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College Valley Estates Ltd.

Address

18-20 Glendale Road
Wooler
Northumberland
NE71 6DW



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College Valley Estates Ltd. Details:

Forestry And Logging, Farm Sheep

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Information about words in this company name or address

college

1. an institution of higher learning, esp. one providing a general or liberal arts education rather than technical or professional training. Cf. university.
2. a constituent unit of a university, furnishing courses of instruction in the liberal arts and sciences, usually leading to a bachelor''s degree.
3. an institution for vocational, technical, or professional instruction, as in medicine, pharmacy, agriculture, or music, often a part of a university.
4. an endowed, self-governing association of scholars incorporated within a university, as at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge in England.
5. a similar corporation outside a university.
6. the building or buildings occupied by an institution of higher education.
7. the administrators, faculty, and students of a college.
8. a private secondary school.
9. an organized association of persons having certain powers and rights, and performing certain duties or engaged in a particular pursuit: The electoral college formally selects the president.
10. a company; assemblage.

valley

1. an elongated depression between uplands, hills, or mountains, esp. one following the course of a stream.
2. an extensive, more or less flat, and relatively low region drained by a great river system.
3. any depression or hollow resembling a valley.
4. a low point or interval in any process, representation, or situation.
5. any place, period, or situation that is filled with fear, gloom, foreboding, or the like: the valley of despair.
6. Archit.a depression or angle formed by the meeting of two inclined sides of a roof.
7. the lower phase of a horizontal wave motion.
1. valley, vale, natural depression, depression
usage: a long depression in the surface of the land that usually contains a river

estates

1. a piece of landed property, esp. one of large extent with an elaborate house on it: to have an estate in the country.
2. property or possessions.
b. the legal position or status of an owner, considered with respect to property owned in land or other things.
An estate is the net worth of a person at any point in time. It is the sum of a person''s assets - legal rights, interests and entitlements to property of any kind - less all liabilities at that time. The issue is of special legal significance on a question of bankruptcy and death of the person.
Depending on the context, the term is also used in reference to an estate in land or of a particular kind of property . The term is also used to refer to the sum of a person''s assets only.
1. estate, property, belongings, holding, material possession
usage: everything you own; all of your assets and liabilities
2. estate, land, landed estate, acres, demesne, real property, real estate, realty
usage: extensive landed property retained by the owner for his own use; "the family owned a large estate on Long Island"
3. estate, estate of the realm, class, social class, socio-economic class
usage: a major social class or order of persons regarded collectively as part of the body politic of the country and formerly possessing distinct political rights

wooler

Wooler (pronounced /ˈwʊlər/ WOOL-ər) is a small town in Northumberland, England.
Wooler was not recorded in the Domesday Book, probably because when the Book was written in 1086, northern Northumbria was not fully under Norman control. However, by 1107, at the time of the creation of the 1st Baron of Wooler, the settlement was described as "situated in an ill-cultivated country under the influence of vast mountains, from whence it is subject to impetuous rains". Wooler subsequently enjoyed a period of prosperity and with its expansion it was granted a licence in 1199 to hold a market every Thursday. The Saint Mary Magdalene hospital was established around 1288.

Wooler is close to Humbleton Hill the site of a severe Scottish defeat at the hands of Harry Hotspur in 1402. This battle is referred to at the beginning of Shakespeare''s play Henry IV, part One - of which Hotspur is the dashing hero.

Wooler also used to have a Drill Hall that used to be the local "Picture House" that children were evacuated to in World War Two. There also used to be a fountain situated at the top of Church Street in the town.

Alexander Dalziel of Wooler (1781-1832) was the father of the celebrated Dalziel Brothers. Seven of his eight sons became artists, and as engravers in London there was no one to touch them. Their sister Margaret was also an engraver.

Between 1887 and 1965 the town was served by Wooler railway station on the Alnwick to Cornhill Branch.