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Rawtenstall Town Hall The coat of arms of the former Rawtenstall Borough Council. A local board was formed for the town in 1874 and the district it governed was extended to cover parts of the townships of Lower Booths (Rawtenstall itself), Higher Booths, Newchurch and Haslingden in the ancient parish of Whalley and Cowpe, Lench, Newhall Hey and Hall Carr, and part of Tottington (Higher End) in ...
English: New Hall Hey Mill, Rawtenstall Built by Hardman Brothers in 1866. Twenty three by four bays with a dentillated flat roof. Twenty three by four bays with a dentillated flat roof. There is a relatively small beam engine house parallel to the mill and between it and the squar(ish) boiler house.
Rawtenstall Town Hall is a municipal building in Bacup Road, Rawtenstall, a town in Lancashire in England. The building, which served as the offices and meeting place of Rawtenstall Borough Council and has been converted for commercial use, is a locally listed building.
In 1889, the short-lived Rossendale Valley Tramways Company was established to operate a route between Bacup and Crawshawbooth via Rawtenstall. In 1908 the route was taken over by Rawtenstall Corporation Tramways. [8]
Goodshaw is a hamlet situated on the edge of the Pennine hills in England, located just north of the market town of Rawtenstall in Lancashire. To the south, it is adjacent to the village of Crawshawbooth, with Rawtenstall located further south. [1] It is also a ward of Rossendale, where the population taken at the 2011 census was 4,033. [2]
Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide. Rawtenstall is a town in Rossendale, Lancashire, England ... [2] II: 2–6 Old ...
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Lumb is a small village in the Rossendale district of Lancashire, England.It lies in the valley of the Whitewell Brook, 3 miles (5 km) north east of Rawtenstall.It should not be confused with the hamlet of Lumb near Edenfield, also in the Rossendale district.