1
Liberal Club
Entrance to the club is now from the back, where there have been extensive additions.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 7 Jun 2010
0.00 miles
2
Hucknall - Liberal Club
Image: © Dave Bevis
Taken: 12 Nov 2009
0.01 miles
3
Hucknall - Nottinghamshire
A glance down Yorke Street in the direction of Market Square reveals the offices of the Hucknall & Bulwell Dispatch, a local rag that has been running for 106 years.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 24 Apr 2012
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4
Half Moon Inn, Hucknall
The half Moon Inn stands next to the Statue, remembering the miners of the area, at the top end of the High St.
Image: © Phil Evans
Taken: 22 Jul 2008
0.02 miles
5
St Mary Magdalene Church, Hucknall
St Mary Magdalene Church, Hucknall, the final resting place of poet Lord Byron.
Image: © Phil Evans
Taken: 22 Jul 2008
0.02 miles
6
Flight of Fancy
Not my title - this is the correct name of this modern sculpture in Hucknall Market Place.
Created by artist Liz Lemon, it is designed to reflect Hucknall's industrial heritage, with other references to lacemaking and Ada Lovelace, the daughter of Lord Byron, credited with designing the precursor to the modern computer. The crown is formed from the mixer from a Rolls Royce Tay jet engine emphasising the local contribution that Rolls Royce's factory makes to the local economy.
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 7 Jun 2010
0.02 miles
7
Hucknall Library
Built in 1887 for the Hucknall Library Board, listed Grade II. In the foreground is the sculpture called Flight of Fancy, see http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/1906468 .
Image: © Alan Murray-Rust
Taken: 7 Jun 2010
0.02 miles
8
Hucknall - Nottinghamshire
The principal entrance to the grounds and church of St Mary Magdalene from Market Square. The ramped entry to Hucknall library is visible to the left of the picture, behind the low railings. The name Hucknall is thought to be derived from 'a nook of land belonging to Hucca' (a Saxon). Reference to "Hochenale" appeared in the Domesday Book (1086) and by the late 1100s it had developed into a village known as Hucknall Torkard. Torkard was the name of a local landowning family. The longer name remained until 1916 when it reverted to being called Hucknall.
Image: © David Hallam-Jones
Taken: 20 Mar 2012
0.03 miles
9
High St, Hucknall
High St Hucknall, looking south from St Mary Magdalene Church.
Image: © Phil Evans
Taken: 22 Jul 2008
0.03 miles
10
A rainy morning in Hucknall
Looking from the end of High Street towards the Library (on the left) and the parish church of St Mary Magdalene, where Lord Byron is buried in the family vault. "A large church right in the (unattractive) Market Square (a rare thing in Notts)," wrote Nikolaus Pevsner. "The church was very much smaller when the Victorians started on it."
Image: © John Sutton
Taken: 7 Apr 2014
0.03 miles