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The newspaper was founded in 1874, the first issue being on Thursday 4 June 1874 at a cover price of 1d. It then had the fuller title, The Morecambe Visitor and General Advertiser, and consisted of four pages, 18 inches x 12 inches. [4]
Eastern bank of the Scioto River along the western side of U.S. Route 23, north of Portsmouth [6 38°48′21″N 82°59′19″W / 38.805833°N 82.988611°W / 38.805833; -82.988611 ( Feurt Mounds and Village
Midland Hotel staircase with Eric Gill's Neptune and Triton Medallion. The Midland Hotel was built to replace two earlier hotels: the North Western Hotel built in 1848 by the "little" North Western Railway, which had been renamed the Midland Hotel in 1871 when the Midland Railway took over the North Western Railway; and another hotel at Heysham, the Heysham Towers, which was converted from a ...
Eric Gill produced several works for the hotel. These were two seahorses, modelled as Morecambe shrimps, for the outside entrance, a round plaster relief on the ceiling of the circular staircase inside the hotel, a decorative wall map of the north west of England, and a large stone relief of Odysseus being welcomed from the sea by Nausicaa. [3]
Giri Portsmouth 505 Inc., the owner of the property at 505 Route 1 Bypass, proposes a 115-room Cambria hotel, plus a Starbucks with drive-thru
It expanded during the 19th century, particularly following the arrival of the railway in 1850. The town was officially renamed Morecambe in 1889. [1] The older listed buildings include some of those surviving from the earliest village, and include some former farmhouses and farm buildings that have been absorbed by the growing town.
New Hampshire State Police and local police and fire and rescue personnel were investigating in the area of the high-level Piscataqua River Bridge on Interstate 95 between Portsmouth, New ...
The sculpture seen in 2023, showing the repairs made with gold leaf The sculpture, seen in 2007. Love, The Most Beautiful Of Absolute Disasters, popularly known as Venus and Cupid is a sculpture by Shane A. Johnstone which stands on a slight promontory beside Morecambe Bay on the eastern approach to Morecambe, Lancashire, England.