the ancient parish of Aberuthven, annexed some time before the Revolution. Bounded NW and N by Trinity Gask, E by Dunning, S by Glendevon, and W by Blackford, it has an extreme length from N to S of 6 3 / 8 miles, a width from E to W of from Groome
    Blairgowrie Perthshire kilns, and a farina-factory. Blairgowrie, made a burgh of barony in 1634, a free burgh of barony in 1809, and a police burgh prior to 1864, is governed by a town council consisting of a senior bailie, 2 junior bailies, and 10 councillors, and by 12 police commissioners. The police court sits every lawful day, the bailie court (for civil causes under £2) every Wednesday, and the sheriff small debt court (for causes under £12) on the second Saturdays of January, April, July, and October; Wednesday is market-day; and fairs are held for cattle Groome
    CARRICKFERGUS Antrim CARRICKFERGUS , a sea-port, borough, market-and post-town, and parish, and a county of itself, locally in the county Lewis:Ireland
    DUNMURRY Antrim kilns. Near these is a large bleach-green, in which 14,000 pieces of fine linen are annually bleached; and at Glenburn Lewis:Ireland
    HERTFORD Hertfordshire green coat school has £125 from endowment. There are also two national schools, a school of industry for girls, a reformatory school, and endowed almshouses. A pretty new cemetery, with a chapel in the centre, is about ½ a mile distant, on the road to Stevenage. The town has a head post office, two railway stations with telegraph, two banking offices, and three chief inns; is a seat of assizes, quarter sessions, and county courts, and the place of election for the county; and publishes one bi-weekly and two weekly newspapers. A weekly market is held on Saturday Imperial
    Iona Argyll Iona, an island and quoad sacra parish at the SW corner of the island of Mull, and separated from the Groome
    KILDARE Kildare KILDARE (County of), an inland county of the province of Leinster, bounded on the east by the counties of Dublin Lewis:Ireland
    Kiln Green Berkshire Kiln Green , vil., Wargrave par., Berks, 2½ miles NE. of Twyford ry sta.; P.O. Bartholomew
    KILN-GREEN Berkshire KILN-GREEN , a village in Wargrave parish, Berks; 2¾ miles NNE of Twyford r. station. It has a post Imperial
    Kirkcudbrightshire or the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright Kirkcudbrightshire Kirkcudbrightshire or the Stewartry of Kirkcudbright, a maritime county in the western part of the southern border of Scotland, constituting Groome
    LINCOLN Lincolnshire
    Nottinghamshire
    LINCOLN , a city and a district in Lincolnshire, and a diocese partly also in Notts. The city stands on Ermine Imperial
    MAGHERALIN, or MARALIN Down kilns, from which lime is sent into the counties of Antrim, Armagh, and Down; this being the western termination of the great limestone formation that rises near the Giant's Causeway. There are also good quarries of basalt much used in building, which dresses easily under the tool; and coal and freestone are found in the parish, but neither has been extensively worked. A new line of road has been formed hence to Lurgan, a distance of 2 ½ miles, and an excavation made through the village. An extensive establishment at Springfield, for the manufacture of cambrics, affords employment Lewis:Ireland
    Moffat Dumfries Shire
    Lanarkshire
    Moffat (Gaelic oua-vat, 'a long, deep, mountain hollow,' or Irish mai-fad, 'a long plain'), a town in the Groome
    Montrose Angus Montrose (Gael. Alt-moine-ros, `the burn of the mossy point'), a seat of manufacture, a seaport, and a royal Groome
    NORWICH Norfolk
    Suffolk
    NORWICH , a city and a district in Norfolk, and a diocese in Norfolk and Suffolk. The city stands on the Imperial
    Orkney Orkney Orkney, a group of islands and islets of the eastern part of the N-coast of Scotland, and forming a Groome
    Peeblesshire or Tweeddale Peebles Shire Peeblesshire or Tweeddale, an inland county in the S of Scotland, is bounded on the N and NE by Edinburghshire Groome
    TEMPLEMORE Londonderry green crops are occasionally adopted. Forced or sown meadows are by no means general; when prepared for cutting the first year, they are sown with perennial rye-grass and red clover; when for grazing, white grass and white clover are sown. There are several nurseries. Most of the timber in the parish appears to have been planted more for ornament than profit: the most common trees along the Foyle are beech, elm, sycamore, and ash: a small patch of natural wood is to be seen at Ballynagalliagh. Manures are easily attainable, being partly stable dung, partly lime, drawn from Lewis:Ireland
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