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St Mary's Church, Preston

19th-century Church of England church buildingsChurch of England church buildings in LancashireChurches completed in 1856Churches in PrestonFormer Church of England church buildings
Former churches in LancashireGrade II listed churches in LancashireRomanesque Revival church buildings in England
St Marys parish church, Preston
St Marys parish church, Preston

St Mary's Church is in St Mary's Street, Preston, Lancashire, England. It is a redundant Anglican parish church, and was converted into a conservation centre in 2006. The church is recorded in the National Heritage List for England as a designated Grade II listed building.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St Mary's Church, Preston (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St Mary's Church, Preston
Dunmore Street, Preston Frenchwood

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: St Mary's Church, PrestonContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.7616 ° E -2.6867 °
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Address

HMP Preston

Dunmore Street
PR1 5LS Preston, Frenchwood
England, United Kingdom
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St Marys parish church, Preston
St Marys parish church, Preston
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Nearby Places

Deepdale railway station
Deepdale railway station

Deepdale railway station (also known as Deepdale Bridge station) was on the Longridge Branch Line in Preston, Lancashire, England. The station opened in 1856 as a replacement for Deepdale Street railway station which until then had been the Preston passenger terminus of the line. The new station lay on an extension, built in 1850, which connected to the earlier line near the level crossing in Skeffington Road. The extension passed through the 862-yard (788 m) Miley Tunnel to another new station at Maudland Bridge. Deepdale station was the headquarters of the Fleetwood, Preston and West Riding Junction Railway, which had bought the Preston and Longridge Railway. The new line and tunnel were originally built to connect the Longridge line to the existing Preston and Wyre Joint Railway, as part of a planned route from Fleetwood on the Fylde coast to Skipton in the West Riding of Yorkshire. However, that plan had already collapsed by 1852. The station, along with others on the line, closed to regular passenger services on 31 May 1930. The last passenger trains to use Deepdale station were 1970s football supporters' specials bringing away fans to Deepdale Stadium to watch a football match. This was done to keep visiting supporters away from the town centre before and after the match. The line through the station continued to be used for goods trains until the 1990s, and the tracks, though rusty and overgrown, still exist as far as the Skeffington Road level crossing.