Brooklands "The birthplace of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang", not to be confused with Brooklyn, NY. Or Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwyll-llantysiliogogogoch, in North Wales. It has also been known for Brooklands to be confused with a Victorian woman's smile. At the time of this going to press we were unable to interview any Victorian ladies to vouch or refute this claim. Perhaps if we walk 3000 ft into the Earth's sky we can see why:
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| - Brooklands "The birthplace of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang", not to be confused with Brooklyn, NY. Or Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwyll-llantysiliogogogoch, in North Wales. It has also been known for Brooklands to be confused with a Victorian woman's smile. At the time of this going to press we were unable to interview any Victorian ladies to vouch or refute this claim. Perhaps if we walk 3000 ft into the Earth's sky we can see why:
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| - Brooklands "The birthplace of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang", not to be confused with Brooklyn, NY. Or Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwyll-llantysiliogogogoch, in North Wales. It has also been known for Brooklands to be confused with a Victorian woman's smile. At the time of this going to press we were unable to interview any Victorian ladies to vouch or refute this claim. Perhaps if we walk 3000 ft into the Earth's sky we can see why: The location of Brooklands is a secret, nobody knows where it is or how it was built. However, Brooklands still manages to attract thousands of visitors every year who marvel at the way she was built and a museum lies on the site of the old paddock. The Victorian women's smile has been used to describe Brooklands since last August but for centuries before this, women (and occasionally children) have likened it to a "giant footprint in the Surrey countryside". This was something that Tony Robinson and Phil Harding could not resist investigating. Upon doing so in the "Time Team LIVE Christmas Day Special" the team discovered the remains of a 3 mile by 1 mile Roman sandal which is now displayed in the "Roman Gallery", at the British Museum (Folded up).
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