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Three Horseshoes, Whitwick

East Midlands building and structure stubsGrade II listed pubs in LeicestershireNational Inventory PubsPub stubsUnited Kingdom listed building stubs
Use British English from August 2014
The Three Horseshoes, Whitwick geograph.org.uk 462038
The Three Horseshoes, Whitwick geograph.org.uk 462038

The Three Horseshoes is a Grade II listed public house at 11 Leicester Road, Whitwick, Leicestershire LE67 5GN.It is on the Campaign for Real Ale's National Inventory of Historic Pub Interiors.It was originally two cottages built in the early/mid 19th century, converted and extended with a front range to create pub in 1882.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Three Horseshoes, Whitwick (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Three Horseshoes, Whitwick
Leicester Road, North West Leicestershire

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 52.739826 ° E -1.350929 °
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Address

Leicester Road 84
LE67 5GJ North West Leicestershire
England, United Kingdom
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The Three Horseshoes, Whitwick geograph.org.uk 462038
The Three Horseshoes, Whitwick geograph.org.uk 462038
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Nearby Places

Coalville Meadows
Coalville Meadows

Coalville Meadows is a 6.0 hectares (15 acres) biological Site of Special Scientific Interest between Whitwick and Coalville in Leicestershire. It is managed by the Friends of Holly Hayes Wood.It is one of the best examples of neutral grassland that has developed on the somewhat leached clay soils of Leicestershire and is representative of such grassland in Central and Eastern England. It is bounded on the West by a former minerals railway line, to the South by social housing, the east by Holly Hayes Woodland, and to the North by an aggregate storage area, and have developed on soils derived from the clays of the Triassic Keuper Marl. The grassland is poorly drained and is dominated by tufted hair-grass Deschampsia caespitosa, Yorkshire fog Holcus lanatus, red fescue Festuca rubra and great burnet Sanguisorba officinalis. Additionally, flora typical of relatively base-poor clay soils, such as pignut Conopodium majus, betony Betonica officinalis, heath bedstraw Galium saxatile, tormentil Potentilla erecta, devil's-bit scabious Succisa pratensis, and mat grass Nardus stricta, are present. The grassland also includes typical meadow species as saw-wort Serratula tinctoria, meadow thistle Cirsium dissectum, knapweed Centaurea nigra and lady's smock Cardamine pratensis. In 2008, the site was bought by the Friends of Holly Hayes Wood who wanted to see the meadow land restored to its former glory. The group is working with Natural England to re-establish appropriate maintenance which it hoped will lead to a more appropriate 'favourable' status and to ensure that the meadow is meeting its conservation objectives. There is access to the site from the Ivanhoe Way footpath.