Bach

Heritage Site in Herefordshire

England

Bach

Pudleston Court, Pudleston By J.T. Brearley, 1846-47 for Elias Chadwick, a cotton merchant from Wigan. It is built of pink sandstone with grey stone dressings. Grade II listed.
In 2011 it was on the market for £5 million.
Pudleston Court, Pudleston Credit: Stephen Richards

The requested URL returned error: 429 Too Many Requests

If you have any feedback on the listing, please let us know in the comments section below.

Bach Images

Images are sourced within 2km of 52.24/-2.667 or Grid Reference SO5460. Thanks to Geograph Open Source API. All images are credited.

Pudleston Court, Pudleston By J.T. Brearley, 1846-47 for Elias Chadwick, a cotton merchant from Wigan. It is built of pink sandstone with grey stone dressings. Grade II listed.
In 2011 it was on the market for £5 million.
Pudleston Court, Pudleston
By J.T. Brearley, 1846-47 for Elias Chadwick, a cotton merchant from Wigan. It is built of pink sandstone with grey stone dressings. Grade II listed. In 2011 it was on the market for £5 million.
St Dubricius, Hamnish Clifford Remote, small, neat and extremely well cared for, dating from 1909-10. The architect was W.S. Weatherley. The tin tabernacle of 1897 it replaced is next door, now serving as the village hall.
St Dubricius, Hamnish Clifford
Remote, small, neat and extremely well cared for, dating from 1909-10. The architect was W.S. Weatherley. The tin tabernacle of 1897 it replaced is next door, now serving as the village hall.
St Dubricius, Hamnish Clifford Remote, small, neat and extremely well cared for, dating from 1909-10. The architect was W.S. Weatherley. The tin tabernacle of 1897 it replaced is next door, now serving as the village hall.
St Dubricius, Hamnish Clifford
Remote, small, neat and extremely well cared for, dating from 1909-10. The architect was W.S. Weatherley. The tin tabernacle of 1897 it replaced is next door, now serving as the village hall.
St Dubricius, Hamnish Clifford Remote, small, neat and extremely well cared for, dating from 1909-10. The architect was W.S. Weatherley. The tin tabernacle of 1897 it replaced is next door, now serving as the village hall.
St Dubricius, Hamnish Clifford
Remote, small, neat and extremely well cared for, dating from 1909-10. The architect was W.S. Weatherley. The tin tabernacle of 1897 it replaced is next door, now serving as the village hall.
Village Hall, Hamnish Clifford The former church, a 'tin tabernacle' dating from 1897, enlarged in 1901 and converted to community use when St Dubricius next door was built in 1910.
Village Hall, Hamnish Clifford
The former church, a 'tin tabernacle' dating from 1897, enlarged in 1901 and converted to community use when St Dubricius next door was built in 1910.
Brockmanton
Brockmanton
Northeast Herefordshire uplands The lightly populated high ground between Leominster and Bromyard was once the source of great wealth thanks to wool from Ryeland sheep.
Northeast Herefordshire uplands
The lightly populated high ground between Leominster and Bromyard was once the source of great wealth thanks to wool from Ryeland sheep.
Brook, Brockmanton A fenced off watercourse.
Brook, Brockmanton
A fenced off watercourse.
Lane,Olden The road is gated further on and very quiet.
Lane,Olden
The road is gated further on and very quiet.
Bach There is a pocket of old style farmland here and it is very scenic.
Bach
There is a pocket of old style farmland here and it is very scenic.
Gated road, Whyle A very scenic corner northeast of Leominster.
Gated road, Whyle
A very scenic corner northeast of Leominster.
Sheep, Whyle Grassland hills amongst the high ground in northeast Herefordshire.
Sheep, Whyle
Grassland hills amongst the high ground in northeast Herefordshire.
Ford at Lower Bach This ford is found on the byway leading up from Lower Bach. The gentleman from the house advised me that he used to travel up the byway regularly in his Citroen. 4X4's are required these days. My 1500th addition to Geograph.
<span class="nowrap"><a title="http://youtu.be/QjhE7E_3ag8" rel="nofollow ugc noopener" href="http://youtu.be/QjhE7E_3ag8">Link</a><img style="margin-left:2px;" alt="External link" title="External link - shift click to open in new window" src="https://s1.geograph.org.uk/img/external.png" width="10" height="10"/></span>
Ford at Lower Bach
This ford is found on the byway leading up from Lower Bach. The gentleman from the house advised me that he used to travel up the byway regularly in his Citroen. 4X4's are required these days. My 1500th addition to Geograph. LinkExternal link
Road, Bache Passing Bache Hill.
Road, Bache
Passing Bache Hill.
Green lane, Bache A grassy field access road.
Green lane, Bache
A grassy field access road.
Lane, Bache Road out from Bache approaches the A4112.
Lane, Bache
Road out from Bache approaches the A4112.
Orchard, Hamnish
Orchard, Hamnish
Hamnish Village Hall
Hamnish Village Hall
Show me another place!

Bach is located at Grid Ref: SO5460 (Lat: 52.24, Lng: -2.667)

What 3 Words

///chum.quicker.correctly. Near Kimbolton, Herefordshire

Nearby Locations

Bach

Related Wikis

Pudleston

Pudleston (or Pudlestone), is a small village and civil parish (alternatively Pudleston-cum-Whyle), in the county of Herefordshire, England, and is 13...

Kimbolton, Herefordshire

Kimbolton is a village and parish in Herefordshire, England, around 3 miles (5 km) north east of Leominster and 15 miles (24 km) north of Hereford. The...

Leominster (UK Parliament constituency)

Leominster was a parliamentary constituency represented until 1707 in the House of Commons of England, then until 1801 in that of Great Britain, and finally...

Duke of York, Leysters

The Duke of York is a public house in the parish of Middleton on the Hill, near Leominster, Herefordshire. The pub is on the Campaign for Real Ale's National...

Nearby Amenities

Located within 500m of 52.24,-2.667
Barrier: stile
Bicycle: yes
Foot: yes
Lat/Long: 52.2384911/-2.6638677
Ford: yes
Lat/Long: 52.2403643/-2.667111
The data included in this document is from www.openstreetmap.org. The data is made available under ODbL.

Have you been to Bach?

Leave your review of Bach below (or comments, questions and feedback).