Grayrigg – Tebay

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Grayrigg – Tebay Kendal - Tebay - Shap - Penrith / Appleby p Due to the closure of Eamont Bridge, Days M-F Wed Mon Thu Col+ Hol+ this stop cannot Operator SCC Rob Cla Cla SCC SCC currently be served Service 106 561 571 570 506 506 Hol+ Operates in School / Kendal College - - - - 1705 - College holidays: Easter: Kendal, Blackhall Road 0910 - - - ä 1714 from 28th March Kendal, Bus Station ä 1400 1455 1455 1714 1715 until 8th April 2016 Summer Holidays: Morrisons 0917 ä 1500 1500 ä 1721 from 25th July until 2nd September 2016 Grayrigg School 0925 1415 1510 1510 1729 1729 Tebay Mount Pleasant 0940 1430 1527 1527 1744 1744 Col + runs when either Old Tebay Roundabout 0941 1431 ä 1528 1745 1745 Kendal College or Queen Katherine Orton Square 0945 1436 ä 1537 1750 1750 School are open Shap,Market Square 0958 ä ä 1557 1804 1804 - / ä Service does not Hackthorpe, Castle Hotel 1008 ä ä - 1814 1814 stop here Lowther Estate Office 1012 ä ä - ä ä Clifton, George & Dragon 1015 ä ä - 1817 1817 M-F Monday to Friday Eamont Bridge p ä ä - p p Mon Penrith, Health Centre 1028 ä ä - 1830 1830 Monday only Penrith Rail Station 1033 ä ä - 1835 1835 Wed Penrith, Bus Station 1039 ä ä - 1840 1840 Wednesday only Appleby, Square - 1457 ä - 1908 - Thu Kirkby Stephen, Square - - 1606 - - - Thursday only Cla Days Col+ Wed Thu Mon M-F operated by Cumbria Classic Operator SCC Rob Cla Cla SCC Coaches (015396 23254) Service 506 561 570 571 106 Kirkby Stephen, Square - - - 1020 - SCC operated by Appleby, Square 0649 0915 - ä - Stagecoach in Cumbria Penrith Rail Station 0717 ä - ä 1252 (01539 722143) Penrith, Bus Station 0722 ä - ä 1300 Rob Penrith, Health Centre 0726 ä - ä 1304 operated by Robinson’s Coaches Eamont Bridge p ä - ä p of Appleby (017683 51424) Clifton, George & Dragon 0741 ä - ä 1319 Lowther Estate Office ä ä - ä 1322 Services also Hackthorpe, Castle Hotel 0744 ä - ä 1326 call at all Shap, Market Square 0755 ä 1045 ä 1337 marked bus Orton Square 0808 0936 1110 ä 1349 stops along Old Tebay Roundabout 0810 0942 1113 ä 1352 the route Tebay Mount Pleasant 0812 0943 1118 1118 1353 plus anywhere it Grayrigg School 0829 0958 1134 1134 1409 is safe to do Morrisons ä ä 1145 1145 1417 so outside Kendal, Blackhall Road 0846 1010 1155 1155 1424 built areas. Kendal College 0856 - - - - www.cumbria.gov.uk/buses Comments, Suggestions Service What’s Changed and Leaflet Requests 106 If you have comments or suggestions on how your local bus services · Eamont Bridge is currently not served due to bridge Kendal - may be improved, or to request a leaflet, please write to: closure (for Eamont Bridge see limited 508 service) Tebay - Scheduled Bus Services Team, From · Times of 106 and 506 revised due to Shap - 1st February Cumbria County Council, Parkhouse Building, Penrith - Baron Way, Kingmoor Business Park, Carlisle, CA6 4SJ Eamont Bridge closure 2016 Email: [email protected] · Service 106 now operates Monday to Friday Phone : 0333 240 6965 (Select option 1) · New 17:14 service 506 from Kendal in College Penrith Holidays. Runs from start of the Easter holiday to Copies of timetables for all bus services throughout Cumbria end of the main Summer holidays can be found at : www.cumbria.gov.uk/buses Clifton · The 12:30 bus from Penrith has been re-timed to For up to date journey details call depart at 13:00 Shap traveline : 0871 200 22 33. (Daily : 07:00 to 20:00) Orton Calls cost 12p per minute plus your phone company’s access charge. Funding Service 106 operates with the help of funding Tebay Kendal College Term Dates from Shap Wells Hotel, Shap, Orton, Tebay, Clifton, th th 4 January until 12 February 2016 Yanwath, Eamont Bridge Parish 22th February until 24th March 2016 Grayrigg Councils and Eden Housing Association. 11th April until 27th May 2016 6th June until 24th June 2016* 5th September until 21st October 2016 Service 506 operates with the support of Kendal College 31st October until 16th December 2016 and Queen Katherine School. Kendal 9th January# until 17th February 2017 th th Operated by 27 February until 7 April 2017 A large print version Stagecoach in Cumbria, Cumbria Classic Coaches * Service 506 runs until 21st July as Queen Katherine School is open. of this timetable is available. and Robinson’s Coaches th Monday to Friday service # Service 506 starts on 5 January as Queen Katherine School is open. Contact the N.B. The morning Service 506 does not run if both Kendal College and Queen Katherine School are closed. Scheduled Bus Services Team on 0333 240 69 65 (Option 1) Monday to Friday 08:30 to 17:00 Open Daily 7am until 8pm Calls cost 12p per minute plus your phone company’s access charge Whilst every effort has been made to ensure the information provided in this leaflet is correct, Cumbria County Council cannot be held responsible for any loss, damage, injury or inconvenience caused by errors, omissions, timetable changes or cancellations, delays or diversions of services..
Recommended publications
  • About Cumbria Text and Graphics
    Building pride in Cumbria About Cumbria Cumbria is located in the North West of England. Allerdale The County’s western boundary is defined by the Irish Sea and stretches from the Solway Firth down to Incorporating an impressive coastline, rugged Morecambe Bay. It meets Scotland in the North and mountains and gentle valleys, much of which lie the Pennine Hills to the East. It is the second largest within the Lake District National Park, the borough of county in England and covers almost half (48%) of Allerdale covers a large part of Cumbria’s west coast. the whole land area of the North West region. It is Approximately 95,000 people live within the borough generally recognised as an outstandingly beautiful which includes the towns of Workington, Cockermouth area and attracts huge loyalty from local people and and Keswick. visitors from both the British Isles and overseas. Workington, an ancient market town which also has Cumbria’s settlement pattern is distinct and has been an extensive history of industry lies on the coast at dictated principally by its unique topography. The the mouth of the River Derwent. During the Roman large upland area of fells and mountains in the centre occupation of Britain it was the site of one of the means that the majority of settlements are located Emperor Hadrian’s forts which formed part of the on the periphery of the County and cross-county elaborate coastal defence system of the Roman Wall. communications are limited. The town we see today has grown up around the port and iron and steel manufacturing have long Cumbria is home to around 490,000 people.
    [Show full text]
  • Grayrigg, Cumbria 23 February 2007
    Rail Accident Report PROGRESS REPORT: Derailment at Grayrigg, Cumbria 23 February 2007 Report IR2/2007 October 2007 This investigation was carried out in accordance with: l the Railway Safety Directive 2004/49/EC; l the Railways and Transport Safety Act 2003; and l the Railways (Accident Investigation and Reporting) Regulations 2005. © Crown copyright 2007 You may re-use this document/publication (not including departmental or agency logos) free of charge in any format or medium. You must re-use it accurately and not in a misleading context. The material must be acknowl- edged as Crown copyright and you must give the title of the source publication. Where we have identified any third party copyright material you will need to obtain permission from the copyright holders concerned. This document/publication is also available at www.raib.gov.uk. Any enquiries about this publication should be sent to: RAIB Email: [email protected] The Wharf Telephone: 01332 253300 Stores Road Fax: 01332 253301 Derby UK Website: www.raib.gov.uk DE21 4BA This report is published by the Rail Accident Investigation Branch, Department for Transport. Introduction The Rail Accident Investigation Branch (RAIB) investigation 1 The RAIB is responsible for conducting independent investigations into rail accidents in the UK. The purpose of its investigations is to improve safety by establishing the causes of the accident and making recommendations to reduce the likelihood of similar occurrences in the future. 2 The RAIB is not a prosecuting body; its investigations are focused solely on safety improvement and do not apportion blame or liability. The police and safety authorities investigate breaches of legislation; none of their statutory duties are changed by the RAIB investigation.
    [Show full text]
  • Sedbergh IRMP 15
    Sedbergh Station Risk Review / Profile This document assesses the specific performance and risk within the fire station area. It provides more defined risk profiling down to Lower Super Output Area (LSOA) level. The risk profiling process by its very nature provides evidence of the fire risk within each geographical LSOA using detailed known risk and demographic information. The risk formula used to inform our fire risk profile was devised following the Intervention Standards Review, full details are available on our website: www.cumbria.gov.uk/fire The review also identifies other significant risks in the area that need consideration so that our resources are appropriately allocated across the county. As well as looking at county wide issues and trends in the main Integrated Risk Management Plan (IRMP), this individual station risk profile considers: • Current resources • Appliance availability • Operational response activity • Fire risk profile • Next nearest supporting appliances • Location specific risks including: heritage risk, environment risk, site specific risks: flooding risks, rurality and resilience risk. Resources The fire station is staffed by 10 on call firefighters and has one fire engine and one Land Rover, which is useful for negotiating many of the small country lanes and farm roads in the area. The crew at Sedbergh have received specialist training and possess the knowledge and equipment to respond with the Land Rover to wildfires and to water incidents as first responders. On-call Fire Engine Availability 2014 During
    [Show full text]
  • Howgill), SD69SW (Firbank) and SD69SE (Sedbergh)
    Geological notes and local details for 1:10 000 sheet SD69NE (Westerdale), and parts of sheets SD69NW (Howgill), SD69SW (Firbank) and SD69SE (Sedbergh) Part of 1: 50 000 sheets 39 (Kendal) and 40 (Kirkby Stephen) Geology and Landscape Northern Britain Programme Internal Report IR/03/090 BRITISH GEOLOGICAL SURVEY GEOLOGY AND LANDSCAPE NORTHERN BRITAIN PROGRAMME INTERNAL REPORT IR/03/090 Geological notes and local details for 1:10 000 sheet SD69NE The National Grid and other Ordnance Survey data are used with the permission of the (Westerdale), and parts of sheets Controller of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office. Licence No: 100017897/2006. SD69NW (Howgill), SD69SW Keywords (Firbank) and SD69SE Report; Howgill Fells, stratigraphy, Ordovician, (Sedbergh) Silurian. Front cover Part of 1: 50 000 sheets 39 (Kendal) and 40 (Kirkby Stephen) Howgill Fells from the Midddleton Fells. (Photograph N H Woodcock) N H Woodcock, R B Rickards Bibliographical reference WOODCOCK, N H, RICKARDS, R B. 2006. Geological notes and local details for 1:10 000 sheet SD69NE (Westerdale), and parts of sheets SD69NW (Howgill), SD69SW (Firbank) and SD69SE (Sedbergh). British Geological Survey Internal Report, IR/03/090. 61pp. Copyright in materials derived from the British Geological Survey’s work is owned by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) and/or the authority that commissioned the work. You may not copy or adapt this publication without first obtaining permission. Contact the BGS Intellectual Property Rights Section, British Geological Survey, Keyworth, e-mail [email protected]. You may quote extracts of a reasonable length without prior permission, provided a full acknowledgement is given of the source of the extract.
    [Show full text]
  • Freedom Information
    2008-09 CFR EXTRACT OF DATA E02 E08 E11 E26 1100101 CLEATOR MOOR NURSERY SCHOOL 3,109.28 1,319.96 1,892.34 - 1100201 MILLOM PARK VIEW NURSERY SCHL 5,451.90 85.57 2,565.80 - 1100301 FRIZINGTON NURSERY SCHOOL 474.87 1,608.15 1,641.85 - 1100501 KENDAL NURSERY SCHOOL 2,860.57 330.34 3,605.79 - 1101001 BRAM LONGSTAFFE NURSERY SCH 15,047.85 1,698.53 4,360.03 130.25 1101101 BARROW HINDPOOL NURSERY SCHOOL - 1,779.51 2,920.33 - 1200101 ALLONBY SCHOOL 5,009.16 1,077.04 717.86 54.44 1200201 CAMBRIDGE SCHOOL 18,626.50 2,819.50 2,262.12 - 1200401 ALSTON PRIMARY SCHOOL 7,612.26 657.54 2,874.33 135.00 1200501 ARMATHWAITE SCHOOL 5,966.44 1,259.53 1,373.40 - 1200801 BEWCASTLE SCHOOL 1,403.00 - 830.00 - 1201001 BLENNERHASSET SCHOOL 3,838.42 1,227.63 - - 1201301 BRAMPTON INF SCHOOL 1,274.27 626.95 - - 1201401 BURGH BY SANDS SCHOOL 8,030.85 296.07 6,470.61 - 1201901 CUMMERSDALE SCHOOL 7,541.31 683.09 2,798.82 - 1202001 CUMWHINTON SCHOOL 20,512.26 4,357.73 2,848.00 - 1202601 GT CORBY SCHOOL 2,454.26 - - 140.34 1202701 GT ORTON SCHOOL 15,855.02 - 402.52 - 1202801 GREYSTOKE SCHOOL 655.07 50.00 1,293.75 - 1203201 HOLME ST CUTHBERT SCHOOL 3,490.62 599.69 1,115.73 - 1203301 IRTHINGTON SCHOOL 1,787.05 420.86 1,230.00 - 1203501 KIRKBRIDE SCHOOL 3,632.59 - 4,364.92 2,474.40 - 1204001 NENTHEAD SCHOOL 3,819.49 1,993.54 513.17 - 1204501 BRUNSWICK SCHOOL 4,750.17 4,763.40 4,367.29 - 1204601 NORTH LAKES SCHOOL, PENRITH 12,558.27 2,202.62 4,700.00 651.40 1205401 PLUMPTON SCHOOL 19,033.40 574.88 2,005.93 - 1205801 SKELTON SCHOOL 6,710.91 1,486.97 1,816.24 - 1205901 STONERAISE
    [Show full text]
  • Retail and Town Centre Uses Study 2013
    Retail and Town Centre Uses Study 2013 Barrow in Furness Borough Council February 2013 41162/PW/SMH/APa Nathaniel Lic hfield & Partners 3rd Floor One St James's Square Manchester M2 6DN nlpplanning.com This document is formatted for double sided printing. © Nathaniel Lichfield & Partners Ltd 2012. Trading as Nathaniel Lichfield & Partners. All Rights Reserved. Registered Office: 14 Regent's Wharf All Saints Street London N1 9RL All plans within this document produced by NLP are based upon Ordnance Survey mapping with the permission of Her Majesty’s Stationery Office. © Crown Copyright reserved. Licence number AL50684A Barrow in Furness Borough Council : Retail and Town Centre Uses Study Contents 1.0 Planning for Barrow in Furness Town Centres 1 2.0 Retail and Commercial Leisure Trends 3 Retail Trends .............................................................................................3 Commercial Leisure Trends .........................................................................5 3.0 New Research: 2012 Surveys 7 Telephone Household Survey ......................................................................7 Pedestrian Counts ......................................................................................8 4.0 The Shopping Hierarchy and Retail Performance 9 Centres in Barrow in Furness and the Surrounding Area .................................9 Household Shopping Patterns ...................................................................10 Comparison Retail Shopping Patterns ........................................................11
    [Show full text]
  • REVIEW Issue 8 November 2007
    REVIEW Issue 8 November 2007 COVER STORY ..t Here to help Graham Harrison helps out at a HWRC Find out how Resource Cumbria are helping Cumbrian kitchens Also inside Purple bags come to Allerdale JMWMS goes out for consultation Swedish for recycling Chinese delegation visits Cumbria Award winning communities Safer streets in Barrow Review is the partnership newsletter of Resource Cumbria. If you would like to access more information, advice and resources or even just keep up to date with what we are doing visit our website resourcecumbria.org The table below highlights our performance so far this year. The percentages are the combined recycling and composting rates. Meet the Purple bags 1st Qtr 2nd Qtr members come to Allerdale Allerdale 41.5% 37.19% Barrow 25.69% 22.46% Here are the councillors who make Allerdale Borough Council will shortly be introducing up the Resource Cumbria partnership a new recycling collection scheme to areas of the Carlisle 49.28% 49.36% board. borough – the mixed collection of glass bottles and jars, metal cans and plastic bottles from individual Copeland 36.31% 34.84% properties. k Keeping the streets safe. Katherine and the rest of the team Eden 56.45% 54.11% k The new fortnightly collection from the kerbside will complement the existing paper, card and garden 42.71% 42.38% Council SLDC Council waste collections from these households, giving @allerdale.gov.u Hitting the Cumbria 42.39% 40.41% residents the opportunity to recycle the majority of Borough Borough their waste easily. source: BVPI Waste Management Report. streets in Barrow Councillor Dave Roberts Barrow [email protected] Help us to reduce LATS fines and keep our environment beautiful.
    [Show full text]
  • Map 17 Lancashire, South Cumbria and Western North Yorkshire, 100-Km Grid Squares SD and SE (Axis Numbers Are the Coordinates of the National Grid) © Crown Copyright
    Morland Mickleton TEESDALE 0 2 5 Buttermere DARLINGTON Patterdale Shap Boldron Darlington Grasmere Kentmere Tebay COPELAND Outhgill 0 0 Windermere 5 Coniston Grayrigg RICHMONDSHIRE SOUTH LAKELAND Kendal Leyburn Hawes Aysgarth Dent Colton Whitbeck Carlton Nook Barbon 0 8 Ulverston 4 Grange-over-Sands Buckden Ireby Docker BARROW-IN-FURNESS Lofthouse Carnforth Barrow-in-Furness Clapham Morecambe Caton CRAVEN Bewerley HARROGATE Settle Lancaster LANCASTER 0 6 4 Hellifield Abbeystead Harrogate Skipton Fleetwood Ilkley Earby Silsden Garstang RIBBLE VALLEY Pool WYRE Clitheroe PENDLE Keighley 0 4 4 Nelson BRADFORD Blackpool BLACKPOOL PRESTON Bradford Wilpshire Burnley Leeds FYLDE Kirkham BURNLEY Preston Blackburn HYNDBURN SOUTH RIBBLE Halifax Farington Todmorden Darwen ROSSENDALE CALDERDALE 0 2 4 Southport CHORLEY Chorley Huddersfield Rochdale KIRKLEES WEST LANCASHIRE Bury ROCHDALE Meltham BOLTON Bolton Formby BURY Wigan OLDHAM Hepworth Oldham BARNSLEY Maghull Orrell WIGAN SEFTON 0 Kirkby 0 Crosby Manchester Stocksbridge 4 SALFORD Bootle St Helens TAMESIDE Salford Glossop Hadfield Liverpool Stockport KNOWSLEY TRAFFORD Birkenhead Warrington 320 340 360 380 400 420 The shading indicates the maximum requirements for radon protective measures in any location within each 1-km grid square to satisfy the guidance in Building Regulations Approved Document C. The requirement for an existing building with a valid postal address can be obtained for a small charge from www.ukradon.org. The requirement for a site without a postal address is available through the British Geological Survey GeoReports service, http://shop.bgs.ac.uk/GeoReports/. Level of protection required Settlements Roads National Grid None Blackburn Motorways 100-km 10-km Basic Primary Roads Other Features Keighley Full A Roads LOCAL ADMINISTRATIVE DISTRICT Hawes B Roads Water features Coniston Map 17 Lancashire, south Cumbria and western North Yorkshire, 100-km grid squares SD and SE (axis numbers are the coordinates of the National Grid) © Crown copyright.
    [Show full text]
  • Directory of Community Support for the South Lakes
    07 April 2020 COVID-19 Community Support Directory Directory of Community Support for the South Lakes This is the first edition of a weekly updated directory of community support, aiming to give information and details of useful contacts during these challenging times. Cumbria County Council Support from Local Community & Third Sector Groups Location Group Contact Email Telephone Aldingham Aldingham Parish Council Beth Mooney [email protected] Ambleside Parish Centre Ambleside Ambleside Foodbank Caroline Gunning [email protected] 015394 34172 Ambleside vs Coronavirus Ambleside Lakes Christian Centre Mike Horseman [email protected] Arnside Arnside Parish Council Caroline Caudwell [email protected] 07375 839182 Arnside Arnside Volunteer Group Si Whorrall [email protected] [email protected] 01524276322 Barbon Barbon Parish council Roger Groves [email protected] 01539 562559 Beetham Beetham Church Jenny Marks [email protected] 015395 63368 Beetham Coronavirus Beetham [email protected] Community Support Burneside Parish Residents Burneside Gayle Howarth [email protected] Assoc 07716 033439 2 Serving the people of Cumbria 01524782984 Burton in Kendal Community Volunteer Lesley Bailey Group Casterton Casterton Neighbours Steve Bentley [email protected] 015242 20219 07786 242112 Claife Claife Parish Council Joanne Heather [email protected] [email protected] Colton Colton Parish Council Julie Hendry Nibthwaite & surrounding John Millburn [email protected]
    [Show full text]
  • Interim Draft History of Kirkby Lonsdale
    Victoria County History of Cumbria Project: Work in Progress Interim Draft [Note: This is an interim draft and should not be cited without first consulting the VCH Cumbria project: for contact details, see http://www.cumbriacountyhistory.org.uk/] Parish/township: KIRKBY LONSDALE (township) Author: Emmeline Garnett Date of draft: August 2013 INTRODUCTION The ancient parish of Kirkby Lonsdale covered 35,945 acres (14,547 ha) of south- east Westmorland and comprised the market town and parish centre of Kirkby Lonsdale and eight other townships: to the east, beyond the Lune, Casterton (4,324 acres/1,750 ha), Barbon (4,261 acres/1,724 ha) and Middleton (7,276 acres/2,945 ha); to the south and west Hutton Roof (2,715 acres/1,099 ha), Lupton (6,059 acres/2,452 ha) and Mansergh (2,668 acres/1080 ha); to the north, Killington (4,875 acres/1973 ha) and Firbank (2,985 acres/1,208 ha). This article treats the township of Kirkby Lonsdale and the history of the parish church. Kirkby Lonsdale, in size and in many of its features no more than a large village, is nevertheless an ancient market town serving a wide area, ‘whither the neighbouring inhabitants resort to church and market’.1 The township to which it gives its name lies at the south-east corner of Westmorland, bordering on Lancashire and within a mile or two of the Yorkshire border, the whole township covering an area of 3,253 acres (1,316 ha.) Its roughly triangular shape is bounded on the east side by the Lune for about two miles, and for another two miles by a Lune tributary flowing from Terrybank Tarn which lies at the most northerly point of the township.
    [Show full text]
  • Grange Worthies (Male)
    An A-Z of Grange-over-Sands 19th and early 20th century worthies, the people who were involved in its development. Reasons for researching this section and what has been investigated Who were the people who helped to shape Grange-over-Sands? The following is a brief biography of people who served as School Trustees, Local Board members or Grange Councillors for random dates between 1874 to 1906. The lists came from Grange Red Books. Other people have been added as their importance has been recognised. Initially I searched census details to find the person and if I could easily find any thing else out about them from other sources I had readily available I have added that information. The list was started to satisfy my curiosity as names reoccurred and I realised that though the names were familiar I knew nothing about the person. It is on-going research and the following is only a précis of the information. If you want more information or have information to share with me please contact me. Information from newspapers has not been researched yet Sources: Grange Red Books; online Census and births marriages and death records; W. E. Swale Grange-over-Sands. The Story of a Gentle Township (1972); Freemason information - www.furnessmasons.org/?page_id=13 accessed 12.12.11; Pat Rowland 31 Dec 2011 Update 1.John Beckett provided information about Alfred Binyon, Reverend Massie and William Pitt Miller. I have added information from Michael Atkinson’s booklet Enlightenment comes to Grange- over-Sands published in 2007 to commemorate the centenary of Grange Lecture Society.
    [Show full text]
  • Cumbrian Other Non-Conformist Church and Chapel Records
    Cumbrian Other non-conformist church registers Roman Catholic Churches Church Baptism Marriage Burial Archive Centre Carlisle, Our Lady and St Joseph 1790-1949 1841-1949 1825-1849: 1856-1969 Carlisle Cleator, St Mary 1853-2003 1855-2003 1859-2003 Whitehaven Dodding Green (Skelsmergh) 1699-1766 1699-1766 1699-1718; 1721; 1766; Whitehaven 1864-1889 Kendal, Holy Trinity and St George 1762-1941 1841-1970 1856-1966 Whitehaven Millom, St James 1867-1912 1867-1917 1867-1988 Barrow Ulverston 1812-1842 1822-1844 Barrow Warwick Bridge (Wetheral) Our Lady and St Wilfred 1765-1948 1769-1842 1765-1841: 1856-1975 Carlisle 1864-1991 Wigton, St Cuthbert 1835-1905 1832-1855 1855-1948 Carlisle Windermere, Our Lady and Saint Herbert 1970-1991 Whitehaven Whitehaven, St Begh Priory 1764-1883 1856-1906 1765-1816: 1868-1884 Whitehaven Workington, Our Lady Star of the Sea and St Michael 1810-2005 1820-2005 1855-2005 Whitehaven 1 Copyright Cumbria County Council: last updated 31 March 2016, 1.0 Cumbrian Other non-conformist church registers Presbyterian Churches Church Baptisms Marriages Burials Archive Centre Barrow-in-Furness, St Andrew, Walney 1909-1991 Barrow Barrow-in-Furness, Trinity 1865-1991 1899-1971 Barrow Bewcastle 1788-1997 Carlisle Brampton 1712-1928 Carlisle Carlisle, Abbey Street 1778-1810 Carlisle Carlisle, Fisher Street 1742-1986 1873-1984 Carlisle Carlisle, Warwick Road 1860-1935 1973-1935 1874-1879 Carlisle Great Salkeld 1833-1907 Carlisle Harrington 1882-2012 Kendal, St John 1823-1858 P 1845-1859 P M 1773-1855 Kendal Maryport, John Street
    [Show full text]