Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. South Shields power station. /  54.99083°N 1.44500°W  / 54.99083; -1.44500. South Shields power station supplied electricity to the borough of South Shields and the surrounding area from 1896 to 1958. It was owned and operated by South Shields Corporation until the nationalisation of the British electricity supply industry in 1948.

  2. Harton, South Shields. / 54.979; -1.410. [1] Harton is a suburban area of South Shields, South Tyneside, Tyne and Wear, England. It was historically a village, however as the urban area grew it merged with its adjacent villages to become part of the town. Some of the original village buildings are still intact today, such as St Peter's Church.

  3. South Shields er ein kystby i Tyne and Wear i det nordaustlege England.Byen ligg ved munningen av elva Tyne, nær Newcastle upon Tyne.Han har om lag 90 000 innbyggjarar. South Shields var tidlegare ein industriby med skipsverft og kolgruver, men etter at desse vart nedlagt har servicenæringa vorte stadig viktigare for byen.

  4. South Shields is a borough constituency represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It elects one Member of Parliament (MP) by the first past the post system of election. It has been represented by Emma Lewell-Buck of the Labour Party since 2013. The seat was created by the Reform Act 1832 as a single-member ...

  5. Frenchman’s Bay is a small bay between South Shields and Marsden Grotto, Tyne and Wear.The O.S. grid reference is NZ392660.. See also. Geordie dialect words. External links. Frenchman’s Bay from the South; A bit of Frenchman's Bay - by James Shotton; Frenchman,s Bay, South Shields by Charles George Jefferson

  6. A by-election was held for the United Kingdom House of Commons constituency of South Shields on 2 May 2013. It was triggered by the resignation of David Miliband, the previous Member of Parliament (MP) and former Foreign Secretary, who had held the seat for Labour since 2001. [1] The by-election coincided with local elections across England.

  7. Billy Blyton, Baron Blyton (1899–1987) of South Shields, Labour Party politician [31] Sir William Fox (1812–1893) four times Prime Minister of New Zealand [32] Harold Heslop (1898–1983) trade unionist and writer [33] John Erickson (1929–2002), professor of politics at Edinburgh.