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Lytham Hall is an 18th-century Georgian country house in Lytham, Lancashire, 1 mile (1.6 km) from the centre of the town, in 78 acres (32 ha) of wooded parkland. It is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade I listed building , the only one in the Borough of Fylde .
The Witchwood is a narrow strip of woodland protected by a tree preservation order and partly a Site of Special Scientific Interest. The strip, which runs alongside the railway line, between Blackpool Road to Ballam Road, was originally part of Lytham Hall parkland and was created by Lytham St. Annes Civic Society.
The Clifton Family of Lytham Hall, owners of the Manor of Lytham in Lancashire, guided by their land agent James Fair began planning for a new town in the area as early as the 1840s. During the 1850s they invested in the railway between Lytham and Blackpool which was . Lytham Hall front entrance. opened in 1863.
The lecture hall is attached to Lytham Methodist Church. It is built in yellow brick with red sandstone dressings and has a slate roof. The building is in Edwardian Baroque style and is in a single storey with a linear plan, and with an entrance porch to the left, above which is a lead dome.
The council is based at Lytham St Annes Town Hall on South Promenade in St Annes. The building was originally a hotel called Southdown Hydro, but was bought in 1925 to serve as a town hall following the merger of the districts of St Annes and Lytham in 1922 to become Lytham St Annes. [19]
Lytham St Annes Town Hall is a municipal building on the South Promenade in Lytham St Annes, Lancashire, England. The structure, which is used as the headquarters of Fylde Borough Council, is a locally listed building.
Councillor L S Stott, Chairman of St Anne's on the Sea Urban District Council had been in communication with the American Philanthropist and benefactor of public libraries, Andrew Carnegie and Council Minutes (General Purposes Committee) of 29 June 1903 report that he received "an intimation from Mr Carnegie's private secretary that he would give the sum of £3,500 for the erection of a library".
Lytham Priory was an English Benedictine priory in Lytham, Lancashire. [1] It was founded between 1189 and 1194 by Richard Fitz Roger as a cell of Durham Priory. [2] It was dedicated to Saint Cuthbert and lasted until Henry VIII dissolved the monasteries in 1530s. [1] In the 18th century, a manor house, Lytham Hall, was built on the site of the ...