Although born in Liverpool Ulric Walmsley was by choice a Yorkshireman, living for nearly 60 years in Robin Hood's Bay where he arrived in the closing years of the 19th century at the age of 34. His son, the author Leo Walmsley, is perhaps better known than his father.
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"Tyskergarden" på Ganddal (ikke ferdig)
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Fornminner i Melshei (ikke ferdig)
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Ulric Walmsley - Artist
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Hå gamle prestegard
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Sandvedparken (ikke ferdig)
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Bauta stones at Småge
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Rogaland Arboret og turområdet i Melshei (ikke ferdig)
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Craster Kippers
L. Robson & Sons Ltd. is a fourth generation family business specialising in the traditional method of oak smoking kippers and salmon. Situated in Craster, a small fishing village on the Northumberland coast, the company still cures the fish in the original smokehouses which are over 130 years old. -
Holy Island
Holy Island has long been a jewel in the crown of Northumberland with a rich past that now draws thousands of visitors and pilgrims to the Island in search of a connection with the religious past, an abundance of birdlife or the isolated tranquillity of the Island away from the village. -
Howick Mesolithic Hut
Amateur archaeologists John Davies and Jim Hutchinson discovered Mesolithic flint artefacts eroding from a cliff-edge at Howick, Northumberland. This prompted a detailed investigation of the site by archaeologists from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne during the summers of 2000 and 2002. The remains of a Mesolithic hut were discovered revealing evidence of three distinct structural phases


























