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Barking » Building And Construction » Utilities
Barking Utilities
In this section of the UFindus Building and Construction directory, you will find the necessary resources for the completion and usage of your new building. Displaying an all-inclusive list of utilities suppliers, providing essential services to the building and construction trade. Listed here are companies offering site support utilities, supplying necessary water, gas and waste handling facilities to building site works, alongside those providing services in maintenance of water utilities. Keep your vital utilities in constant flow, with water pipe repairs and replacement from UFindus companies. With water being an ultimate supply in building utilities, you can also find water engineers within this category. Whatever your utilities query, find the answer here.
About Barking - show infohide info
Barking is the main town in the London Borough of Barking and Dagenham, but is also considered a traditional town of Essex. It is a suburban development with a large retail and commercial centre situated near to Charing Cross. It most historical exhibit is Barking Abbey, which was originally founded by Erkenwald, Bishop of London, in AD 666, for his sister Ethelburga. Previous excavation attempts in 1912 failed to unearth Saxon remains however. Yet recent digs just outside the medieval abbey precincts discovered the workshops of the Saxon Abbey. Artefacts including jewellery, pottery, carved bone, gold thread and glassmaking tools now show how Barking Abbey has become one of the most important religious archaeological sites in Europe today. Famous residents in Barking Abbey include William the Conqueror, who lived in the Abbey until the completion of his castle in the Tower of London. With the 1536 Dissolution of the Monasteries, Barking Abbey was demolished. St Margaret's Church and Curfew Tower still stand upon the site where some walls and foundations may still be seen. It was at St Margaret's Church that Here Captain James Cook married Elizabeth Batt of Shadwell in 1762.
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