Need a Data Recovery? - Follow the simple steps below!

Step 1

 

3 Send your Hard Disk to Salvation Data, 105 Upper Lisburn Road, Belfast, BT10 0LG

 

3Send us your Hard Drive. Make sure to include your name and address inside package.

 

 

Step 2

 

We will Recover your Data from your PC or Mac Hard Disk for 249.99+vat within 24-72 Hours not Weeks! We offer the best value service within UK.

Step 3

 

3 You verify the data via email or telephone.

3We will let you decide what method you want the data backed up.

3 We dispatch data to you on a next day service

Our Address: Salvation Data 105 Upper Lisburn Road, Belfast BT10 0LG Email us 24x 7 at sales@salvationdata.co.uk

 

Adwick le Street Data Recovery


Adwick le Street
Adwick le Street is located in South Yorkshire
Adwick le Street

 Adwick le Street shown within South Yorkshire
Population 10,507 
OS grid reference SE5307
Metropolitan borough Doncaster
Metropolitan county South Yorkshire
Region Yorkshire and the Humber
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town DONCASTER
Postcode district DN6
Dialling code 01302
Police South Yorkshire
Fire South Yorkshire
Ambulance Yorkshire
EU Parliament Yorkshire and the Humber
UK Parliament Doncaster North
List of places: UK • England • Yorkshire

Adwick le Street

Adwick le Street is a small village in the Metropolitan Borough of Doncaster, South Yorkshire, England. It is situated a few miles to the north west of the town of Doncaster. It has a population of 10,507.[1]

The earliest references to the town are found in Domesday Book (1086), and the parish church of St. Lawrence dates from the 12th century. The town derives its name from the great north British Roman routeway, Ermine Street.

Adwick le Street was an urban district of the West Riding of Yorkshire until 1974.

Within the area of the former urban district lies the model village of Woodlands.

In December 2007, archaeologists from South Yorkshire Archaeological Survey working on the North Doncaster Technology College site (Now Outwood Academy Adwick) discovered the remains of 35 Anglo-Saxon burials dating from the 7th-9th century. This is believed to be the first Anglo-Saxon cemetery of this type found in South Yorkshire and one of the most significant Anglo-Saxon finds in the country.


 

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