1
Railway junction near Lostock Hall Station
Viewed from Moss Bridge on Todd Lane South (formerly Moss Lane). Passenger journeys fork to the right here to reach Lostock Hall Station which lies just beyond the junction. There are no regular passenger services over the line forking left but it is used by freight and excursion trains.
Image: © Adam C Snape
Taken: 5 May 2016
0.13 miles
2
New bridge over the River Lostock
The bridge will replace the existing ford and stepping stones. The ford is just visible beyond the bridge
Image: © Adam C Snape
Taken: 5 May 2016
0.13 miles
3
Lostock Hall Station
Image: © Ian Greig
Taken: 7 Sep 2013
0.15 miles
4
Peace Garden at Lostock Hall
The view from inside the new war memorial (
Image])
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 8 May 2016
0.18 miles
5
Great War Memorial
Dedicated to the men of South Ribble killed in the First World War.
Image: © John M
Taken: 22 Aug 2017
0.19 miles
6
War Memorial, Lostock Hall
A stunning 15m monument depicting a First World War soldier has been created at Dandy Brook Park, in Lostock Hall, alongside a peace garden. The memorial has a striking orange ‘rusted’ appearance and a cut-out silhouette of a soldier with head bowed, a large poppy and the word ‘Remember’ inscribed upon it. Written inside, visible to people standing in the peace garden behind the memorial, are the names of the fallen soldiers of South Ribble.
The 40ft monument, which also has the dates 1914 and 1918 etched on the side and took 10 weeks to make, was created by DP Structures in Nelson. It was craned into place and welded together onsite in October and was formally opened at a dedication ceremony on Remembrance Day in November 2015. (http://www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk/news/pendle/14030369.Stunning_new_war_memorial_officially_unveiled_on_Armistice_Day/ Lancashire Evening Post).
The memorial and a surrounding peace garden will form part of the greater St Catherine’s Park, due to open to the public in summer 2016. It is a joint project between South Ribble Council and St Catherine’s Hospice.
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 8 May 2016
0.19 miles
7
Wicker warrior
An exhausted soldier rests on an ammunition box beside the memorial to the dead of South Ribble.
Image
Image: © John M
Taken: 22 Aug 2017
0.19 miles
8
War Memorial, St Catherine's Park
The War Memorial at Lostock Hall has a striking orange ‘rusted’ appearance and a cut-out silhouette of a soldier with head bowed, a large poppy and the word ‘Remember’ inscribed upon it. Written inside, visible to people standing in the peace garden behind the memorial, are the names of the fallen soldiers of South Ribble.
The 40ft monument, which also has the dates 1914 and 1918 etched on the side and took 10 weeks to make, was created by DP Structures in Nelson. It was craned into place and welded together onsite in October and was formally opened at a dedication ceremony on Remembrance Day in November 2015. (http://www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk/news/pendle/14030369.Stunning_new_war_memorial_officially_unveiled_on_Armistice_Day/ Lancashire Evening Post).
The memorial and its surrounding peace garden forms part of the greater St Catherine’s Park which opened to the public in summer 2016. It is a joint project between South Ribble Council and St Catherine’s Hospice.
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 9 Sep 2018
0.19 miles
9
Lostock Hall War Memorial, St Catherine's Park
The War Memorial at Lostock Hall has a striking orange ‘rusted’ appearance and a cut-out silhouette of a soldier with head bowed, a large poppy and the word ‘Remember’ inscribed upon it. Written inside, visible to people standing in the peace garden behind the memorial, are the names of the fallen soldiers of South Ribble.
The 40ft monument, which also has the dates 1914 and 1918 etched on the side and took 10 weeks to make, was created by DP Structures in Nelson. It was craned into place and welded together onsite in October and was formally opened at a dedication ceremony on Remembrance Day in November 2015. (http://www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk/news/pendle/14030369.Stunning_new_war_memorial_officially_unveiled_on_Armistice_Day/ Lancashire Evening Post).
The memorial, together with its surrounding peace, garden forms part of the greater St Catherine’s Park which opened to the public in summer 2016. It is a joint project between South Ribble Council and St Catherine’s Hospice.
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 9 Sep 2018
0.19 miles
10
World War One Memorial
Image: © Anthony Parkes
Taken: 11 Mar 2019
0.19 miles