place

Lion Salt Works

1894 establishments in EnglandChemical plants of the United KingdomEuropean Route of Industrial Heritage Anchor PointsFood museums in the United KingdomGrade II listed buildings in Cheshire
Industrial archaeological sites in EnglandIndustry museums in EnglandMuseums in CheshireSalt museumsSaltworksScheduled monuments in CheshireTourist attractions in CheshireUse British English from February 2023
Salt Lion Salt Works
Salt Lion Salt Works

The Lion Salt Works is the last remaining open pan salt works in Marston, near Northwich, Cheshire, England. It closed as a work in 1986 and is now preserved as a museum.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Lion Salt Works (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Lion Salt Works
Ollershaw Lane,

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address External links Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: Lion Salt WorksContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.2753 ° E -2.4952 °
placeShow on map

Address

Lion Salt Works

Ollershaw Lane
CW9 6ES
England, United Kingdom
mapOpen on Google Maps

linkWikiData (Q15242436)
linkOpenStreetMap (439814807)

Salt Lion Salt Works
Salt Lion Salt Works
Share experience

Nearby Places

Wincham Park
Wincham Park

Wincham Park is a football stadium in Wincham, a parish on the edge of Northwich, England. The home ground of Witton Albion, it first opened in 1989, after the club left their former Central Ground. Capacity is 4,813, with 600 covered seats on the north side of the stadium. The other three sides of the ground are all standing: the Lostock End, Wincham End, and Popular Side. It has a small club museum at the Lostock end, which is unusual in itself. Wincham Park has not changed much since its construction although cover was added at both ends of the stadium in 1990. The floodlights were replaced in 2010 after supporters walked to nearby Runcorn to raise the funds. The record attendance for a match at Wincham Park was when Northwich Victoria lost 2–0 to Shrewsbury Town on 1 January 2004 in The Football Conference. A crowd of 3,268 (2,609 away) attended the game.The stadium has had a number of names due to sponsorship deals; these include Britannia Carpets Stadium, Bargain Booze Stadium and its current name, the 'U Lock It Stadium'. Wincham Park's former name of The Bargain Booze Stadium was discussed on the popular BBC1 TV show Room 101 hosted by Frank Skinner. Local rivals Northwich Victoria and Runcorn Linnets have ground-shared at Wincham Park. 1874 Northwich have also used the stadium to stage one-off matches.Northwich Victoria and Witton Albion shared Wincham Park whilst both clubs played in the Evo-Stik League First Division North. It is currently used in the NPL West by Witton and the Midland Football League Premier Division by Northwich Victoria - who have just been moved across from the NWCFL Premier.