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Description & Travel information for East Leake and places above it in the hierarchy

East Leake

This parish and village are in south-west Nottinghamshire and lie about 120 miles north of London, 5 miles north of Loughborough (in Leicestershire) and 9 miles due south of Nottingham. The parish covers 2,540 acres.

The village sits along a small stream that flows into the Soar River. If you are planning a visit:

  • By automobile, take the A60 arterial road north out of Loughborough toward Nottingham. At Costock, turn left (west) for East Leake.
     
  • Richard VINCE has a photograph of the a href="http://www.geograph.org.uk/photo/4264712">"Rushcliffe Halt" train station on Geo-graph, taken in November, 2014. This facility is just north of East Leake. The web page author does not know of any passenger rail service to this facility. The last passenger service was in March, 1963. There have been proposals to build a walkway or an elevated station and to re-open the line in the future.
     
  • M. J. RICHARDSON has an aerial photograph of the southern edge of East Leake on Geo-graph, taken in April, 2016..
     
You can see pictures of East Leake which are provided by:

Nottinghamshire

England

  • English Heritage are responsible for the care and repair of many buildings of historic importance. The Historic England Archive  (previously the National Monuments Record) is English Heritage's public archive and is the home of around 10 million items covering England's buildings, archaeology and maritime sites. English Heritage's ambitious Images of England initiative aims to put a photograph of every listed building in England on the internet.
  • The Badger's Heritage website features many pen and ink drawings of churches, schools, pubs, hotels, bridges, locks, mills, cottages & villages in Berkshire, Hampshire, Middlesex, Oxfordshire, Surrey, West Sussex and Wiltshire.
  • Destination England from Lonely Planet.
  • There are many links on the (Internet Archive snapshot from 2018) England's Buildings webring.
  • ViewFinder - an online image resource for England's history provided by Historic England.
  • The England in Particular website from Common Ground encourages the study of our own localities.

UK and Ireland