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Upholland railway station

DfT Category F2 stationsFormer Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway stationsNorthern franchise railway stationsPages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain opened in 1848
Railway stations in the Borough of West LancashireUse British English from October 2013
Upholland Railway Station
Upholland Railway Station

Upholland railway station serves the small town of Up Holland in the southern Lancashire/Wigan boundary area of England. It is on the Kirkby branch line from Wigan Wallgate and means the service (which is provided by Northern Trains, who also manage the station) runs through three counties on its journey from Wigan to Kirkby. Upholland has been named in past Lancashire County Council reports as a possible site of a rail link to Skelmersdale, but as yet no firm plans have been made.

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

Upholland railway station
Pimbo Lane, West Lancashire Up Holland

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

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.528 ° E -2.741 °
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Address

Pimbo Lane

Pimbo Lane
WN8 9QQ West Lancashire, Up Holland
England, United Kingdom
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Upholland Railway Station
Upholland Railway Station
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Nearby Places

Bispham Hall
Bispham Hall

Bispham Hall is a Grade II* listed Elizabethan country house in Billinge, now part of the Metropolitan Borough of Wigan, Greater Manchester.The hall was built in 1573 but has been extended since. It is constructed to an E-shaped plan in dressed stone with ashlar dressings in three storeys, with a frontage of five gabled bays. The 2nd and 4th bays project but the 1st and 5th bays project even further and are wider. Despite interior damage caused by fire, the hall remains one of the most complete examples of 16th century architecture in the historic county of Lancashire. The surrounding park, at one time much larger than the 60-acre estate which exists today, had extensive woodlands which contain an 1815 monument to the Duke of Wellington and a smaller monument to either a horse or dog called Dash. Bispham Hall was named after the Bispham family who acquired the estate by marriage in 1346 and held it until 1730. It then passed to the Leigh family of Whitley Hall, Wigan. In 1825 the property had descended to John Holt, who had inherited it in 1816 from his unmarried brother Robert. In 1841 John Holt left the property to William Mills, a distant relative of Cheshire, on condition that the latter adopted the surname of Holt. On William's death the estate passed to his son William Thomas, who died in 1857, leaving it to be divided between his six sisters, whereby it was sold in 1871 to coal-producer Meyrick Holmes Bankes of Winstanley Hall.The Bispham estate was acquired by the Boy Scout Association in 1948 as an activity centre. The hall itself was gutted by a fire in 1977 or 1978, but has been since restored by the Vivat Trust and is now privately owned. The Scout activity centre provides, in addition to indoor accommodation facilities, field camping areas for large groups and smaller woodland clearings for smaller groups. Varied outdoor facilities are organised, including climbing, orienteering, canoeing and team sports. Local legend tells how the ghost of Nellie Bispham haunts the woods around Bispham Hall.