Top 10 similar words or synonyms for osbaston

coppenhall    0.855910

mancetter    0.854030

mollington    0.848645

bishopstone    0.848593

cuddington    0.844959

hemington    0.844063

queniborough    0.843924

scraptoft    0.842249

hauxton    0.841976

cookley    0.841329

Top 30 analogous words or synonyms for osbaston

Article Example
Osbaston, Monmouth In 2008, the Environment Agency created a £600,000 fish pass so that salmon could avoid the weir and spawn upstream. The following year migratory salmon were found above the fish pass, at Kentchurch. During the engineering work for the fish pass, remains of the old power station were uncovered. Landowner Ronald Kear proposed that the power station be rebuilt and, working in partnership with Environment Agency Wales, invested £500,000 in the project. The electricity scheme uses an Archimedes' screw which powers a generator. It is now operated by the Old Manor Electric Company, and produces 670 MWh of electricity each year for the National Grid, which is sufficient to power over 150 homes. The combined hydroelectric and fish pass project was officially opened by Prince Edward in 2009.
Osbaston, Monmouth There is a public house, the Royal Oak, on the Hereford Road. It has a bar, restaurant and function room with balcony, and a garden area with views of the Wye Valley.
Osbaston, Telford Osbaston forms part of the civil parish of Ercall Magna and the unitary authority of Telford and Wrekin, it lies eleven miles north-west from the centre of Telford.
Osbaston, Leicestershire There are several farms located in and around the village, notably Osbaston House Farm, a goat farm which dates back to 1908 situated on the edge of the National Forest. A dental practice and a corner shop are located in the area around the former Osbaston Tollgate in which borders the neighbouring village of Barlestone. There is also a public house, The Gate Inn, situated in Osbaston Hollow.
Osbaston, Monmouth Osbaston House (also known as Great Osbaston House), located 1 km north of Monmouth Castle on the east bank of the River Monnow, has been a Grade II Listed building since 15 August 1974. The house's occupants have included Captain George William Moyse Harmer in 1901, Robert Alan Russel MacClelland in 1967, and Michael John Marshal Clarke (High Sheriff of Gwent) in 1985. Major-General Lennox Alexander Hawkins Napier, C.B., O.B.E., M.C., of Osbaston Farm, was High Sheriff of Gwent in 1988.