You searched for "LITTLE CHART" 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 15 possible matches we have found for you:
- If you meant to type something else:
- If you typed a postcode, it needs to be a full
postcode: some letters, then some numbers, then more letters.
Old-style postal districts like "SE3" are not precise enough
(if you know the location but do not have a precise postcode or placename,
see below):
- If you are looking for a place-name, it needs to be
the name of a town or village, or possibly a district within a town.
We do not know about individual streets or buildings, unless they
give their names to a larger area (though you might try our
collections of Historical Gazetteers and
British travel writing).
Do not include the name of a county, region or
nation with the place-name: if we know of more than one place
in Britain with the same name, you get to choose the right one
from a list or map:
-
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 "LITTLE CHART"
(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 "LITTLE CHART":
It may also be worth using "sound-alike" and wildcard searching to find names similar to your search term:
Place name County Entry Source ASHFORD Kent Chart, Kingsnorth, and Shadoxhurst; and the subdistrict of Calehill, containing the parishes of Westwell, Smarden, Egerton, Little-Chart, Charing, and Pluckley Imperial BALLYHEIGUE, or BALLYHEIGH Kerry little growth. Good brown-stone for building is found near the shore. Ballyheigue Castle, the seat of Colonel J. Crosbie, is a superb structure, in the later English style of architecture, erected after a design by Mr. R. Morrison, and situated in an extensive demesne tastefully disposed and highly embellished. Ballyheigue has been made a penny post to Tralee; and a patent has been obtained for holding fairs, but none have been yet established. A seneschal's court is occasionally held for the manor; and the petty sessions for the district are also held here. The living is a rectory Lewis:Ireland CALEHILL Kent Little Chart parish, 5 miles WNW of Ashford; and has belonged to the Darell family since the time of Henry Imperial CANTERBURY Kent
SurreyChart, Little Chart, Eastwell, Pluckley, and Pevington; the vicarages of Ashford, Charing, Hothfield, Kennington, and Westwell; and the p. curacy Imperial Chart, Little Kent Chart, Little , par., E. Kent, 2 miles NW. of Ashford, 1607 ac., pop. 276. Bartholomew CHART (Little) Kent CHART (Little) , a parish in West Ashford district, Kent; 2 miles SW of Charing, and 2½ N of Pluckley Imperial Dundee Angus Dundee, a town and a parish, or group of parishes on the southern border of Forfarshire. The town stands chiefly Groome Forres Moray Forres, a town, with the privileges of a royal burgh, in the centre of the foregoing parish. It stands on Groome GREENWICH Kent little used for hourly operations; but two turrets on the leads are in constant active service. One of them has an anemometer, for hourly registering the direction and force of the wind; and the other has a time ball, about 6 feet in diameter, which drops at one o'clock, notes the time to the shipping on the Thames, and telegraphs it to time balls and signal guns at distant stations. Meridional observations of the sun, the moon, and the stars are regularly made, to the aggregate of upwards of 5, 000 in the year; magnetic observations also are made Imperial GRIMSBY (Great) Lincolnshire GRIMSBY (Great) , a town, a parish, and a sub-district in Caistor district, Lincoln. The town stands on the flat Imperial KERRY Kerry charts, it has often been fatally mistaken for the mouth of the Shannon. The only harbour in Kerry within the Shannon is that of Tarbert: off its mouth is the island of the same name. The climate is mild, and though moist from its vicinity to the Atlantic, the height of the mountains, and the extent of the bogs, is salubrious: several trees which are deemed indigenous to warmer latitudes, particularly the arbutus, grow here naturally to great size and beauty. In some instances cultivation extends up the sides of the high lands in the mountainous region to an elevation Lewis:Ireland LONDON London
LondonLONDON , the metropolis of England. The centre of it is London city or London proper; the centre of that is Imperial Tay, The Angus
Fife
Perthshirecharts. The estuary in general is shallow, and receives much débris from the steady and large current of the river. Though it cannot compare in spaciousness and some other properties with the Forth, it is not a little Groome WATERFORD Waterford WATERFORD , a seaport, city and county of itself, and the seat of a diocese, locally in the county of WATERFORD Lewis:Ireland AF’GHANISTAN. Af’ghanistan is an extensive and partially explored region of Central Asia; of fluctuating boundaries, but RussianGaz
- Place-names also appear in our collection of British travel writing. If the place-name you are interested in appears in our simplified list of "places", the search you have just done should lead you to mentions by travellers. However, many other places are mentioned, including places outside Britain and weird mis-spellings. You can search for them in the Travel Writing section of this site.
- If you know where you are interested in, but don't know the place-name, go to our Historical mapping, and zoom in on the area you are interested in. Click on the "Information" icon, and your mouse pointer should change into a question mark: click again on the location you are interested in. This will take you to a page for that location, with links to both administrative units, modern and historical, which cover it, and to places which were nearby. For example, if you know where an ancestor lived, Vision of Britain can tell you the parish and Registration District it was in, helping you locate your ancestor's birth, marriage or death.