A Three Shire Stone is a monument marking the point where three shires meet. The term is mostly used in England.
Some notable Three Shire landmarks are:
- Three Shire Stone (Lake District) – Cumberland/Lancashire/Westmorland (grid reference NY276027)
- Three Shire Stone – Bedfordshire/Huntingdonshire/Northamptonshire (grid reference TL046705)
- Three Shire Stones (Bath and North East Somerset) – Somerset/Gloucestershire/Wiltshire (grid reference ST796700) (also the site of a neolithic burial chamber)
- Three Shire Stones – Northamptonshire/Oxfordshire/Warwickshire (grid reference SP457524): site of three marker stones until World War II, now part of Three Shire Farm
- Three Shires Oak – Derbyshire/Nottinghamshire/Yorkshire (grid reference SK533789), 500m south of actual county tripoint
- Three Shire Oak – Leicestershire/Lincolnshire/Nottinghamshire (grid reference SK821430)
- Three Shires Oak – Staffordshire/Shropshire/Worcestershire (grid reference SP017866): 19th-century meeting point of Staffordshire with detached parts of Shropshire and Worcestershire; cut down in 1904, commemorated in name of current road
- Three Shire Head – Derbyshire/Cheshire/Staffordshire near Flash (grid reference SK009685): also known as Three Shire Stones, the former site of three stones marking the boundary and shown on John Speed's map of 1612
- Threeshire Wood – Buckinghamshire/Bedfordshire/Northamptonshire (grid reference SP911560)
- Three Counties Road in Mossley, Greater Manchester is situated on the west bank of the River Tame adjacent to the Yorkshire/Lancashire/Cheshire historical tripoint
See also
- Tripoint, a point where three counties (or other geographical entities) meet
- List of tripoints of English counties, listing ceremonial and historic county tripoints
- Three-Farthing Stone in The Shire of J. R. R. Tolkien's legendarium
- Quadripoint, a point where four counties (or other geographical entities) meet
- No Man's Heath, Warwickshire, possibly having a Four Shire Stone
- Four shire stone where Worcestershire, Warwickshire, Oxfordshire and Gloucestershire once met
If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Categories: