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Looe railway station

DfT Category F1 stationsFormer Liskeard and Looe Railway stationsLooePages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Cornwall
Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1879Railway stations on the South West Coast PathRailway stations served by Great Western RailwayUse British English from April 2017
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Looe railway station (Cornish: Logh) serves the twin towns of East and West Looe, in Cornwall, England. The station is the terminus of the scenic Looe Valley Line 8.75 miles (14 km) south of Liskeard. It faces out across the estuary of the River Looe.

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

Looe railway station
Station Road,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

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N 50.3594 ° E -4.45653 °
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Address

Looe Police Station

Station Road
PL13 1HN , Plaidy
England, United Kingdom
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police.uk

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Nearby Places

St Martin-by-Looe
St Martin-by-Looe

St Martin-by-Looe (Cornish: Penndrumm) is a coastal civil parish in south Cornwall, England, United Kingdom. The parish is immediately east of the town and parish of Looe, seven miles (11 km) south of Liskeard. The parish is in the Liskeard Registration District and the population in the 2001 census was 321, which had increased to 429 at the 2011 census.To the north, the parish is bordered by Morval parish, to the east by Deviock parish, to the west by Looe parish and to the south by the English Channel. Until 1845 the parish also included East Looe. The parish church of St Martin stands outside the civil parish in the hamlet of St Martin at OS Grid Ref SX259550 about a mile north of Looe town centre. Its Norman doorway is built of Tartan Down stone and probably dates from about 1140. The interior of the church is of typically 15th-century appearance, but parts of the building are considerably older.Thomas Bond, the topographer is buried in the churchyard. Jonathan Toup, classical scholar, was presented on 28 July 1750 to the rectory of St Martin and held it until his death in 1785. A stone cross was found at Tregoad Farm in 1906 built into the wall of a stable. In 1931 it was set up on a new base at Tregoad by the Looe Old Cornwall Society. In 1971 it was removed to the Guildhall Museum in East Looe for preservation. It is a rare example in east Cornwall of a cross with a carved figure of Christ, in this case incised.