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Gilbert Birdsall Trading Ltd.

Address

South Road
Belford
Northumberland
NE70 7DP



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Gilbert Birdsall Trading Ltd. Details:

Livestock Farming And The Operation Of A Golf Course Under The Style "belfordgolf Club". The Golf Course Covers 50% Of The Agricutural Land.

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gilbert

In English, the name Gilbert means- trusted. Other origins for the name Gilbert include - English, German, French, Scottish, Welsh.The name Gilbert is most often used as a boy name or male name.
Recorded as Gilbert and the patronymic Gilbertson, this is an English surname, but one recorded throughout the British Isles. It is of Norman-French and even earlier pre 7th century Germanic origins. It derives from the personal name variously spelt as Gislebert, Guilbert or Gilebert. However spelt it is a compound with the elements "gisil", meaning a noble youth, and "berht", bright or famous. It is first recorded in England in the famous Domesday Book of 1086 and in the Latinized form of Gislebertus, and appears as a surname in the early 13th century (see below). The given name as Gilbert was very popular in medieval England, partly owing to the fame of St. Gilbert of Sempringham, (1086 - 1189), and the founder of the only native English monastic order. Early examples of the surname recording taken from surviving church registers of the diocese of Greater London include Anna Gylberte, who was christened on June 20th 1548, at St. Michael''s Cornhill, and Anne, the daughter of Harry Gilbert, who was christened on December 21st 1558, at St. Matthew''s, Friday Street, also in the city of London. Henry Gilbert, aged 38, was a "famine" emigrant who sailed from London aboard the ship "Northumberland", bound for New York on April 9th 1846.

trading

1. the act or process of buying, selling, or exchanging commodities, at either wholesale or retail, within a country or between countries: domestic trade; foreign trade.
2. a purchase or sale; business deal or transaction.
3. an exchange of items, usually without payment of money.
Trade is an exchange involving goods, services, or currency. Trade is sometimes loosely called commerce or financial transaction. A network that allows trade is called a market. The original form of trade was barter, the direct exchange of goods and services. Later one side of the barter were the metals, precious metals , bill, paper money. Modern traders instead generally negotiate through a medium of exchange, such as money. As a result, buying can be separated from selling, or earning. The invention of money greatly simplified and promoted trade. Trade between two traders is called bilateral trade, while trade between more than two traders is called multilateral trade.
1. trade, commerce, commercialism, mercantilism
usage: the commercial exchange of goods and services; "Venice was an important center of trade with the East"; "they are accused of conspiring to constrain trade"
2. craft, trade, class, social class, socio-economic class
usage: people who perform a particular kind of skilled work; "he represented the craft of brewers"; "as they say in the trade"
3. barter, swap, swop, trade, exchange, interchange
usage: an equal exchange; "we had no money so we had to live by barter"
4. trade, craft, occupation, business, job, line of work, line
usage: the skilled practice of a practical occupation; "he learned his trade as an apprentice"
5. deal, trade, business deal, transaction, dealing, dealings
usage: a particular instance of buying or selling; "it was a package deal"; "I had no further trade with him"; "he''s a master of the business deal"
6. trade, patronage, business
usage: the business given to a commercial establishment by its customers; "even before noon there was a considerable patronage"
7. trade wind, trade, prevailing wind
usage: steady winds blowing from east to west above and below the equator; "they rode the trade winds going west"

belford

Belford is a village and civil parish in Northumberland, England about halfway between Alnwick and Berwick-upon-Tweed, a few miles inland from the east coast and just off the Great North Road, the A1. It has a population of 1,055.

Belford has a church with a Norman chancel, and the Blue Bell Hotel. The 18th century Belford Hall, now residential flats, has Grade I listed building status. It achieved momentary fame in April 2000 when protests about the closure of its bank was picked up and used by the mainstream media to illustrate stories of rural decline brought about by bank branch closures.

Belford is surrounded by rich pastoral farmland, and to the west of the village is found one of the better rock climbing locations in the county, Bowden Doors.

In 2008, Belford Junior Football Club was awarded the Queen''s Award for Voluntary Service.
Belford Hall is a Grade I listed building, an 18th century mansion house.

The Manor of Belford was acquired by the Dixon family in 1726 and in 1752 Abraham Dixon built a mansion house in a Palladian style to a design by architect James Paine.