IMAGES TAKEN NEAR TO
Tring Station, TRING, HP23 5SG

Introduction

This page details the photographs taken nearby to Tring Station, HP23 5SG by members of the Geograph project.

The Geograph project started in 2005 with the aim of publishing, organising and preserving representative images for every square kilometre of Great Britain, Ireland and the Isle of Man.

There are currently over 7.5m images from over14,400 individuals and you can help contribute to the project by visiting https://www.geograph.org.uk

Image Map


Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
Notes
  • Clicking on the map will re-center to the selected point.
  • The higher the marker number, the further away the image location is from the centre of the postcode.

Image Listing (154 Images Found)

Images are licensed for reuse under creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0
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Image
Details
Distance
1
Royal Hotel, Tring Station
Tring Station, which lies some 2 miles from the Town Centre, has given its name to the small community that has grown up there since the coming of the London and Birmingham Railway in 1837. The Royal Hotel was opened by John Brown, proprietor of the Tring Brewery and of a handful of public houses in the area to provide food, drink, accommodation and horse transport for passengers using the adjacent railway station. The hotel was originally named the Harcourt Arms after the then owner of nearby Pendley Manor, the Comte d'Harcourt. Alas, the Hotel has gone the way of the original Tring Brewery (although we do have a modern 'micro-brewery' of that name) and has ceased to function as such; it is now flats, but it must be said that the conversion has been sensitively carried out and the Hotel remains an attractive period-piece. See also: Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image
Image: © Gerald Massey Taken: 15 Nov 2009
0.00 miles
2
Royal Hotel, Tring Station
Tring Station, which lies some 2 miles from the Town Centre, has given its name to the small community that has grown up there since the coming of the London and Birmingham Railway in 1837. The Royal Hotel was opened by John Brown, proprietor of the Tring Brewery and of a handful of public houses in the area to provide food, drink, accommodation and horse transport for passengers using the adjacent railway station. The hotel was originally named the Harcourt Arms after the then owner of nearby Pendley Manor, the Comte d'Harcourt. Alas, the Hotel has gone the way of the original Tring Brewery (although we do have a modern 'micro-brewery' of that name) and has ceased to function as such; it is now flats, but it must be said that the conversion has been sensitively carried out and the Hotel remains an attractive period-piece. See also: Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image
Image: © Gerald Massey Taken: 15 Nov 2009
0.01 miles
3
Royal Hotel, Tring Station
Tring Station, which lies some 2 miles from the Town Centre, has given its name to the small community that has grown up there since the coming of the London and Birmingham Railway in 1837. The Royal Hotel was opened by John Brown, proprietor of the Tring Brewery and of a handful of public houses in the area to provide food, drink, accommodation and horse transport for passengers using the adjacent railway station. The hotel was originally named the Harcourt Arms after the then owner of nearby Pendley Manor, the Comte d'Harcourt. Alas, the Hotel has gone the way of the original Tring Brewery (although we do have a modern 'micro-brewery' of that name) and has ceased to function as such; it is now flats, but it must be said that the conversion has been sensitively carried out and the Hotel remains an attractive period-piece. See also: Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image
Image: © Gerald Massey Taken: 15 Nov 2009
0.01 miles
4
Royal Hotel, Tring Station
Image: © Gerald Massey Taken: 15 Nov 2009
0.01 miles
5
Royal Hotel, Tring Station
Tring Station, which lies some 2 miles from the Town Centre, has given its name to the small community that has grown up there since the coming of the London and Birmingham Railway in 1837. The Royal Hotel was opened by John Brown, proprietor of the Tring Brewery and of a handful of public houses in the area to provide food, drink, accommodation and horse transport for passengers using the adjacent railway station. The hotel was originally named the Harcourt Arms after the then owner of nearby Pendley Manor, the Comte d'Harcourt. Alas, the Hotel has gone the way of the original Tring Brewery (although we do have a modern 'micro-brewery' of that name) and has ceased to function as such; it is now flats, but it must be said that the conversion has been sensitively carried out and the Hotel remains an attractive period-piece. See also: Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image
Image: © Gerald Massey Taken: 15 Nov 2009
0.01 miles
6
Royal Hotel, Tring Station
Tring Station, which lies some 2 miles from the Town Centre, has given its name to the small community that has grown up there since the coming of the London and Birmingham Railway in 1837. The Royal Hotel was opened by John Brown, proprietor of the Tring Brewery and of a handful of public houses in the area to provide food, drink, accommodation and horse transport for passengers using the adjacent railway station. The hotel was originally named the Harcourt Arms after the then owner of nearby Pendley Manor, the Comte d'Harcourt. Alas, the Hotel has gone the way of the original Tring Brewery (although we do have a modern 'micro-brewery' of that name) and has ceased to function as such; it is now flats, but it must be said that the conversion has been sensitively carried out and the Hotel remains an attractive period-piece. See also: Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image
Image: © Gerald Massey Taken: 15 Nov 2009
0.01 miles
7
Houses near Tring station
These houses have had a makeover from their original purpose. Adjacent to Tring station, and frequent trains into London, they make a good commuter base, because two minutes the other way and you are in the countryside.
Image: © Graham Horn Taken: 9 Apr 2010
0.01 miles
8
Royal Hotel, Tring Station
Tring Station, which lies some 2 miles from the Town Centre, has given its name to the small community that has grown up there since the coming of the London and Birmingham Railway in 1837. The Royal Hotel was opened by John Brown, proprietor of the Tring Brewery and of a handful of public houses in the area to provide food, drink, accommodation and horse transport for passengers using the adjacent railway station. The hotel was originally named the Harcourt Arms after the then owner of nearby Pendley Manor, the Comte d'Harcourt. Alas, the Hotel has gone the way of the original Tring Brewery (although we do have a modern 'micro-brewery' of that name) and has ceased to function as such; it is now flats, but it must be said that the conversion has been sensitively carried out and the Hotel remains an attractive period-piece. See also: Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image; Image
Image: © Gerald Massey Taken: 15 Nov 2009
0.01 miles
9
The Railway Station at Tring.
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Image: © Jack Hill Taken: 11 Jul 2005
0.01 miles
10
Tring railway station: The former Royal Hotel
This month (October 2007) is the 170th anniversary of the coming of the railway line to Tring in October 1837. Since the station is about 3 kilometres from the centre of Tring, there was a need for a hotel and a posting house and this structure was consequently built around 1838. The hotel was originally the Harcourt Arms, but fairly rapidly (between 1845 and 1851) became the Royal. Demand for this sort of facility probably declined with the advent of motor transport and it is no longer a hotel. From the 1881 Census, transcribed by the Church of Latter Day Saints, the hotel keeper was one Samuel Brown, aged 35, born Cheford Fitzpaine, Dorset. His wife was Jane M Brown, aged 32, born Stoke Prior, Worcestershire. Other residents included their son Ernest S Brown, aged 11, one cook, one chambermaid, one barmaid, one ostler, one waiter, and one post boy. The building is Grade II Listed.
Image: © Nigel Cox Taken: 8 Oct 2007
0.01 miles
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