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St Paul's Church, Colton

Church of England church buildings in North YorkshireChurches completed in 1899Walter Brierley buildings
St.Paul's church geograph.org.uk 1611417
St.Paul's church geograph.org.uk 1611417

St Paul's Church is an Anglican church in Colton, North Yorkshire, a village in England. Until the end of the 19th century, Anglicans in Colton worshipped at All Saints' Church, Bolton Percy. In 1899, a church was built in the village, to a design by Walter Brierley and James Demaine. It is a single-cell red brick structure. There is a monthly communion service held in the church.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Paul's Church, Colton (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St Paul's Church, Colton
Manor Farm Court,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.8965 ° E -1.1774 °
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Address

St Paul's

Manor Farm Court
LS24 8BF , Colton
England, United Kingdom
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Website
allsaintsboltonpercy.co.uk

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St.Paul's church geograph.org.uk 1611417
St.Paul's church geograph.org.uk 1611417
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Askham Bryan College

Askham Bryan College is a specialist land-based college based in Askham Bryan, York, England. It also has centres in Newcastle, Middlesbrough, Saltaire and Wakefield. It was built in 1936, but not opened until after World War II as the Yorkshire Agricultural Institute. It first opened to students in 1948. The college runs courses in Agriculture, Animal Management, Veterinary Nursing, Equine, Engineering, Motorsport, Horticulture, Arboriculture, Floristry, Countryside Management, Outdoor Adventure Sport, Sport Coaching and Fitness, Uniformed Public Services and Foundation Vocational Programmes. The college farm is 1,022 acres (414 ha) and supports three farms: Westfield Farm which accommodates a 250 Holstein Friesian dairy herd and the National Beef Training Centre; East Barrow Farm which houses the college Equine Department with 53 horses and Animal Management Department; and Headley Hall Farm which is the arable farm formerly of the University of Leeds. Newton Rigg College, based in Penrith, Cumbria, became part of Askham Bryan College in 2011; while Liz Philip was Principal; in 2020 Tim Whitaker announced that teaching at the site would cease in July 2021. According to Cumbrian Lord Inglewood, the process of asset stripping may be "unlawful". Between 2016 and 2020 student numbers at Newton Rigg fell by 40%. Alumni include Geoffrey Smith, a horticulturalist, writer and broadcaster; and Joe Maiden, a horticulturalist and broadcaster for BBC Radio Leeds.