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Meanwood Valley Urban Farm

City farms in EnglandLow-energy building in the United KingdomMeanwoodUrban agriculture
Meanwood Farm Sign
Meanwood Farm Sign

Meanwood Valley Urban Farm is a city farm established in 1980 in Meanwood, Leeds, England, which has animals and crops and an environmentally friendly visitors centre. The farm is on Meanwood Beck and occupies 24 acres (97,000 m2). The main entrance is on Sugarwell Road.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Meanwood Valley Urban Farm (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Meanwood Valley Urban Farm
Definitive Footpath LEEDS 94, Leeds Potternewton

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Wikipedia: Meanwood Valley Urban FarmContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.820805555556 ° E -1.5532777777778 °
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Meanwood Valley Urban Farm

Definitive Footpath LEEDS 94
LS7 2HT Leeds, Potternewton
England, United Kingdom
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Website
mvuf.org.uk

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Meanwood Farm Sign
Meanwood Farm Sign
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Nearby Places

Memorial to Queen Victoria, Leeds
Memorial to Queen Victoria, Leeds

A Memorial to Queen Victoria stands in Woodhouse Moor, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. The memorial consists of figures and a frieze in bronze on a plinth and pedestal of Portland stone. The sculptor was George Frampton, and the architect working with him was Leonard Stokes. The figure on the top of the pedestal is that of Queen Victoria sitting on a throne, with a sceptre resting on her right forearm, and holding an orb in her left hand. The back of the throne has the appearance of a radiant Sun. On the sides of the pedestal are figures in niches, that on the left representing Peace, and that on the right representing Industry. On the front of the plinth are carved the Royal Arms, and on the back is the coat of arms of Leeds and an inscription. Beneath the pedestal is a plinth with a continuous frieze incorporating the words "INDIA", "AUSTRALIA", "CANADA", and "AFRICA" on scrolled plaques that are flanked by owls and foliage. The plinth stands on four steps. The memorial was unveiled on 27 November 1905, and originally stood outside Leeds Town Hall. It was moved to Woodhouse Moor in 1937. The memorial was designated as a Grade II* listed building on 5 August 1976.During the wave of George Floyd protests in the United Kingdom, it was reported on 9 June 2020 that the statue had been vandalized by painting with slogans such as 'racist', 'colonizer', 'justice', "BLM" (Black Lives Matter) and 'slave owner' (although slave ownership in the British Empire had been abolished in 1833, four years before she ascended the throne).