bdNorth East.co.uk

Safe & Secure 24

Address

Church Street
Haydon Bridge
Hexham, Northumberland
NE47 6JG



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Safe & Secure 24 Details:

Sale Of Domestic Alam Systems

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Information about words in this company name or address

safe

1. secure from liability to harm, injury, danger, or risk: a safe place.
2. free from hurt, injury, danger, or risk: to arrive safe and sound.
3. involving little or no risk of mishap, error, etc.: a safe estimate.
4. dependable or trustworthy: a safe guide.
5. careful to avoid danger or controversy: a safe player; a safe play.
6. denied the chance to do harm; in secure custody: a criminal safe in jail.
7. Baseball.
a. reaching base without being put out: safe on the throw to first base.
b. making it possible to reach a base: a safe slide.
1. a steel or iron box or repository for money, jewels, papers, etc.
2. any receptacle or structure for the storage or preservation of articles: a meat safe.
3.
a. a pan for catching leakage.
b. template .
4. Slang.a condom.

secure

1. to get hold or possession of; procure; obtain: to secure materials; to secure a high government position.
2. to free from danger or harm; make safe: Sandbags secured the town during the flood.
3. to effect; make certain of; ensure: The novel secured his reputation.
4. to make firm or fast, as by attaching: to secure a rope.
5. Finance.
a. to assure payment of by pledging property.
b. to assure of payment by the pledge or mortgaging of property.
6. to lock or fasten against intruders: to secure the doors.
7. to protect from attack by taking cover, by building fortifications, etc.: The regiment secured its position.
8. to capture : No one is safe until the murderer is secured.
9. to tie up , esp. by binding the person''s arms or hands; pinion.
10. to guarantee the privacy or secrecy of: to secure diplomatic phone conversations.

church street

Church Street was originally named Church Lane and was referred to as this by John Harrison''s in his survey of the town centre streets for Thomas Howard, 21st Earl of Arundel in 1637. Ralph Gosling''s map of Sheffield of 1736 shows the area around Church Lane as "extraordinarily narrow". Joseph Mather , the local songwriter and file cutter described Church Lane in the 1780s in his song "The Black Resurrection":

Proceed then up Church Lane, that poor narrow place,
With wood buildings projecting, twas quite a disgrace,
The roofs nearly meeting, a dark dreary street,
Might justly be styled, the robbers retreat.
In 1785 Church Lane was widened by taking a section of the nearby churchyard which resulted in the exhumation of several bodies and coffins. This produced adverse reaction from local inhabitants who directed their wrath against the vicar, the Reverend James Wilkinson