The Black Horse was formerly a pub at 168 Mile End Road, Stepney, London E1.
It is a Grade II listed building, built in the early-mid 19th century. [1]
Oxfordshire is a county in South East England. The ceremonial county borders Warwickshire to the north-west, Northamptonshire to the north-east, Buckinghamshire to the east, Berkshire to the south, Wiltshire to the south-west and Gloucestershire to the west.
The White Horse Bridge is a footbridge that crosses the tracks at Wembley Stadium railway station leading up to Wembley Stadium in Wembley Park, England. It was designed by Steve Chilton for architects Marks Barfield and engineered by Halcrow. It replaced an old concrete footbridge which was probably built for the British Empire Exhibition. The project also included the construction of a public square.
St Helen's Church is the oldest church in Wheathampstead, Hertfordshire, England, although the date of its origins is unknown. The wooden Anglo-Saxon structure pre-dated the Norman conquest of England, but no records survive which establish the date upon which it was founded. It is a Grade I listed building.
At the 1948 Summer Olympics in London, nine events in gymnastics were contested. Finland led all nations with six gold medals and ten medals overall.
Sandon is a village and civil parish in the North Hertfordshire district, in the county of Hertfordshire, England. Sandon is located near the towns of Baldock and Buntingford. The parish also includes the hamlets of Green End and Roe Green, and Blagrove Common, a nature reserve. At the 2011 Census the population of the civil parish was 495.
The Black Lion is a Grade II listed public house at South Black Lion Lane, Hammersmith, London.
The Black Friar is a Grade II* listed public house on Queen Victoria Street in Blackfriars, London.
The Black Lion is a Grade II* listed public house at 274 Kilburn High Road, Kilburn, London.
The Flying Horse is a Grade II* listed public house at 6 Oxford Street, Fitzrovia, London. It was built in the 19th century, and is the last remaining pub on Oxford Street. The pub is on the Campaign for Real Ale's National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors.
The Coach and Horses is a Grade II listed public house at London Road, Isleworth, London.
The Black Horse is a Grade II listed public house at High Road, Eastcote, in the London Borough of Hillingdon. It was built in the early 19th century.
The White Horse, now known as The Cask and Stillage, is a public house in High Street, Potters Bar, England, and a grade II listed building with Historic England.
Platforms Piece consists of three bronze sculptures of commuters at Brixton railway station, completed by the British artist Kevin Atherton in 1986.
The Horse and Groom is a grade II listed public house in Park Street, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, England. The building is based on a seventeenth-century or earlier timber frame with a later red brick casing.
The White Horse is a grade II listed public house in Whitehorse Lane, Burnham Green, in the parish of Datchworth in Hertfordshire. The building dates from around the seventeenth century. It was formerly known as The Chequers.
The White Horse is a public house on the south side of Castle Street, Hertford. England. The pub occupies numbers 31 and 33 Castle Street, two of a group of three grade II listed houses that also includes number 35. The timber-framed buildings date from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries with later additions. The pub is under the management of Fullers Brewery.
Horse and Rider is a 1974 bronze equestrian sculpture by Elisabeth Frink. The work was commissioned for a site in Mayfair; another cast is in Winchester. It was described by Frink as "an ageless symbol of man and horse".
The Swan with Two Necks was a coaching inn in the City of London that, until the arrival of the railways, was one of the principal departure points for travel to the north of England from London. Its site was given over in the early 1860s to a goods and parcels depot for a firm of railway agents and carriers.
Stud House is an early 18th-century house in the centre of Hampton Court Park near Hampton Court Palace. It is Grade II listed on the National Heritage List for England. It was traditionally the official residence of the Master of the Horse. The former stables at the house are separately listed, also at Grade II.
The Black Horse is a Grade II listed public house at 65 Blackhorse Lane in South Mimms, Hertfordshire, England. It dates from the early 18th century and is of red brick with a tiled roof. Blackhorse Lane, which may be named after the pub, was the lane along which South Mimms developed. In 1847, a police station was built there, with married quarters added in 1908, but the surrounding areas was and remains rural.
Coordinates: 51°31′16″N0°02′57″W / 51.521052°N 0.0490373°W
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