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Layton railway station (England)

DfT Category F2 stationsFormer Preston and Wyre Joint Railway stationsNorthern franchise railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Blackpool
Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1867Use British English from December 2016
Layton railway station, Lancashire, geograph 5842530 by Nigel Thompson
Layton railway station, Lancashire, geograph 5842530 by Nigel Thompson

Layton railway station (formerly Bispham railway station) is on the Blackpool North to Preston railway line, in Lancashire, England, serving the Blackpool suburbs of Layton and Bispham. It is managed by Northern and is unstaffed.

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

Layton railway station (England)
Bispham Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Layton railway station (England)Continue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.835 ° E -3.0306 °
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Address

Bispham Road

Bispham Road
FY2 0SX , Hoohill
England, United Kingdom
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Layton railway station, Lancashire, geograph 5842530 by Nigel Thompson
Layton railway station, Lancashire, geograph 5842530 by Nigel Thompson
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Nearby Places

Layton cemetery
Layton cemetery

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 m2), having been regularly expanded during its history. It is administered by Blackpool Council. A number of memorials in the cemetery are executed in Portland stone. The cemetery was designed and laid out by Garlick, Park and Sykes, architects of Preston. Originally there were three mortuary chapels, Anglican, Catholic and Non-Conformist, but only the Anglican remains. The lodge at the entrance is now used as the cemetery office, situated to the right of the main gates on Talbot Road, it is currently occupied by the friends group, although originally it is where John Wray, the Superintendent & registrar, resided with his wife and their brood of children. Records show that by 1891 eleven people dwelled within the bijou cottage! He recorded burials, exhumations and unusual incidents in copper-plate handwriting from within his office which was also situated inside the lodge. The original part of the cemetery was surrounded a stone wall, topped with iron railings with a double iron gate at the entrance. These structures are extant. A World War I memorial is centrally situated. In the 1930s, the cemetery was rapidly nearing capacity and therefore a new cemetery and crematorium were opened, known as Carleton Crematorium and Cemetery. Layton Cemetery is now replete but interments are permitted in existing graves.