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Some Related Sentences

Hertford and Union
* Hertford Union Canal – bought by the Regent's Canal in 1857
* North Carolina: Anson, Beaufort, Bertie, Bladen, Camden, Caswell, Chowan, Cleveland ( except for the city of Kings Mountain ), Craven, Cumberland, Edgecombe, Franklin, Gaston, Gates, Granville, Greene, Guilford, Halifax, Harnett, Hertford, Hoke, Jackson, Lee, Lenoir, Martin, Nash, Northampton, Onslow, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Person, Pitt, Robeson, Rockingham, Scotland, Union, Vance, Washington, Wayne, Wilson
A stretch of the Hertford Union Canal leads from the Regent's canal, at a basin in the north of Mile End to join the River Lea at Old Ford.
* Hertford Union Canal
A basin in the north of Mile End, near Victoria Park connects with the Hertford Union Canal leading to the River Lee Navigation.
It is bounded on two sides by canals: the Regent's Canal lies to the west, while its branch, once known as the Hertford Union Canal runs along the Southern edge of the park.
Continuing eastwards beyond the Islington tunnel and passing many notable landmarks including the Rosemary Branch Theatre, it then forms the southern end of Broadway Market and then meets the Hertford Union Canal by Victoria Park, after which it turns south towards the Limehouse Basin, where today it also meets the Limehouse Cut.
The Hertford Union Canal or Duckett's Canal is a short stretch ( c. 1. 5 km ) of canal in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets in east London.
Like its 1766 predecessor, the Limehouse Cut, the Hertford Union Canal was intended to provide a short-cut between the River Thames and the River Lee Navigation.
The canal starts at Hertford Union Junction between Mile End Lock and Old Ford Lock on the Regent's Canal.
This is lock No. 1, and is from the Hertford Union Junction with the Regent's Canal.
The towpath forms part of the " Limehouse Circuit "; commencing at Limehouse Basin and utilising the Limehouse Cut, Lee Navigation, Regent's Canal and Hertford Union in a circular five-mile walk.
Located alongside the Hertford Union Canal, in east London, the property became informally known as ' The Big Breakfast House '.
North leads to Duckett's Cut ( the Hertford Union Canal ), which provides access to Victoria Park and joins the Regent's Canal near Mile End.
It lies on land to the east of the Regent's Canal and in the north, is separated from the southern edge of Victoria Park by the Hertford Union Canal.
Access to sections of the Lee Navigation which pass close to the Olympic Stadium, including part of Bow River, part of the Hackney Cut, and the Hertford Union Canal will be restricted during the summer of 2012.
This in turn was linked to the Lea system by the Hertford Union Canal or Hackney Cut ( 1830 ).
* Hertford Union Canal ( Grand Union ) 1824 – appointed engineer.
West of the ' old ' River Lea The Lee Navigation, here called Hackney Cut meets the Hertford Union Canal.
Very little remains of the inter-war street pattern between the Hertford Union Canal and Eastway ( the western part was then known as Gainsborough Road ) or the masses of small terraced houses.
The Hertford Union Canal is accessed via a ramp from Wick Road, near St Marks Gate.
Westwards, the towpath proceeds to the Hertford Union junction with the Regent's Canal ; to the south this proceeds to Limehouse Basin, and to the north-west provides a route through north London to Islington, Camden and Paddington.
The Nation's residents principally reside in and around the " Little California / Pleasant Plains / Union " area of Hertford County, North Carolina.

Hertford and Canal
Hertford grew and prospered as a market and county town ; communication was improved by the construction of the Lea Navigation Canal in 1767 and the arrival of the railway in 1843.
: An Act for authorizing the Company of the Grand Junction Canal to vary the Course of a certain Part of the said Canal, in the county of Hertford, so as to render the Navigation thereof more safe and convenient, and for making some other Amendments and Alterations in an Act made in the Thirty-third Year of the Reign of his present Majesty, for making the said Canal.

Hertford and links
In addition, there are other links to St. Albans, Harpenden and Luton ( via B653 ), Hatfield ( via A1000 and A1001 ) and Hertford ( via B1000 ).
* A stained-glass window in St Andrew's Church is part of a fringe theory that links Hertford to the Knights Templar and the Holy Grail.
Hertford also lies just west of the A10 and the Kingsmead Viaduct which links it south to London and the M25 and north to Royston and Cambridge.
The bridge links together the Old and New Quadrangles of Hertford College ( to the south and the north respectively ), and much of its current architecture was designed by Sir Thomas Jackson.
Waltham Cross Bus Station serves as the main terminus and starting point for buses in the immediate locality, with links to North London, Central London, Hertford, Waltham Abbey, Loughton, Cheshunt and Potters Bar.

Hertford and River
On May 9, 1925 the first bridge opened across the Chowan River between Gates and Hertford counties.
The river bank, the New River Path, can be walked for some distance to the north through Haringey and on to its source near Hertford, though not all sections are open.
Prior to the last Ice Age, the River Thames followed a more northerly route to the North Sea, from Reading via Marlow, Chorleywood, St Albans, Hertford and along the present Suffolk-Essex border.
Hertford is at the confluence of four river valleys: the Rib, Beane and Mimram join the River Lea at Hertford to flow south toward the Thames as the Lee Navigation, after Hertford Castle Weir. The shared valley of the Lea and the Beane is called Hartham Common and this provides a large park to one side of the town centre running towards Ware and lying below the ridge upon which Bengeo is situated. Hartham Common
The spelling Lea predominates west ( upstream ) of Hertford, but both spellings are used from Hertford to the River Thames.
The river flows through ( or by ) Luton, Harpenden, Welwyn Garden City, to Hertford where it changes from a small shallow river to a deep canal at Hertford Castle Weir, which then flows on to Ware, Stanstead Abbotts, Hoddesdon, Broxbourne, Cheshunt, Waltham Abbey, Enfield Lock, Ponders End, Edmonton, Tottenham, Upper Clapton, Hackney Wick, Stratford, Bromley-by-Bow ( past Fish Island ), Canning Town and finally Leamouth where it meets the River Thames ( as Bow Creek ).
* Wikipaddle, River Lea ( Hertford Loop ), an article from a kayaking and canoeing perspective
Its original termination point was at New River Head near Clerkenwell, Islington, close to the current location of Sadler's Wells theatre — where water from the river was used to flood a large tank to stage an Aquatic Theatre at the beginning of the 19th century .< ref name = VicWeb >< cite > Victorian Theatres in London accessed 14 September 2009 </ ref > Today by following the New River Path it is possible to walk almost the whole length of the New River from its source between Hertford and Ware to its current destination in Stoke Newington, Hackney.
In 1946 the water supply to New River Head was truncated at Stoke Newington with the New River ending at the East Reservoir .< ref >< cite > The New River Path – a walk linking Hertford with Islington accessed 27 October 2011 </ ref >
It runs from Hertford Castle Weir to the River Thames at Bow Creek ; its first lock is Hertford Lock and its last Bow Locks.
One of these sites, bordering on the New Hertford River was to the south of Star Carr Farm.

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