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Places of interest in TW11
The present premises in Church Road were remodelled in 2004 with a new glass atrium and front. This remodelling has enabled the church to host many more community based activities. The church has a wide range of activities which are well described on its website in addition to Sunday services at 10.30am and 6.30pm.
Researchers who have worked at NPL include Paul Baran and Donald Davies, who co-invented packet switching in the early 1960s[1]; D. W. Dye who did important work in developing the technology of quartz clocks; Louis Essen, who invented a more accurate atomic clock than those first built in America. Others who have spent time at NPL include Harry Huskey, a computer pioneer; Alan Turing, one of the fathers of modern digital computing who was largely responsible for the early ACE computer design; Robert Watson-Watt, generally considered the inventor of radar, Oswald Kubaschewski, the father of computational materials thermodynamics and the numerical analyst James Wilkinson.
Bushy House was originally built in 1663 by William Samwell for Edward Proger, at a cost of £4000, as a keeper's lodge in what was at the time North Park. Proger had been made ranger of Bushy Park to reward him for his loyalty to King Charles II during his exile.
The Sternberg Centre for Judaism, in East End Road Finchley, London, is the largest Jewish cultural centre in Europe.[dubious ? discuss]
Finchley Central station was built by the Edgware, Highgate and London Railway (EH&LR) and was originally opened as Finchley & Hendon on 22 August 1867 by the Great Northern Railway (GNR) (which had taken over the EH&LR) in what was then rural Middlesex.[3] The station was on a line that ran from Finsbury Park to Edgware via Highgate. A branch line from this station was constructed by the GNR to High Barnet and opened on 1 April 1872.[3] The station was renamed to Finchley (Church End) on 1 February 1894.
Information by Wikipedia.com
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