The Championships have been held in London since 1881, apart from a brief spell at Belle Vue Manchester in 1944, Birmingham NEC for 1993–1995 and Barnsley for 1996–2002.
Belle Isle | Regina Belle | Accademia di Belle Arti | Memphis Belle | Memphis Belle (film) | La Belle et la Bête | Canton of Marseille-La Belle-de-Mai | Belle Isle Park | Belle Île | Belle Glade | Belle | Belle of Louisville | Belle Mead, New Jersey | Belle Isle (Newfoundland and Labrador) | Belle Époque | Vue | Strait of Belle Isle | La Belle Noiseuse | Belle Vue | Belle Glade, Florida | Belle and Sebastian | Accademia di Belle Arti di Venezia | Accademia di Belle Arti di Roma | Accademia di Belle Arti di Firenze | Vesper Belle | The Belle Stars | The Belle's Stratagem | The Belle of New York (musical) | The Belle of New York | The Belle Game |
The Victorian suburb of Belle Vue grew up south of Coleham and the wealthy suburb of Kingsland (which centres on Shrewsbury School) grew up west of Coleham.
His major works include: Meditation - The Light of the World; Symphony of Thanksgiving, written for the International Staff Band of The Salvation Army in 1951 for their Diamond Jubilee Celebration; and Rhapsody In Brass, selected for the 1949 British Open Brass Band Championships at Belle Vue.
Louis Tussaud wax museums were later established in St. Petersburg, Florida, Atlantic City, New Jersey, Great Yarmouth, Brighton (1937-1979), Copenhagen, Denmark and Belle Vue, Greater Manchester.
In 1817 his father, a merchant shipowner and agent at Arichat, Nova Scotia, petitioned for land grants at Belle Vue on the Strait of Canso, where he built a stone house and had settled by 1822.