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Ansty Park
Ansty may refer to: Places in England * Ansty, Dorset (including Higher Ansty, Lower Ansty, Little Ansty and Ansty Cross) * Ansty, Warwickshire, village and civil parish ** Anstey College of Physical Education **RAF Ansty Royal Air Force Ansty, or more simply RAF Ansty, was a former Royal Air Force station located near the village of Ansty, east of Coventry city centre, Warwickshire, England, north-west of Rugby, Warwickshire. The airfield was opened in 1936, ..., former Royal Air Force station * Ansty, West Sussex, village * Ansty, Wiltshire, village and civil parish ** Ansty Preceptory, medieval monastery See also * Anstey (other) * Anstee * Anstie {{geodis ...
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Ansty, Dorset
Ansty is a village in the civil parish of Hilton, in Dorset Dorset ( ; Archaism, archaically: Dorsetshire , ) is a Ceremonial counties of England, ceremonial county in South West England. It is bordered by Somerset to the north-west, Wiltshire to the north and the north-east, Hampshire to the east, t ..., England, north of Cheselbourne and west of Milton Abbas. It consists of the settlements of Higher Ansty, Lower Ansty, Pleck (also known as Little Ansty) and Ansty Cross. The Hall & Woodhouse brewing company founded a brewery in the village in 1777, and brewing continued here until the 1940s. The village hall used to be a brewery building, and the old malthouse became Malthouse Cottages. From 1974 to 2019 it was in North Dorset district. Notes External links Villages in Dorset {{dorset-geo-stub ...
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Ansty, Warwickshire
Ansty is a village and civil parish in the Rugby Borough of Warwickshire, England, about northeast of Coventry city centre and 7 miles (13 km) south of Hinckley. Ansty is on the B4065, which used to be the main road between Coventry and Hinckley. The junction between the M6 and M69 motorways and A46 road is southwest of the village. The parish had a population of 299 at the 2021 Census. The northern section of the Oxford Canal, once a major coal-carrying network and now a popular leisure resource, passes through the village. Ansty has been cited as "the most boater-hostile village on the canals" because of the huge number of "no mooring" signs. History The Domesday Book of 1086 mentions ''Anestie'' as part of the hundred of Brinklow.Stephens, 1969, pages 98-103 The main landowner was Lady Godiva. Ansty was part of the County of the City of Coventry from 1451 until that county was dissolved in 1842. The Church of England parish church of Saint James has a 13th-cen ...
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Anstey College Of Physical Education
Anstey College of Physical Education, founded in 1897 as the Anstey Physical Training College, was a pioneer training college for teachers of girls' physical education, only the second such institution for women in the United Kingdom. Located for most of its history in the Erdington area of Birmingham, England, the college was originally independent but came under the control of Staffordshire education department in 1955 as part of a financial rescue deal. In 1975 it was taken over by Birmingham Polytechnic and renamed the Anstey Department of Physical Education. The Erdington premises remained in use until 1981, when the Anstey Department was transferred to the Edgbaston campus of the polytechnic, before being closed down in 1984. College history Rhoda Anstey (1865–1936), the founder of the college, grew up on her family's farm near Tiverton, Devon, and later became a feminist, theosophist, astrologer and advocate of meditation. From 1893 to 1895 she attended the Hampstead P ...
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RAF Ansty
Royal Air Force Ansty, or more simply RAF Ansty, was a former Royal Air Force station located near the village of Ansty, east of Coventry city centre, Warwickshire, England, north-west of Rugby, Warwickshire. The airfield was opened in 1936, and after training many pupils closed in 1953. History The airfield was mainly used for schools with taught navigation and flying to new recruits using a varied range of aircraft such as de Havilland Tiger Moths and Avro Ansons. The first school teaching navigation to arrive was No. 4 Civilian Air Navigation School RAF with the Anson between September 1938 and October 1939 before being renamed No. 4 Air Observer Navigation School RAF (AONS) using Blackburn Bothas as an additional aircraft type between September 1939 and July 1940 before moving to another airfield. The other schools were used for flying training with the first school arriving on 6 January 1936 which was the No. 9 Elementary and Reserve Flying Training School RAF which ...
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Ansty, West Sussex
Ansty is a village in the Mid Sussex district of West Sussex, England. It lies on the A272 road 1.4 miles (2.2 km) southwest of Cuckfield. It is in the civil parish of Ansty and Staplefield. Ansty has a cricket team (Ansty Cricket Club), 1 football club (Ansty Sports and Social FC) and the Dark Star micro brewery. Pronunciation Ansty or Anstye is traditionally pronounced with a heavy stress on the final syllable. Transport The A272 & B2036 runs through Ansty. The A272 is the main route that connects the town of Haywards Heath and surrounding villages to the A23 Trunk Road. The B2036 is a north-south road that connects local traffic between Cuckfield & Burgess Hill. The nearest railway station is in Haywards Heath, 3 miles away. The Village is served by a bus service that runs between Haywards Heath & Horsham/Southwater Southwater is a large village and civil parish in the Horsham District of West Sussex, England, with a population of roughly 10,000. It is ad ...
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Ansty, Wiltshire
Ansty is a small village and Civil parishes in England, civil parish in southwest Wiltshire, England, about east of Shaftesbury. The village is just north of the A30 road, A30, between Shaftesbury and Salisbury. The parish includes the hamlet of Ansty Coombe. History In the southern part of the parish is White Sheet Hill, on which there are Bronze Age Britain, Bronze Age Tumulus, barrows including a long barrow. In the eastern part of the parish there is bowl barrow. The barrow may be older than the Germanic paganism, pagan History of Anglo-Saxon England, Saxon burial from the 7th century AD that has been found in it. Grave goods excavated from the burial include a diadem, palm cups, enamelled ironwork and an incense burner. Domesday Book in 1086 recorded two estates at ''Anestioe'', with altogether 17 households. The village developed in a sheltered valley where springs form a stream which flows north to join the River Nadder, Nadder at Tisbury, Wiltshire, Tisbury. One of the ...
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