Tally-ho - Other Names

Other Names

The West Midlands Police Learning and development Centre, Tally Ho!, Edgbaston, Birmingham

HMS Tally-Ho was a British World War II submarine.

It is the name of a pub in Worcestershire, as well as a pub in Bouldon, Shropshire, and there is a pub called 'The Tally-Ho' in .

A pub in Finchampstead, Berkshire, is named the Tally Ho.

A pub in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania is also named the Tally Ho Tavern.

It is also the name of a pub in North Finchley, London, and often North Finchley is referred colloquially as Tally Ho or in the case of local bus transport as Tally Ho Corner.

It is also the name of a fast food restaurant near McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario Canada

There is also a residential street named Tally-Ho Road in Arroyo Grande, California.

It is also the name of a bus company in Devon, England. In 1923, Jim Clark, a farmer at The Mounts in Kingsbridge, Devon bought a coach and started running passenger transport services with the company name "Tally Ho, Sunshine Coach". His bus and coaching business grew over the years, using the "Tally Ho" name. In 1926, W. Wellington bought a lorry and started a goods haulage business, in Kingbridge, Devon. Later, he added a bus to his growing fleet and his bus and coaching business called "Kingsbridge Belle" grew along with the addition of furniture removal and cattle haulage. In 1960, Jim Wellington acquired the "Tally Ho" bus and coach business from Jim Clark and continued it, using the same name. Today, Tally Ho in Kingsbridge operate from there to Dartmouth, Modbury, Salcombe, Totnes and from Ivybridge they operate to Plymouth and Bigbury.

Read more about this topic:  Tally-ho

Famous quotes containing the word names:

    Tonight there are only the winter stars.
    The sky is no longer a junk-shop,
    Full of javelins and old fire-balls,
    Triangles and the names of girls.
    Wallace Stevens (1879–1955)

    It was a poetic recreation to watch those distant sails steering for half-fabulous ports, whose very names are a mysterious music to our ears.... It is remarkable that men do not sail the sea with more expectation. Nothing was ever accomplished in a prosaic mood.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)