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Ayot railway station

Disused railway stations in HertfordshireEast of England railway station stubsFormer Great Northern Railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1948
Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1877Use British English from May 2017
Ayot Railway Station
Ayot Railway Station

Ayot was a railway station serving Ayot St Peter near Welwyn Garden City in Hertfordshire, England. It was on the branch line to Dunstable.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ayot railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Ayot railway station
Ayot Green, Welwyn Hatfield

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Wikipedia: Ayot railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 51.81503 ° E -0.22935 °
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Address

Ayot Green
AL6 9BE Welwyn Hatfield
England, United Kingdom
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Ayot Railway Station
Ayot Railway Station
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Hertfordshire
Hertfordshire

Hertfordshire ( (listen) HART-fərd-sheer or -⁠shər; often abbreviated Herts) is one of the home counties in southern England. It borders Bedfordshire and Cambridgeshire to the north, Essex to the east, Greater London to the south, and Buckinghamshire to the west. For government statistical purposes, it forms part of the East of England region. Hertfordshire covers 634.366 square miles (1,643.00 km2). It derives its name – via the name of the county town of Hertford – from a hart (stag) and a ford, as represented on the county's coat of arms and on the flag. Hertfordshire County Council is based in Hertford, once the main market town and the current county town. The largest settlement is Watford. Since 1903 Letchworth has served as the prototype garden city; Stevenage became the first town to expand under post-war Britain's New Towns Act of 1946. In 2013 Hertfordshire had a population of about 1,140,700, with Hemel Hempstead, Stevenage, Watford and St Albans (the county's only city) each having between 50,000 and 100,000 residents. Welwyn Garden City, Hoddesdon and Cheshunt are close behind with around 47,000 residents. Elevations are higher in the north and west, reaching more than 800 feet (240 m) in the Chilterns near Tring. The county centres on the headwaters and upper valleys of the rivers Lea and the Colne; both flow south, and each is accompanied by a canal. Hertfordshire's undeveloped land is mainly agricultural, with much of it protected by green-belt policies. Services have become the largest sector of the county's economy. Hertfordshire is well served with motorways and railways for access to London, the Midlands and the North. See the List of places in Hertfordshire and also List of settlements in Hertfordshire by population articles for extensive lists of local places and districts.