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Metropolitan Borough of Wigan

Incomplete lists from May 2019Local government in the Metropolitan Borough of WiganMetropolitan Borough of WiganMetropolitan boroughs of Greater ManchesterPages with non-numeric formatnum arguments
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Wigan Civic Centre
Wigan Civic Centre

The Metropolitan Borough of Wigan is a metropolitan borough of Greater Manchester, in North West England. It is named after the main settlement of Wigan. It covers the towns of Atherton, Ashton-in-Makerfield, Golborne, Hindley, Ince-in-Makerfield, Leigh and Tyldesley. The borough also covers the villages and suburbs of Abram, Aspull, Astley, Bryn, Hindley Green, Lowton, Mosley Common, Orrell, Pemberton, Shevington, Standish, Winstanley and Worsley Mesnes. The borough was formed in 1974, replacing several former local government districts. It is the furthest west part of Greater Manchester, and it is bordered by the Greater Manchester boroughs of City of Salford and Bolton to the east, the Cheshire borough of Warrington to the south, the Merseyside borough of St Helens to the south west, and the Lancashire boroughs of West Lancashire to the west and Chorley to the north.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Metropolitan Borough of Wigan (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Metropolitan Borough of Wigan
Warrington Road,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Metropolitan Borough of WiganContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.533333333333 ° E -2.6166666666667 °
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Address

Warrington Road/Cemetery Road

Warrington Road
WN3 4NF , Spring View
England, United Kingdom
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Wigan Civic Centre
Wigan Civic Centre
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Nearby Places

Ince railway station
Ince railway station

Ince railway station serves the Ince area of Metropolitan Borough of Wigan, Greater Manchester. The station is on the Manchester-Southport Line 17¼ miles (28 km) north west of Manchester Victoria. Until November 1964, Ince was also served by a station at Lower Ince on the line from Wigan Central to Glazebrook (to the now closed Manchester Central). Ince suffered in the 1960s and 1970s from much house clearance and landscaping. This has resulted in low passenger usage for the station which served an area which was (until the 1960s) a bustling independent town. Ince (unlike Daisy Hill and Hindley, and other stations on the line) is not a commuter dormitory suburb and now the station is deserted even at peak times. Usage figures increased by around 10% in 2006/07 and recently by greater amounts (around 25% in 2007/08, and 29% in 2010-11) albeit from a relatively low base. There are three seats, with a new shelter that contains benches. There is also a newly installed LED next train indicator sign (which the station did not previously have) and a payphone. A series of improvement works during June and July 2018 to the station added an array of CCTV cameras and a new Card-Only ticket machine. The station is entirely unstaffed and customers must obtain tickets from the ticket machine on the platform. those wishing to pay for their ticket with cash must use the ticket machine to obtain a 'Promise to Pay' and pay the conductor on the train.