You searched for "WATER ORTON" 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 17 possible matches we have found for you:
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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 "WATER ORTON":
It may also be worth using "sound-alike" and wildcard searching to find names similar to your search term:
Place name County Entry Source ASHBY-DE-LA-ZOUCH Leicestershire water containing bromine; and are noted for medicinal effect in scrofula and kindred diseases. The town is a summer resort of invalids and visitors; and has two good hotels, good lodging-houses, a theatre, a railway station, a head post office‡ and a banking office. A weekly market is held on Saturday, and fairs on the Monday before Shrove-Tuesday, Easter-Tuesday, Whit-Tuesday, 14 Sept., and 8 Nov. Trade is carried on in malting, stocking-making, hat-making, and in the traffic of neighbouring brickfields, smelting-works, and collieries. A coalfield lies around, of irregular outline, about Imperial ASTON Warwickshire Water-Orton. The hamlets of Deritend and Bordesley form one of the borough wards of Birmingham; the hamlet of Duddeston Imperial Banffshire Banffshire Banffshire, a maritime county in the NE of Scotland. It is bounded N by the Moray Firth, E and S Groome CARLISLE Cumberland CARLISLE , a city and a district in Cumberland; and a diocese in Cumberland, Westmoreland, and Lancashire The city stands on Imperial CURDWORTH Warwickshire Water-Orton r. station, 2¾ miles NNW of Coleshill; and has a post office under Birmingham. Pop., 330. Houses Imperial Elginshire or Moray Moray Elginshire or Moray, a maritime county on the southern shore of the Moray Firth, forming the central division of the Groome ELY Cambridgeshire ELY , a city and several territorial tracts in Cambridgeshire; and a diocese in the counties of Cambridge, Bedford, Huntingdon, Norfolk Imperial Great North of Scotland Railway Aberdeenshire
Banffshire
Inverness Shire
MorayGreat North of Scotland Railway, a railway supplying the counties of Aberdeen, Banff, and Elgin, and part of Inverness-shire Groome LEICESTERSHIRE, or LEICESTER Leicestershire LEICESTERSHIRE , or LEICESTER, an inland county, nearly in the centre of England, but a little to the E. It is Imperial PETERBOROUGH Leicestershire
Northamptonshire
RutlandOrton-Waterville, Orton-Longville, Glatton, Denton, Caldecote, Washingley, Folksworth, Morborn, Haddon, Chesterton, Alwalton, and Water-Newton, and the chapelry of Farcett Imperial Rothes Banffshire
Moraywater, while 899.332 acres, including 48.008 of water, are in Banffshire. The surface is irregular, but slopes gradually from E to W. The whole of the ground on the E along the Spey is low and level, particularly at the fertile haughs of Orton Groome Spey Banffshire
Inverness Shire
Moraywater, and far beyond it, in places seldom trodden and scarcely known. This too is a country hitherto undescribed, and therefore unseen by the mass of travellers; though among the most engaging parts of the Highlands, as it is the most singular: since there is nothing with which it can be compared, or to which, indeed, it can be said to bear the slightest resemblance. Much of this depends on the peculiar forms and distribution of the ground and of the mountains, and still more on the character of the wood, which is always fir and birch; the latter Groome Water Orton Warwickshire Water Orton , eccl. dist. and vil. with ry. sta., Aston par., Warwickshire - dist., pop. 394; vil., 6 miles NE. of Birmingham Bartholomew WATER-ORTON Warwickshire WATER-ORTON , a chapelry in Aston parish, Warwick; on the Birmingham and Derby railway, 2¼ miles NW of Coleshill Imperial WESTMORELAND Westmorland water, Elter-water, and seven or eight tarns. Mineral springs are at Clifton, Roundthwaite, and near Shap. The principal tracts consist of silurian rocks, lower and upper; some small tracts are Devonian; a broad belt in the NE, and considerable tracts in the S, are carboniferous, chiefly limestone and shale; a broad belt in the extreme NE, beyond the limestone, is new red sandstone; and interspersed spots, throughout the silurian tracts, are trap and granite. Gypsum is quarried at Acornbank; a grey or greenish limestone, resembling marble, near Kendal, Kirkby-Lonsdale, and Ambleside; roofing-slate, at Kentmere, Whitemoss, Thrang-Crag Imperial Westmorland Westmorland Water, Grasmere, Rydal Water, and Ullswater on the Cumberland border, and Windermere on the Lancashire border. The climate is moist. The arable land is mostly confined to the valleys, where the soil usually consists of a dry gravelly loam, well adapted for turnips, but the greater part of the co. is natural pasture. (For agricultural statistics, see Appendix.) A few tracts of woodland remain of the forests which formerly clothed all the hills. The mineral productions include graphite, marble, roofing slate, and some coal, lead, and copper. The only mfrs. of any consequence are the coarse woollens of Kendal Bartholomew WISHAW Warwickshire Water-Orton r. station, and 8½ NE of Birmingham. Post town, Erdington, under Birmingham. Acres, 1,196. Real property Imperial
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