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Topic: Arram Beck


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In the News (Mon 28 Dec 09)

  
  Rosedale
We were stopped in our tracks as wave after wave of fieldfares with a soft chirping twittering glided out of tall silver birch trees and on to patches of pasture.
Plus red lichens, vivid orange/green mosses and best the waters of the beck that ran beautifully between lips and cushions of club mosses.
Path vanishes, so now aim for spoil heaps on the horizon, c50 degrees magnetic from butt 3/7, down to beck, slab bridge, uphill, connect with stone wall to right, path, when wall curves away take mown heather path through spoil heaps to road.
www.yorkandcountypress.com /york/library/YORK_LEISURE_COUNTRYWALKS45.html   (799 words)

  
  Astrop - Auckland, Bishop | British History Online
The parish is bounded on the east by the German Ocean, and comprises, with the manors of Arram and Skirlington, about 2186 acres, the soil of which is a stiff, but very fertile, clay.
11., of which £107 for the hamlet of Arram are not payable when the land is in the hands of the owner, it having been the property of the dissolved abbey of Meaux.
The chapel attached to the palace is a fine edifice in the early and decorated styles, built originally by Bishop Beck, and repaired about 1660 by Bishop Cosin, whose remains are deposited in it.
www.british-history.ac.uk /report.asp?compid=50769   (4109 words)

  
 Driffield Navigation History
The whole navigation was completed in 1770, the canal being 5 miles long from Fisholme on Frodingham Beck to Driffield and the river section three quarters of a mile from Emmotland, the juction with the Hull already navigable.
Hull Bridge, about 1 mile upsteam of Beverley Beck, was raised, and a new lock was built at Struncheonhill below Emmotland, at the tail of a new cut avoiding a big bend on the river.
There were other navigable tributaries, the Arram Beck just above Beverley near Leconfield, and the Old Howe and Earl's Dyke above Frodingham, the last two in 1800 incorporated into the Beverley and Barmston Drain.
www.drifnav.co.uk /history/potted-history.htm   (662 words)

  
 River Hull
It has its source in the Yorkshire Wolds.
It is navigable from its junction with the Driffield Canal[?] at Struncheon Hill Lock, and it continues via the junctions with the Leven Canal[?], the Arram Beck[?] and Beverley Beck[?].
It then joins the Humber estuary in the centre of Kingston upon Hull.
www.ebroadcast.com.au /lookup/encyclopedia/ri/River_Hull.html   (68 words)

  
 River Hull - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
It has its source in the Yorkshire Wolds.
It is navigable from its junction with the Driffield Navigation at Aike Beck, and it continues via the junctions with the Leven Canal, the Arram Beck and Beverley Beck.
It then joins the Humber estuary in the centre of Kingston upon Hull.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/River_Hull   (210 words)

  
 Driffield Navigation & River Hull   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The main part of the route is the River Hull while at the northern end is Frodingham Beck and the Driffield Canal.
The River Hull and part of Frodingham Beck are navigable while the Driffield Canal is mostly unnavigable - though under various stages of restoration.
This watercourse is actually the old River Hull, known as West Beck, which leaves the main navigation and meanders north west to Great Driffield.
www.btinternet.com /~canals/canals/driffieldhull.htm   (2538 words)

  
 River Hull and Driffield Navigation Today
Aike Beck is now redirected to come out at the same place as Arram but I thought I would keep the descriptions in the map order.
To the west is a drain which follows the old course of the river, which winds its way round the back of the farm to the southwest and back to the river at the lock.
On the other side of the road, which is the one which we have followed from Frodingham is a pub called the Bluebell, and just up the road is the train station which took so much of the canal traffic away.
www.drifnav.co.uk /ma_files/riverhul_dn_today.htm   (2755 words)

  
 East Yorkshire Long Distance Walkers Assoc.: The Hutton Hike
Some of the route tends to be a little overgrown during the summer, and it is very flat.
Walk ahead, along the river bank and Watton Beck is soon reached.
Reach a stream, which will soon become Skerne Beck, and follow this to the Skerne road by the side of a bridge, crossing a footbridge along the way.
beehive.thisishull.co.uk /?WCI=SiteHome&ID=4387&PageID=54854   (1992 words)

  
 The Dispatch - Serving the Lexington, NC - News
Arram Beck is a small stream running through high embankments and flowing eastwards from the village of Arram to join the River Hull.
Depths variable due to the tidal nature of the Hull.
The stream was diverted into Aike Beck as part of the Environment Agency flood reduction works.
www.the-dispatch.com /apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=NEWS&template=wiki&text=Arram_Beck   (80 words)

  
 Work In Mind
There are many case studies reported which document the effectiveness of CBT techniques with clients who have a wide range of disabilities such as hearing impariment, visual impairment and spinal cord injuries (Gandy, 1995).
Studies have shown that unemployed people experience higher levels of depression, anxiety and general distress, together with lower self esteem and self confidence (Warr, Jackson and Banks, 1988; Morris, 1990; Edam and Arram, 1993).
Evidence from these studies examining changes in status over time, shows unemployment to be a direct causing factor in the creation of these differences.
www.workinmind.org /english/cbtinterventions.htm   (658 words)

  
 A Potted History of the Driffield Navigation | driffield navigation guide
1770, the canal being 5 miles long from Fisholme on Frodingham Beck to
Chapman was made engineer and works were completed by
Hull Bridge, about 1 mile upsteam of Beverley Beck, was raised,
www.driffieldnavigation.co.uk /history_memory/history_memory/a_potted_history_of_the_driffield_navigation   (684 words)

  
 Arram Beck and the River Hull.:: OS grid TA0443 :: Geograph British Isles - photograph every grid square!
Arram Beck and the River Hull.:: OS grid TA0443 :: Geograph British Isles - photograph every grid square!
TA0443 : Arram Beck and the River Hull.
Arram Beck flows over the Barmston Drain (not shown, behind the photographer) and joins the river Hull.
www.geograph.org.uk /photo/527696   (75 words)

  
 River Hull
It has its source in the Yorkshire Wolds.
It is navigable from its junction with the Driffield Navigation at Aike Beck, and it continues via the junctions with the Leven Canal, the Arram Beck and Beverley Beck.
It then joins the Humber estuary in the centre of Kingston upon Hull.
www.ukcanals.net /hull.html   (139 words)

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