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Settle
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Settle

Market town in Ribblesdale, North Yorkshire, England, on the River Ribble, 26 km/16 mi from Skipton; population (2001) 2,400. There is a paper mill in the town. Settle dates from the 13th century. The surrounding limestone country has many caves and gorges, including Alum Pot, Gaping Gill, and Malham Tarn.

The Settle–Carlisle railway line (182 km/114 mi) is one of the most scenic in the UK, passing through the Yorkshire Dales National Park and the Pennines.

Henry III granted a market charter to the town in 1249, and a new charter was granted by Queen Anne in 1708. Settle originally held an important position on the route between Lancaster and York, and retained its significance when the road from Leeds to Kendal was developed.



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Managers also negotiated a long lease with course owners Peel Settled Estates to ensure the venue's long-term future.
Cluain Bearu is conveniently located within an settled estate, but is also close to M9 Dublin corridor.
Evidence that the Horsemen's Group is still some way from being a settled estate came earlier in the TBA's Tuesday deliberations, and the differences of opinion over its constitution are an illustration that some of racing's various factions remain more intent on looking over their shoulders, fearful that one is getting more than the other, than on looking to the future.
 
 
 
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