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  1. 3 giorni fa · Ordnance Survey maps of Lancashire from the nineteenth century Ordnance Survey 1:10,560 Epoch 1 . Originally published by Ordnance Survey, Southampton, 1846-1873.

  2. 4 giorni fa · Part of the old East Lancashire Railway, opened to Colne in 1848. 7. Part of the old Leeds and Bradford Extension Railway; cuttings began at Priestfield in 1846; opened 1847. 8. A coal pit in Carry Heys is marked on the 1848 map; Coal Pit Lane led to it. Receipts from sea coal in Trawden are recorded in 1296 and 1305.

  3. 4 giorni fa · Footnotes. 1.Farrer, Clitheroe Ct. R. i, 227 (1495), 365. 2.V.C.H. Lancs. ii, 514.It was called Castell Clif in 1515; Farrer, op. cit. i, 261. 3.In 1762 the inhabitants and landowners of Great Marsden were indicted for not repairing the king's highway from the south end of Waterside Bridge to Coldwell, being part of the road from Colne to Halifax; also the same highway from the south end of ...

  4. 3 giorni fa · Lancashire, administrative, geographic, and historical county in northwestern England. It is bounded to the north by Cumberland and Westmorland (in the present administrative county of Cumbria), to the east by Yorkshire, to the south by Cheshire, and to the west by the Irish Sea.

  5. 4 giorni fa · This is an incomplete list of the cotton and other textile mills that were located within the modern-day boundaries of the ceremonial county of Lancashire, England. The first mills were built in the 1760s, in Derbyshire using the Arkwright system and were powered by the water. When stationary steam engines were introduced they still needed ...

  6. 5 giorni fa · Ordnance Survey ‘1-inch’ map series: Wigan (sheet 84) – outline, with hills – published 1896. Liverpool (sheet 100) – published 1947 (does not include ROF Kirkby site) Liverpool (sheet 100) – published 1961. Ordnance Survey ‘6-inch’ map series: Lancashire XCIX and C – surveyed 1845-47.

  7. 20 mag 2024 · The number of shafts sunk to gain coal number several thousand, for example, in 1958, Wigan undertook a survey of old shafts and located 500. In 1995 following several years of redevelopment across the Wigan Metropolitan Borough by the British Geological Survey (BGS), in association with the planning consultants Roger Tym & Partners, the list had grown to over 1000 with no real idea of the ...