Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. North Foreland Lodge était une importante école privée pour jeunes filles originellement située à North Foreland, dans le Kent, au Royaume-Uni.

  2. People educated at North Foreland Lodge. Former pupils of North Foreland Lodge, an English school for girls originally in the county of Kent, later in Hampshire. The school closed in 2003.

  3. North Foreland [1] is a chalk headland on the Kent coast of southeast England, specifically in Broadstairs . With the rest of Broadstairs and part of Ramsgate it is the eastern side of Kent's largest peninsula, the Isle of Thanet. It presents a bold cliff to the sea, 15 miles north of South Foreland, and commands views over the southern North Sea .

  4. Golf has been played at North Foreland since 1903, starting as a 9-hole course and known as Kingsgate Golf Club. In 1909 Lord Northcliffe became the owner and by 1920 the 18-hole championship course and the adjoining short course had been opened; at this time the name was changed to North Foreland Golf Club.

  5. Kongeparret fulgte i september 1955 prinsesse Margrethe på vej til hendes ophold på kostskolen North Foreland Lodge i England, hvor prinsessen skulle være et år. Her ses kong Frederik IX og dronning Ingrid sammen med tronfølgeren, da de under Storebæltsoverfarten promenerede på færgens dæk. . Fotograf: Fyens Stiftstidendes pressefotografer (Odense Stadsarkiv )

  6. North Foreland Lodge var en stor privat skole for piger, der oprindeligt var beliggende i North Foreland, Kent, Storbritannien. Grundlagt i 1909 af Miss Mary Wolseley-Lewis, flyttede skolen sine lokaler omkring tidspunktet for Anden Verdenskrig. Efter et par års vandring flyttede hun i 1947 til Sherfield Manor, Sherfield på Loddon, i Hampshire.

  7. They were renting a cliff-top villa half a mile away at North Foreland which had a set of steps cut into the chalk that led down to a private beach. The villa was called St Cuby and is believed to be the inspiration for Trafalgar Lodge, where the book’s hero, Richard Hannay, meets the villainous Mr Appleton.