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Cam Connect Ltd.

Address

Stamford Farmhouse
Stamford
Alnwick
Northumberland
NE66 3RY



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Cam Connect Ltd. Details:

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connect

1. connect, link, tie, link up
usage: connect, fasten, or put together two or more pieces; "Can you connect the two loudspeakers?"; "Tie the ropes together"; "Link arms"
2. associate, tie in, relate, link, colligate, link up, connect, think, cogitate, cerebrate
usage: make a logical or causal connection; "I cannot connect these two pieces of evidence in my mind"; "colligate these facts"; "I cannot relate these events at all"
3. connect, link, link up, join, unite
usage: be or become joined or united or linked; "The two streets connect to become a highway"; "Our paths joined"; "The travelers linked up again at the airport"
4. connect, join, bring together
usage: join by means of communication equipment; "The telephone company finally put in lines to connect the towns in this area"
5. connect, hit, strike, impinge on, run into, collide with
usage: land on or hit solidly; "The brick connected on her head, knocking her out"
6. connect, join, bring together
usage: join for the purpose of communication; "Operator, could you connect me to the Raffles in Singapore?"
7. connect, be
usage: be scheduled so as to provide continuing service, as in transportation; "The local train does not connect with the Amtrak train"; "The planes don''t connect and you will have to wait for four hours

stamford

Stamford is an ancient town located in the south of Lincolnshire, approximately 100 miles to the north of London, just off the A1 , leading to York and Edinburgh.
It is a town and civil parish within the South Kesteven district of Lincolnshire. It is situated on the River Welland, in a south-westerly protrusion of Lincolnshire, between Rutland to the north and west, and Peterborough to the south. It borders Northamptonshire to the south-west at the only point in England where four ceremonial counties meet. Stamford was declared a conservation area in 1967 and has over 600 listed buildings, more than half of the total for the County of Lincolnshire. In April 1991, the boundary between Lincolnshire and Rutland in the Stamford area was re-arranged and now mostly follows the A1 to the railway line. The conjoined parish of Wothorpe is in the city of Peterborough. Barnack Road is the Lincolnshire/Peterborough boundary where it borders St. Martin''s Without.
Closure of Stamford East railway station in 1957 saw services to Essendine and Bourne handled at the town station, until the Stamford & Essendine line closed in 1959. The surviving railway station, hidden away between Wothorpe Road and the Welland, remains open and has direct services to Leicester, Birmingham and Stansted Airport on the Birmingham to Peterborough Line. Trains arriving from, or departing for Peterborough, pass through a short tunnel that runs beneath the Western edge of Stamford.


alnwick

Alnwick is a small market town in north Northumberland, England. The town''s population was just over 8000 at the time of the 2001 census and Alnwick''s district population was 31,029.

According to Country Life, October 2002, "Alnwick is the most picturesque market town in Northumberland, and the best place to live in Britain". The town is situated 32 miles south of Berwick-upon-Tweed and the Scottish border, and 5 miles inland from the North Sea at Alnmouth.

The town dates back to approximately AD 600, and over the centuries has thrived as an agricultural centre; as the location of Alnwick Castle and home of what were in mediaeval times the most powerful northern barons, the Earls of Northumberland; as a staging post on the Great North Road between Edinburgh and London, and latterly as a modern rural centre cum dormitory town. The fabric of the town centre has changed relatively little and still retains much of its original character; however there has been appreciable growth in size over the last ten years, with a number of housing estates covering what had been pasture, and new factory and trading estate developments along the roads to the south of the town.