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Mickle Trafford railway station

Disused railway stations in CheshireFormer Birkenhead Railway stationsNorth West England railway station stubsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1951
Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1889Use British English from October 2017
001 Mickle Trafford BOx 18.08.13 edited 2
001 Mickle Trafford BOx 18.08.13 edited 2

Mickle Trafford railway station was a station on the Birkenhead Joint Railway in Mickle Trafford, Cheshire.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Mickle Trafford railway station (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Mickle Trafford railway station
Station Lane,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Mickle Trafford railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.2181 ° E -2.8307 °
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Address

Mickle Trafford

Station Lane
CH2 4EL , Mickle Trafford and District
England, United Kingdom
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001 Mickle Trafford BOx 18.08.13 edited 2
001 Mickle Trafford BOx 18.08.13 edited 2
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Nearby Places

St. Plegmund's well
St. Plegmund's well

St. Plegmund's well lies about 220 yards (201 m) to the west of St Peter's Church, Plemstall near the village of Mickle Trafford, Cheshire, England (grid reference SJ454701). It is named after Plegmund, who later became Archbishop of Canterbury, and who is believed to have lived as a hermit nearby. The well is situated on the edge of a low cliff to the east of which is one of the channels of the River Gowy. It is one of two holy wells in west Cheshire. An inscribed sandstone curb was added in 1907 which was dedicated by the Venerable E. Barber, Archdeacon of Chester, on 11 November 1907. The earliest documentary evidence of the well is in a quitclaim dated 1301.A survey of the well was carried out in 1995 which found that it is a square stone-lined pit with two large slabs on either side and two steps down from the southern side beside the road. In the bottom of the well is a ceramic pipe which has been inserted at a later date. At the time of the survey there was water present up to the level of the first step. The cover slabs show some signs of damage but there was no sign of the curbs added in 1907. It is said to have been used for baptisms up to the 20th century. In the 1990s, it was noticed that the hawthorn tree overhanging the well was dressed periodically and during the later 1990s, archaeologists from Chester City Council led local children on a well dressing walk on St Plegmund's feast day (2 August). This continued until 2000, when a more formal annual well dressing event was revived. The well is a scheduled monument.