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Settlement Association

Calthrop

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Irresistible "semi-look-and-sound-alike" connection: the Cornish name of Newquay in Cornwall, is Tewinblustri -- an interesting fact which has come up before on this game, though via a different association. (One figures that Newquay's coastal setting, is probably quite a blustery one -- hence the good surfing?).
 
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RailUK Forums

Calthrop

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There is within Runcorn's town limits: Floodbrook Clough, a Site of Special Scientific Interest. it is described as an ancient semi-natural woodland: one of the best examples in Cheshire, of clough woodland on keuper marl -- which last is, I learn, a geological formation of multiple layers of mudstone and sandstone, of Triassic age. The Kingscourt Brick Company, of Kingscourt, Co. Cavan: proudly describes its bricks as of high quality, made from locally-sourced keuper marl.
 
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Calthrop

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Also with an -- at least in theory -- shellfish-associatable name: is Winklebury, Hampshire -- formerly a hamlet in its own right; now a suburb of Basingstoke, north of the town, designated "Winklebury and Manydown". (This settlement is -- unlike Musselburgh -- far inland: nothing available on its name-derivation, but one would suspect its not being to do with the sea-creature the winkle.)
 

Calthrop

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I'm having fun today with hitherto unknown-to-me technical terms. Have learned that a "cruck" building, is one featuring "crucks": curved timbers, one of a pair, which support the building's roof -- a technique in favour centuries ago, but long superseded. Rye Cottage in Mapledurwell, built in 1487, was the last cruck-built house in Hampshire. The large main barn of Barlow Woodseats Hall -- at the village of Barlow, Derbyshire (four miles north-west of Chesterfield) -- is claimed to be the largest continuously-roofed cruck barn in Derbyshire -- possibly even the largest such in the UK.
 

Calthrop

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Shepton Mallet, Somerset, is also twinned with a settlement in Sweden. Luton's "twin" is Eskilstuna; Shepton Mallet's is Bollnas.
 

High Dyke

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Cotesbach, Leicestershire was another location where the Midland Revolt occurred.

The Midland Revolt was a popular uprising which occurred in the Midlands of England in 1607. The riots were a protest against the enclosure of common land.
 

Calthrop

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Lutterworth has a 17th-century building, which was long a pub; now made over into other use. For most of the place's pub career, it was named the Ram Inn; we learn that latterly, the brewery involved -- worried about possible "off-colour" connotations of the name -- rechristened it the Cavalier. (Strikes me as looking very assiduously, for possible "mucky" associations; for that matter, the same can be ascribed -- if one tries hard enough -- to the word "cavalier".) Firle, East Sussex -- near Lewes -- has a pub still unrepentantly called the Ram Inn.
 

High Dyke

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St Peter's Church in Firle has a John Piper stained-glass window in warm colours, depicting Blake's Tree of Life.

John Egerton Christmas Piper CH (13 December 1903 – 28 June 1992) was an English painter, printmaker and designer of stained-glass windows and both opera and theatre sets.

John Piper died on 28 June 1992 at his home at Fawley Bottom, Buckinghamshire, where he had lived since 1934.
 

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