Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ainsdale is a Metropolitan Borough of Sefton ward in the Southport Parliamentary constituency that covers the localities of Ainsdale and Woodvale in the town of Southport. At the 2011 census it had a population of 12,102.
Ainsdale is a village near Southport, in the Sefton district, in Merseyside, England, situated three miles south of the centre of Southport. Originally in the historic county of Lancashire , at the 2001 Census it had a population of 12,723. [ 1 ]
The Southport & Cheshire Lines Extension Railway opened the station on 1 September 1884 as Woodville & Ainsdale, though one source refers to it as "Woodvale and Ainsdale". [6] It was renamed Woodvale on 1 May 1898. The station was built on an embankment crossing Liverpool Road and was well known for its floral displays on both platforms. [7] [8]
The area is located on the Irish Sea coast, approximately a mile away from the centre of Southport. At the 2001 census , the local government ward called Birkdale had a population of 12,265. [ 1 ] The population of the area at the 2011 Census is shown under Birkdale (ward) (qv).
Hillside is a residential suburb of the seaside town of Southport, England. It is surrounded by Birkdale, a former town in its own right, but part of Southport itself since amalgamation in 1912. It takes its name from a building named Hill Side, clearly evident on early maps.
SOUTHPORT Ainsdale, Birkdale, Blowick, Scarisbrick: Sefton, West Lancashire PR9 SOUTHPORT Banks, Churchtown, Crossens, Marshside: Sefton, West Lancashire PR11 PRESTON Great Universal Stores/Department for Work and Pensions delivering to its address in PR1 [3] non-geographic: PR25 LEYLAND Leyland, Clayton-le-Woods, Cuerden, Farington: South ...
Ainsdale railway station opened on 24 July 1848 when the Liverpool, Crosby and Southport Railway (LC&SR) opened its line from Waterloo to Southport Eastbank Street. [1]In 1851 a branch line was opened, without parliamentary authorisation, from the station to Ainsdale Corn Mill 53 ch (3,500 ft; 1,100 m) away on the east side of Liverpool Road.
The Southport & Cheshire Lines Extension Railway (SCLER) opened a line extending their existing system from Aintree to Southport on 1 September 1884. [6] Seeing the potential in Ainsdale's large beach they subsequently built this station, which opened as Seaside in 1901.