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Astley Bridge railway station

1877 establishments in England1879 disestablishments in EnglandDisused railway stations in the Metropolitan Borough of BoltonFormer Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway stationsGreater Manchester railway station stubs
Pages with no open date in Infobox stationRailway stations in Great Britain closed in 1879Railway stations in Great Britain opened in 1877Use British English from October 2021

Astley Bridge railway station served the village of Astley Bridge, England, from 1877 to 1879 on the Astley Branch Railway.

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

Astley Bridge railway station
Waters Meeting Road,

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Wikipedia: Astley Bridge railway stationContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.5957 ° E -2.4317 °
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Address

McDonald's

Waters Meeting Road
BL1 8TT , Astley Bridge
England, United Kingdom
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Hall i' th' Wood
Hall i' th' Wood

Hall i' th' Wood is an early 16th-century manor house in Bolton in the historic county of Lancashire and the ceremonial county of Greater Manchester, England. It is a Grade I listed building and is currently used as a museum by Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council. It was the manor house for the moiety of the Tonge with Haulgh township held by the Brownlows in the 16th century. The original building is timber framed and has a stone flagged roof; there were later additions to the house, built from stone, in 1591 and 1648. The name represents "Hall in the Wood' spoken in the local regional English dialect and is pronounced . The house was not used as a gentry house but rather given over to multiple occupation by families engaged in industry. Four (previously five) separate dwellings can be identified, each with its own entrance and staircase. One part was let to Samuel Crompton during the 18th century, where he designed and built the first spinning mule. About 1779, Crompton succeeded in producing a mule-jenny, a machine which spun yarn suitable for use in the manufacture of muslin. It was known as the muslin wheel or the Hall i' th' Wood wheel from the name of the house.Hall i' th' Wood was bought by William Lever (later Lord Leverhulme) in 1899 and was restored by Jonathan Simpson and Edward Ould. Lever gave the house to the Corporation of Bolton in 1900.An episode of the television programme Most Haunted was filmed in the hall in 2008.In Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1833, is a poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon to an engraving of a painting of the hall by William Linton. This dwells on the changes the hall has seen over the centuries.