| LNER | Railway company which operated from London to the north east of Britain from 1923 to 1948 (abbr) (4) |
| DOWNTOEARTH | Old television drama series with Pauline Quirke and Warren Clarke based on a family and their move from London to the Devon countryside (4,2,5) |
| CLINK | The _, Southwark prison which operated from the 12th century until 1780 (5) |
| EASTHAMPTON | Ina Garten's famous Barefoot Contessa store, which operated from 1978 to 2003, was located in this Long Island town |
| THAMES | Flowing from the Cotswolds through London to the North Sea, river on which Henley Royal Regatta and |
| NORTHSEA | Body of water east of Britain that is home to 300 oil platforms (5,3) |
| RIGHTON | Trendy seaside resort to the east of Britain |
| OGPU | The secret police of the Soviet Union from 1923 to 1934 (4) |
| ARTA | Town in the north-east of Mallorca known for the Sanctuary of Sant Salvador and the remains of a Bronze Age settlement (4) |
| TEES | River in the north-east of England where the High Force falls and the Low Force cascades (4) |
| ROAD | Home to Manchester City from 1923 to 2003 (5,4) |
| SIAM | Name by which Thailand was known before 1939 and from 1946 to 1948 (4) |
| YORK | City to the north-east of Leeds (4) |
| SPUR | An accelerator operated from the back seat (4) |
| LAND | Archetypal British offroader dating back to 1948 (4,5) |
| FOOD | Post-war shortages meant athletes brought their own ___ to 1948 Games (4) |
| MIDDLEENGLISH | The language of parts of Britain from the Norman Conquest until the late 15th Century (6,7) |
| ATATURK | Kemal ___ (1881 - 1938) the founder of modern Turkey who was president from 1923 to 1938 (7) |
| WILHELMINA | Queen of the Netherlands from 1890 to 1948; the longest-reigning Dutch monarch (10) |
| NEWJERSEY | Atlantic City and its famous boardwalk are found on the coast of this state in the north-east of the |