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Skegness Pier is a pleasure pier in Skegness, Lincolnshire, England. Opened in June 1881, it was at the time the fourth longest in England, originally stretching a length of 1,844 ft (562 m). When originally built, it was a T-shaped pier with a saloon/concert hall at the pier head. Steamboat trips ran from the pier to Norfolk until 1910.
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Skegness Pier; Metadata. This file contains additional information, probably added from the digital camera or scanner used to create or digitize it.
The seafront includes Skegness Pier, which houses amusements; [292] to the south, Botton's Pleasure Beach is a funfair with roller coasters and other rides. [133] Further south still is the Jubilee Clock Tower and the boating lake and Fairy Dell paddling pool. [293]
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Natureland is a seal sanctuary, with a seal hospital, a small zoo, tropical glasshouses (known as the 'Floral Palace') and an aquarium. [1] Animals include seals, African penguins, crocodiles, goats, tarantulas, snakes, terrapins, scorpions, as well as tropical butterflies and birds.
Chapel St. Leonards is a seaside resort village and civil parish in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England.It is situated 5 miles (8 km) north from the resort of Skegness and just north of Ingoldmells.
In Skegness the storm washed away two large sections of the pier and left the theatre isolated at the seaward end. Plans to link the two sections by monorail, and to build a new 1200-seat theatre and a 250-foot tower all fell through later that year when an application for financial assistance was rejected. [ 40 ]