Heaven of UK

Heaven of UK

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  • @derekm1791
    @derekm179123 күн бұрын

    My main draw to Wigan is to see the blue plaque for the casino but it looks like a great place to stay for a few days of relaxation!

  • @ByteBackCreative
    @ByteBackCreative2 ай бұрын

    Slaithwaite is a great village to visit, if you are looking for something to do, don't forget the Slaithwaite Duck Race taking place this June kzread.info/dash/bejne/X6KfqtuahqXZqLg.html

  • @user-rl9mt4ll4h
    @user-rl9mt4ll4h2 ай бұрын

    Why are you showing images that look like Hadrian’s Wall when you’re talking about Newport Arch?

  • @reverendbluejeans1748
    @reverendbluejeans17486 ай бұрын

    I am sure that isn't croydon, that is soho

  • @reverendbluejeans1748
    @reverendbluejeans17486 ай бұрын

    How did I get here

  • @paulharvey9149
    @paulharvey91497 ай бұрын

    The pictures shown to accompany point 5 are in Falkland, Fife - some 130 miles south of Inverness! This small town did pose as "Inverness" on Overlander however, so I can see where your confusion might come from!"

  • @ThePleb
    @ThePleb8 ай бұрын

    Why are you showing footage of the Palace Theatre on Shafstbury Avenue in central London when talking about The Spread Eagle Theatre?

  • @mickelsuradi5629
    @mickelsuradi56298 ай бұрын

    nice vidio

  • @back40ranch
    @back40ranch9 ай бұрын

  • @GreatCityAttractions
    @GreatCityAttractions9 ай бұрын

    Nice video - Glasgow looks amazing

  • @paulharvey9149
    @paulharvey91499 ай бұрын

    Well done for the proper pronunciation of 'Ruthven'. Pity it doesn't occur to you that the village of Scone is likely to be pronounced the same way as the palace - which you also get correct. Oh, and some of those city centre shots - well, they might be in Perth, only, not this one! Come and see for yourself sometime!!

  • @jakebeatstheworld
    @jakebeatstheworld9 ай бұрын

    Absolute crap, most of these are not in bangor, ignore this video, it's pure rubbish

  • @maureentaphouse5206
    @maureentaphouse520610 ай бұрын

    Oh my goodness what an awful computer generated voice and what's with all the flashing x and o symbols on the screen .. It's unwatchable I'm afraid.

  • @daisytaylor4745
    @daisytaylor474510 ай бұрын

    1:13

  • @daisytaylor4745
    @daisytaylor474510 ай бұрын

    1:14

  • @daisytaylor4745
    @daisytaylor474510 ай бұрын

    1:51

  • @KPP365
    @KPP36511 ай бұрын

    It's Llandudno, Not Li .Thanks

  • @Gregdotgreg
    @Gregdotgreg Жыл бұрын

    Is it a town or a city? The video seems to be confused about it

  • @dap149b
    @dap149b Жыл бұрын

    Missed out Ivor Dewdneys😍

  • @ENGBriseB
    @ENGBriseB Жыл бұрын

    Portsmouth the only Island City in the UK. A great City a very proud City. The most densely populated city in the UK. And at the moment a sleeping giant of a football club.

  • @ChamaraIresh
    @ChamaraIresh Жыл бұрын

    Love Bristol!

  • @tabithamyers4236
    @tabithamyers4236 Жыл бұрын

    *promo sm* 🌈

  • @myramaddela402
    @myramaddela402 Жыл бұрын

    Gaganda nman halaman

  • @waverunner3911
    @waverunner3911 Жыл бұрын

    Cornwall is the most over rated county in England it's OK but it ain't that good try driving through it in the summer takes ages just to get where you want to go then you arrive you can't even park and every attraction they got is over priced or a load of rubbish and packed full of people try going to St Ives and you will see what I meen, lands end one big rip off,, St Michael's Mount is nice but to expensive, I much prefer deven or Dorset

  • @MattForbes
    @MattForbes Жыл бұрын

    Southsea Beach is **not** a tourist attraction. This was clearly created by someone with zero knowledge of the city - and where the hell is the connection with "Country Road" and Portsmouth? Mike Oldfield''s "Portsmouth" might have been a better choice of music, had you spent more than 5 minutes "researching" the place (and by 'research', I mean putting in a bit more effort than just grabbing images from the web.)

  • @susanwilcox3403
    @susanwilcox3403 Жыл бұрын

    love cornwall my favorite place to go also love charlestown and the museum

  • @garyyork1942
    @garyyork1942 Жыл бұрын

    I'll be back in March. I always visit in the off season. Less crowds and I love the winters there with snow.

  • @williammitchell9974
    @williammitchell9974 Жыл бұрын

    Good Old Brighton By Thee SeasideSuch Fond Memories Of Times Long Ago❤🎉❤xxx🌟🌟🌟

  • @paulskillman7595
    @paulskillman7595 Жыл бұрын

    I sat on those steps and watched a play there. Oh, so long ago!

  • @shahadathossain5861
    @shahadathossain5861 Жыл бұрын

    23.12. 22.....Miss you, faded vision from thousand miles with evergreen memory.

  • @jasinere35
    @jasinere35 Жыл бұрын

    the national mining museum is in west yorkshire not doncaster

  • @jasinere35
    @jasinere35 Жыл бұрын

    omg talk about getting it wrong only one of these is actually in doncaster thats the trolleybus museum which is housed on an old airfield right next to the M180

  • @tracyarmstrong8463
    @tracyarmstrong84634 ай бұрын

    This is so badly researched practically nothing has anything to do with Doncaster.

  • @tracyarmstrong8463
    @tracyarmstrong84634 ай бұрын

    ​@@jasinere35and the racecourse.

  • @paulnealgrove5016
    @paulnealgrove5016 Жыл бұрын

    awful place! avoid

  • @colinwatkins2950
    @colinwatkins2950 Жыл бұрын

    why all the women and few men,have the women took over POOR WORLD.

  • @stephenhodgson3506
    @stephenhodgson3506 Жыл бұрын

    The video should have mentioned Abbey House as well as Kirkstall Abbey. Some people are not aware of it as it is over the road from the Abbey. There is also a rare breed farm at Temple Newsam which is well worth a visit especially if you have children. If Harewood House is going to be included why not Lotherton Hall and Bird Gardens? Plus of course Middleton Railway the oldest working railway in the world.

  • @deathrider7
    @deathrider7 Жыл бұрын

    The Coal Mining Museum is nearer the city of Wakefield in West Yorkshire than it is Doncaster. Robot voice very annoying. Yeah don't go to Doncaster because none of this is in Donny. Worcestershire is nowhere near Doncaster. Wombwell is in the area of Barnsley. Barnsley is NOT in Doncaster.

  • @jasinere35
    @jasinere35 Жыл бұрын

    its actually close tohuddersfield/dewsbury so its basicly in west yorkshire

  • @krellis1000
    @krellis1000 Жыл бұрын

    Cornwall, where 12 = 10. No Eden Project?

  • @Angie-ky4lb
    @Angie-ky4lb Жыл бұрын

    Why do you keep calling it a town it's a city!!!

  • @mi6uk
    @mi6uk Жыл бұрын

    COUNTY DURHAM, DARLINGTON, TEESSIDE, BILLINGHAM, MIDDLESBROUGH, STOCKTON, YARM, NEWCASTLE, JESMOND & YORK - OUR UNUSUAL NEIGHBOURS AND LOCAL HISTORY IN THE NORTH OF ENGLAND Most people living in the North of England think they know their neighbours and local history but how would you know your neighbour worked for MI6? Most who knew the Fairclough family didn’t have a clue that from the seventies Bill Fairclough was a secret agent (MI6 codename JJ) working for various intelligence agencies. What’s more they had no idea he was following in his parents’ footsteps. Bill's parents met during the Second World War when his father, ostensibly working for Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI), worked secretly on creating bombs to wipe out the Nazi's industrial hinterland. In 1941 in Yarm Richard married Margaret Hawxwell, a local lass from Middlesbrough. After the war in Europe ended in May 1945, Dr Richard Alan Fairclough continued to work for British Intelligence (MI1). Not long after retiring from ICI in the seventies, Richard Fairclough opened and ran an antiquarian book shop business in Yarm High Street until his death in 1987. The book shop was a bit of an enigma as it was also a haunt for spooks. Why? Best ask his son Bill Fairclough (MI6 codename JJ). When not gated at St Peter’s School, York Bill Fairclough spent most of his childhood and early teens in the North East of England. As a child in the fifties he was educated at Red House School in Norton. He lived in Billingham and then in a vast white house (once the home of the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley) in Norton Green overlooking the duck pond. In Bill’s teens, the Faircloughs moved to live in Middleton St George and later in Yarm. Bill also lived in flats he rented near nightclubs he helped run during the late sixties and early seventies in Portrack, Stockton-on-Tees and Jesmond in Newcastle upon Tyne. Conveniently for him they were near the offices of the firm of Chartered Accountants (Coopers & Lybrand, now PwC) he worked for in Middlesbrough and Newcastle upon Tyne. So if you lived, worked or visited any of these places you may well have unwittingly encountered this “spooky” family, been their neighbours or inhabited the houses they lived in. A quick web-search will even disclose some of the addresses where they lived. Mind you, if you live in any of them now, best sweep them for bugs! Details including full addresses of where the Faircloughs lived and worked are given in most of Bill Fairclough’s bios on the web such as can be found at everipedia.org/wiki/lang_en/bill-fairclough. If you were as fascinated as we were, you can also read the raw fact based thriller Beyond Enkription, the first stand-alone novel to be released in The Burlington Files series (theburlingtonfiles.org/#/reviews). It’s a memorable and distinctively different noir espionage thriller based on his and his family’s experiences in 1974 and he still seems to be operational as Boris Johnson and Dominic Cummings might have noticed (theburlingtonfiles.org/news_2021.07.21.php).

  • @mi6uk
    @mi6uk Жыл бұрын

    COUNTY DURHAM, DARLINGTON, TEESSIDE, BILLINGHAM, MIDDLESBROUGH, STOCKTON, YARM, NEWCASTLE, JESMOND & YORK - OUR UNUSUAL NEIGHBOURS AND LOCAL HISTORY IN THE NORTH OF ENGLAND Most people living in the North of England think they know their neighbours and local history but how would you know your neighbour worked for MI6? Most who knew the Fairclough family didn’t have a clue that from the seventies Bill Fairclough was a secret agent (MI6 codename JJ) working for various intelligence agencies. What’s more they had no idea he was following in his parents’ footsteps. Bill's parents met during the Second World War when his father, ostensibly working for Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI), worked secretly on creating bombs to wipe out the Nazi's industrial hinterland. In 1941 in Yarm Richard married Margaret Hawxwell, a local lass from Middlesbrough. After the war in Europe ended in May 1945, Dr Richard Alan Fairclough continued to work for British Intelligence (MI1). Not long after retiring from ICI in the seventies, Richard Fairclough opened and ran an antiquarian book shop business in Yarm High Street until his death in 1987. The book shop was a bit of an enigma as it was also a haunt for spooks. Why? Best ask his son Bill Fairclough (MI6 codename JJ). When not gated at St Peter’s School, York Bill Fairclough spent most of his childhood and early teens in the North East of England. As a child in the fifties he was educated at Red House School in Norton. He lived in Billingham and then in a vast white house (once the home of the poet Percy Bysshe Shelley) in Norton Green overlooking the duck pond. In Bill’s teens, the Faircloughs moved to live in Middleton St George and later in Yarm. Bill also lived in flats he rented near nightclubs he helped run during the late sixties and early seventies in Portrack, Stockton-on-Tees and Jesmond in Newcastle upon Tyne. Conveniently for him they were near the offices of the firm of Chartered Accountants (Coopers & Lybrand, now PwC) he worked for in Middlesbrough and Newcastle upon Tyne. So if you lived, worked or visited any of these places you may well have unwittingly encountered this “spooky” family, been their neighbours or inhabited the houses they lived in. A quick web-search will even disclose some of the addresses where they lived. Mind you, if you live in any of them now, best sweep them for bugs! Details including full addresses of where the Faircloughs lived and worked are given in most of Bill Fairclough’s bios on the web such as can be found at everipedia.org/wiki/lang_en/bill-fairclough. If you were as fascinated as we were, you can also read the raw fact based thriller Beyond Enkription, the first stand-alone novel to be released in The Burlington Files series (theburlingtonfiles.org/#/reviews). It’s a memorable and distinctively different noir espionage thriller based on his and his family’s experiences in 1974 and he still seems to be operational as Boris Johnson and Dominic Cummings might have noticed (theburlingtonfiles.org/news_2021.07.21.php).

  • @ladymissp1880
    @ladymissp1880 Жыл бұрын

    Caerphilly is not in Cardiff! You could have mentioned our fabulous Victorian Shopping aracades

  • @leedsman5881
    @leedsman5881 Жыл бұрын

    Another great thing about Sheffield is how near the Peak District national park is.

  • @leedsman5881
    @leedsman5881 Жыл бұрын

    Meadowhall is absolutely awful.

  • @sharons9773
    @sharons9773 Жыл бұрын

    Get rid of the electric voice. Put in a real WY voice!!

  • @nkley1
    @nkley1 Жыл бұрын

    Why this music……very distracting.

  • @robertskolimowski7049
    @robertskolimowski7049 Жыл бұрын

    Is the thumbnail image of this video really of Bangor?

  • @Rhiannon101302
    @Rhiannon101302 Жыл бұрын

    The thumbnail is... But many of the clips in the video are not. I saw Cardiff, Paris, and other cities that I'm not entirely certain of but I know are definitely not Bangor.

  • @robertskolimowski7049
    @robertskolimowski7049 Жыл бұрын

    @@Rhiannon101302 Thank u:)

  • @user-co1ex9yn3m
    @user-co1ex9yn3m Жыл бұрын

    美しい都市ですね。

  • @teddymckinney1333
    @teddymckinney1333 Жыл бұрын

    p͎r͎o͎m͎o͎s͎m͎ 🤤

  • @laraibdin
    @laraibdin Жыл бұрын

    Wow very great video

  • @rabbastern
    @rabbastern Жыл бұрын

    Wunderbar - Cornwall ist unser zweites Heimatland.

  • @elainechubb971
    @elainechubb971 Жыл бұрын

    Nice video, but you really should change the title. Most of these "tourist attractions" are not IN Chichester at all but in the nearby (or not so nearby area). I have been to the open-air farm museum ad Fishbourne, and the Cathedral--which actually is in the city, of course. It is a long time since I visited, but I remember some very attractive streets in the city center, and a pretty little lane of old houses at the edge of the cathedral close. I think most were owned by the cathedral and various members of the clergy or staff were lucky enough to live in them. I know this is nitpicking, but I am thinking of visitors who turn up in Chichester expecting to find a lot of these attractios right there and would be very disappointed, particularly if they don't have a car. I did visit the downland museum by public transportation (Southdown bus), but I was driven to the Fishbourne Roman villa--very well worth visiting, but basically in the middle of nowhere, or as far as it is possible to be in West Sussex! The cathedral is not one of the most famous in England, but is beautiful, in a lovely setting, andalso very much worth a visit.