Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Blackpool Gazette (locally marketed as simply The Gazette) is an English daily newspaper based in Blackpool, Lancashire. Published every day except Sunday, it covers the towns and communities of the Fylde coast. It was founded as The West Lancashire Evening Gazette in 1929 before being renamed the Evening Gazette, and then Blackpool Gazette ...
Layton cemetery is a graveyard located at Talbot Road in Blackpool, Lancashire in England. It was opened in 1873 when Blackpool parish church was replete with burying. The site encompasses 30 acres (120,000 m 2), having been regularly expanded during its history.
Science & Tech. Shopping. Sports
Carleton Crematorium, together with the adjacent necropolis, Carleton Cemetery, is a graveyard located within the Greenlands ward of Blackpool, [1] with its main entrance on Stocks Road in Carleton, Lancashire, England. It was opened on 18 July 1935. [2]
Fleetwood Weekly News is a weekly newspaper based in Fleetwood, Lancashire, England published every week, on a Wednesday, which covers Fleetwood and North Fylde. The newspaper is published by Blackpool Gazette & Herald Ltd who also publish the daily Blackpool Gazette and the weekly Lytham St. Annes Express. All three are owned by National World ...
Blackpool Council's Parks Service designed the plans for the memorial woodland, while rangers worked with local school children and community groups to plant trees. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Officially opened on 26 June 2009 with a service of dedication, [ 4 ] the arboretum has a main memorial plaque as well as 16 smaller plinths. [ 5 ]
Trinity Hospice is a purpose-built hospice on Low Moor Road (formerly Low Moor Lane) in Greenlands, Bispham, Blackpool, Lancashire, England. [1] It is set in landscaped gardens and it has a central courtyard. [1] It was opened in 1985 after several years of planning and fund raising led by Dr David Cooper.
Mick Gradwell, a former detective superintendent with Lancashire Constabulary, said that the police inquiry into child grooming in Blackpool, Blackburn and Burnley had been "hampered by political correctness", according to The Daily Telegraph, because the girls were white and the perpetrators non-white. [29]