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    Recommended Reviews - Greestone Stairs

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    18 years ago

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    18 years ago

    Haha this is so much easier than the steep hill so it is a must! A lot easier and faster!

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    Templae Bruer

    Templae Bruer

    3.5(2 reviews)
    0.2 km

    Hard to find this is in the middle of nowhere. Sited in a farm yard it has a place to park and they…read moredon't mind visitors. It is one of the few Templar Sites, other than the odd church, with any remains above ground. This is a tower and you can see where the round church stood and that the farmhouse is made from the stone. The ruin consists of the intact square south tower, one of two added to the original structure during the Templars' tenure, north and south of the chancel. The car park is on the site of the round nave. The Templars financed their military campaigns through the income generated by their estates all over Europe, including several in Lincolnshire. It was founded in the period 1150 to 1160 and the order was dissolved in 1312. The tower has strange effects on people..some rush out. I love it and find it exhilarating. I climb the barrier and up the worn steps and sit at the top feeling wonderful yet shaky. A friend walked the land around with dowsing rods and (I am a sceptic) he handed them to me and they were going crazy..I could hardly hold them. In the tower the graffitti is very interesting ..British and American airmen from Bomber County etched their names and base/date. I wonder how many of them ever went back? It was a preceptory and training would have been done here but at Temple Bruer, the Templars were leaders in the sheep farming industry..knocks the myth a little?

    Interesting looking building but not worth itread more

    Stonebow & the Guildhall

    Stonebow & the Guildhall

    4.0(6 reviews)
    0.6 km

    Five stars for the coolness of walking through the Stonebow and thinking you are drunk…read more This place leans! It separates upper and lower Lincoln. A gateway has stood here for over 1800 years, although the present building was not completed until 1520. So not that ols then :) No wonder it leans. The Guildhall is the official home of the Mayor and occupies the whole of the second floor of the Stonebow. The Guildhall is still used today for Council meetings. It opens on Heritage days and maybe others although you can book party tours. The City's administration have met in the Council Chamber for many centuries from the medieval Gild Merchant to its modern day descendant of the City Council. Inside the Guildhall is the old debtors prison which now houses the City's Civic Insignia including the Royal Sword presented by Richard II and the Mayor's Mace presented by Charles II. I love that they say this in their guideIt must also be borne in mind that some of the floor areas are a little uneven and there a few additional steps to be careful of when walking about the building. Have they not noticed the whole thing leans!!??? Actually it doesn't if you have a few drinks before looking at it.

    A great meeting place in the middle of Lincoln that everyone just takes for granted. Next time when…read moreyou pass take a moment to have a look at what you arte passing through. That is of course if you aren't hassled by the ever present charities collectors.

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    Stonebow & the Guildhall
    Stonebow & the Guildhall

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    The Pilgrims Fathers Stone

    The Pilgrims Fathers Stone

    5.0(1 review)
    47.2 km

    This is a memorial stone dedicated to the Pilgrims going to America…read more In 1608 the attempt to leave for Holland was made, this time from Killingholme Creek near Immingham where a Dutch ship waited. Men were ferried aboard first, but before the women and children could do so an armed crowd intervened. The Pilgrim Fathers left from the bank of the Humber at a place called Immingham Creek to Holland in 1608. The actual spot was marked by a memorial which was erected in 1924. The granite top stone of the memorial was taken from Plymouth Rock, Mass and presented by the Sulgrave Institution. The memorial was erected by the Anglo-American Society of Hull. The memorial became surrounded by industry as the Immingham dock area expanded and was moved in 1970 to its present site in a small park opposite the church in Immingham. According to Alan Tailby in his book the Pilgrims did hire a boat to take them to Holland from Boston in 1607 but the skipper, after taking their money, betrayed them to the authorities and they were imprisoned for a time. Many of the streets in Immingham are named after the Pilgrims: e.g. Clyfton Crescent and Brewster Avenue. Some 22 million Americans claim descent from the Pilgrim Fathers who sailed in the Mayflower and related crossings. The memorial stone, erected in 1924, on the estuary, was moved in 1970 to near St. Andrew's church because of re-development.When I worked in the archeology department I remember listing this as an SMA. (Sites and Monuments). Many Americans visit it each year.

    Greestone Stairs - landmarks - Updated May 2026

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