Burnley
is a large market town in the borough of Burnley in Lancashire, England, with a population of around 73,500. It lies east of Blackburn and east of Preston, at the confluence of the River Calder and River Brun.
It began life in the early medieval period as a small market town, but its main period of expansion came during the Industrial Revolution, when it became one of the world's largest producers of cotton cloth. Today, Burnley has lost much of its industry, and is increasingly a dormitory town for Manchester, Leeds and the M65 corridor [1]. The public sector is now the town's largest employer.
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History
Origins
Burnley's origins are
prehistoric, as shown by
Stone Age flint tools and weapons that found on the
moors around the town
[2]. Local place names
Padiham and Habergham show the influence of the
Angles, suggesting that some had settled in the area by the early 7th century
, but there is no definitive record of settlement until 1122, when a
charter granted the church of Burnley to the
monks of
Pontefract Abbey. In its early days, Burnley was a small farming community, gaining a
corn mill in 1290 , a market in 1294, and a
fulling mill in 1296
. At this point, it was within the
manor of
Ightenhill, one of five that made up the
Honour of
Clitheroe, then a far more significant settlement, and consisted of no more than 50 families
. Little survives of early Burnley – the name means ‘meadow by the River Brun’
– apart from the
Market Cross, erected in 1295, which now stands in the grounds of an annexe of
Burnley College.
Over the next three centuries, Burnley grew in size to about 1,200 inhabitants by 1550, still centred around the church, St Peter’s, in what is now known as "Top o’ th’ Town". Prosperous residents built larger houses, including
Gawthorpe Hall in Padiham and
Towneley Hall, and in 1532 St Peter's Church was largely rebuilt
. Burnley’s
grammar school was founded in 1559, and moved into its own schoolhouse next to the church in 1602
. Burnley began to develop in this period into a small
market town. It is known that
weaving was established in the town by the middle of the 17th century
and in 1617 a new Market House was built. The town continued to be centred on St Peter’s Church until the market was moved to the bottom of what is today
Manchester Road at the end of the 18th century
.
Industrial Revolution and after
In the second half of the 18th century, the manufacture of
cotton began to replace that of
wool. Burnley’s earliest known factories – dating from the mid-century – stood on the banks of the
River Calder close to where it is joined by the
River Brun, and relied on
water power to drive the
spinning machines, but by 1830 there were 32
steam engines in cotton mills throughout the rapidly expanding town
. By 1866, the town was the largest producer of cotton cloth in the world.
[3] The 18th century also saw the rapid development of
coal mining: the
drift mines and shallow
bell-pits of earlier centuries were replaced by deeper shafts meeting industrial as well as domestic demand locally, and by 1800 there were over a dozen pits in the centre of the town alone
. The first
turnpike road through Burnley was begun in 1754, linking the town to
Blackburn and
Colne, and by the early 19th century there were daily stagecoach journeys to
Blackburn,
Skipton and
Manchester, the last taking just over two hours.
. For the transportation of goods in bulk, the
Leeds and Liverpool Canal arrived in 1796, and in 1848 the
East Lancashire Railway Company’s extension from
Accrington linked the town to the nation’s nascent railway network for the first time
. By 1851, the town’s population had reached almost 21,000
.
Burnley became incorporated as a
municipal borough in 1861, and became, under the
Local Government Act 1888, a
county borough outside the administrative county of Lancashire. But from a population of over 100,000 in 1911, the town's population has declined to today's figure,
[4] mirroring the decline in its traditional industries of
textiles,
mining and
engineering. The Queen paid an official visit to the town in summer 1961, marking the 100th anniversary of Burnley's borough status. Under the
Local Government Act 1972 Burnley's county borough status was abolished, and it was incorporated with neighbouring areas into the non-metropolitan district of
Burnley.
In June 2001, the town received national attention following a series of violent disturbances arising from
racial tension between elements of its white and immigrant communities.
[5]
Governance
Burnley has three tiers of government,
Burnley Borough Council and
Lancashire County Council ("local"), the
United Kingdom parliament ("national") and the
European Parliament ("Europe"). While the town itself is unparished, the rest of the borough has one further, bottom tier of government, the
parish or town council.
[6]
Local
Composition of Burnley Borough Council (as of May 2008)
|
Party
| Group Leader
| Seats
| Change (on 2007)
|
| Liberal Democrat
| Gordon Birtwistle
| 23
| +5
|
| Labour
| Julie Cooper
| 12
| -5
|
| Conservative
| Peter Doyle
| 6
| 0
|
| British National Party
| Sharon Wilkinson
| 4
| 0
|
Total Seats
| 45
|
Burnley Borough Council has been governed since 2008 by the
Liberal Democrats, led by Gordon Birtwistle. The
mayor – a ceremonial post, which rotates annually – is currently Ida Carmichael (
Conservative). The borough comprises 15
wards, 12 of which – Bank Hall, Briercliffe, Brunshaw, Coal Clough with Deerplay, Daneshouse with Stoneyholme, Gannow, Lanehead, Queensgate, Rosegrove with Lowerhouse, Rosehill with Burnley Wood, Trinity, and Whittlefield with Ightenhill – fall within the town itself.
[7]
Lancashire County Council was controlled by
Labour from 1981 until the
Conservative Party won control in the
local council elections in June 2009.
[8] [9]. The borough is represented on the council in 6
divisions: Burnley Central East, Burnley Central West, Burnley North East, Burnley Rural, Burnley South West, and Padiham & Burnley West.
[10] In 2009
Liberal Democrats won five of the six county seats and the
British National Party has a single councillor.
[11] The election of BNP candidate
Sharon Wilkinson to the council seat of Padiham and Burnley West made her the BNP's first County Councillor.
[12]
National
All but one of the seven MPs elected by
Burnley since the first World War have been from the
Labour party. The Member of Parliament for the town since the election in
2005 has been
Kitty Ussher (
Labour).
Europe
Burnley lies within the
North West England European Parliament constituency, which elects 9 MEPs by proportional representation - currently 3
Conservative, 2
Labour, 1
Liberal Democrat, 1
UKIP and 1
BNP.
Geography
The town lies in a natural three-forked
valley at the
confluence of the
River Brun and the
River Calder, surrounded by open fields which evolve into wild
moorland at higher altitudes. There are several large parks in the town, including
Towneley Park, once the
deer park for the 15th century
Towneley Hall and three winners of the
Green Flag Award, including Queens Park, which hosts a summer season of
brass band concerts each year, and Thompson Park, which has a boating lake and
miniature railway.
[13] The landmark
RIBA-award winning
Panopticon Singing Ringing Tree
, overlooking the town from the hills at Crown Point, was installed in 2006.
[14]
To the west of Burnley lie the towns of
Padiham,
Accrington and
Blackburn, with
Nelson and
Colne to the north. To the north west of the town lies the imposing and visually dramatic
Pendle Hill, home of the
Pendle Witches, whose summit stands 1,827 feet (557 m) above
sea level. To the east of the town lie the hills of the
South Pennines, and to the south, the
Forest of Rossendale.
The
Pennine Way passes six miles east of Burnley; the
Mary Towneley Loop, part of the
Pennine Bridleway, and the
Burnley Way offer riders and walkers clearly-signed routes through the countryside immediately surrounding the town.
The
Leeds and Liverpool Canal passes through the town on a 60 foot high
embankment known as the 'Straight Mile', built between 1796 and 1801 to avoid the need for
locks and is today regarded as one of the seven wonders of the
British waterways.
[15]
Demography
The
United Kingdom Census 2001 showed a total resident population for Burnley of 73,021. The town is the main population centre in the Burnley-Nelson urban area, which has an estimated population of 149,796; for comparison purposes, this is about the same size as
Huddersfield,
Oxford or
Poole.
[16]
The racial composition of the borough is 91.77% White and 7.16% South Asian or South Asian / British, predominantly from
Pakistan. The largest religious groups are
Christian (74.46%) and
Muslim (6.58%). 59.02% of adults between the ages of 16 and 74 are classed as economically active and in work.
[17]
Year
| Population [18]
|
1911
| 106,322
|
1921
| 103,157
|
1931
| 98,258
|
1939
| 85,400
|
1951
| 84,987
|
1961
| 80,559
|
1971
| 76,489
|
2001
| 73,021
|
Transport
Road
Burnley is served by Junctions 9, 10 and 11 of the
M65 motorway, which runs west to
Accrington,
Blackburn and
Preston, and northeast to
Nelson and
Colne. From the town centre, the
A646 runs to
Todmorden, the
A679 to
Accrington, the
A671 to
Clitheroe, and the
A682 – Britain's most dangerous road
[19] – south to
Rawtenstall and northeast to
Nelson and the
Yorkshire Dales.
Rail
Rail services to and from Burnley are provided by
Northern Rail. The town has three
railway stations,
Burnley Manchester Road,
Burnley Central and, on the western outskirts of the town centre,
Burnley Barracks (A fourth station,
Rose Grove, serves the Rose Grove district west of Burnley). Manchester Road station has an hourly semi-fast service west to
Preston and
Blackpool North and east to
Leeds and
York, whilst the Central and Barracks stations provide an hourly stopping service west to
Blackpool South and Preston, and east to
Nelson and
Colne.
Bus and coach
The main bus operator in Burnley is
Transdev Burnley & Pendle, although
Transdev Northern Blue operate some local and coastal services and Tyrer Bus operate some tendered town services. Other services are provided by Coastlinks Express (X27 to
Southport),
First (589 to
Rochdale, 592 to
Halifax),
Transdev Lancashire United (152 to
Preston), Pennine (215 to
Skipton), and
Rossendale Transport (483 to
Bury).
National Express operates three coach services to
London each day, and one to
Birmingham.
The town has good bus links into
Manchester, compensating for the lack of a direct rail link: the X43/X44 Witch Way service (operated by Burnley & Pendle) runs from
Nelson to Manchester, via Burnley and
Rawtenstall, using a fleet of specially-branded
double-decker buses with leather seats. The fastest journeys take 59 minutes.
The town's futuristic
bus station, designed by Manchester-based , won the UK Bus Award for Infrastructure in 2003.
[20]
Economy and industry
Burnley's traditional employment base has been in decline for several decades. The last deep coal mine, Hapton Valley Colliery, closed in February 1981 and the last steam-powered mill, Queen Street Mill, in 1982. Over the next two decades, Burnley's two largest manufacturers both closed their factories: Prestige in July 1997 and
Michelin in April 2002.
[21] [22] The town has struggled to recover: its employment growth between 1995 and 2004 placed it 55th of England's 56 largest towns and cities,
[23] and as of 2007 it was the 21st most deprived local authority (out of 354) in the United Kingdom.
[24] 13% of its working age population currently claims
incapacity benefit (national average 7%).
[25]
The largest employment sector in the town is now public administration, education and health (31.2%), followed by manufacturing (21.9%).
[26] Key manufacturing employers today are in highly specialised fields: Gardner Aerospace,
Safran Aircelle and TRW Automotive
(automotive components)
.
[27] In 2004, the was established on land formerly occupied by the now-closed
Michelin factory to provide support and incubation space for start-up technology companies.
The town's main shopping street is St James Street, onto which Charter Walk
Shopping Centre opens. The town centre is home to a good number of major
high street multiples, including
Marks and Spencer,
Next and
W H Smith, and a healthy mix of other shops, including specialist food shops, independent record shops and an independent bookshop. A large council-run is open six days a week. On the edge of the town centre, three
retail parks house
big box stores, including
Currys,
Homebase and
PC World; there are also a number of
mill shops. A second town centre shopping centre, 'The Oval', housing 32 further units, is scheduled for construction in 2008-2010, but has yet to secure the anchor tenant needed for the project to proceed.
[28]
Sport
Burnley has good sporting facilities for a town of its size. The new £29m St Peter's Centre offers
swimming,
squash courts and a
fitness suite, while the nearby Spirit of Sport complex includes a large sports hall, and several indoor courts and synthetic pitches.
[29] There is an outdoor athletics track at Barden Lane, where the meets. For golfers, there are both 9 hole and 18 hole municipal
golf courses at
Towneley Park, along with an 18-hole
pitch and putt course.
[30] (The private also welcomes visiting players.) There are
tennis courts at Towneley Park, as well as at the , eleven
bowling greens around the town,
[31] and a £235,000
skate park at Queens Park, which opened in 2003. There are also , and clubs in the town.
The town's sporting scene is dominated by
Burnley Football Club, which was founded in 1882, and has played its home matches at
Turf Moor since 1883, where attendance currently averages 13,000.
[32] The club was one of the 12 founder members of the
Football League in 1888. Nicknamed the Clarets, they will play the 2009/10 season in the
Premier League, 33 years since they last played in the top flight of English football and are one of the few English league clubs to have been champions of all four professional league divisions.
Other football clubs in the town include Burnley Belvedere and Burnley United, members of the
West Lancashire Football League.
There are two members of the
Lancashire Cricket League in the town.
Burnley Cricket Club play their home matches at Turf Moor, on a field next to the football ground, while
Lowerhouse Cricket Club play at
Liverpool Road.
Culture and nightlife
thumb, in Padiham owned by the
National Trust
Burnley is well-served for a town of its size. There is a modern 24 lane Ten pin bowling centre on Finsley Gate, operated by
AMF Bowling. A 9-screen
multiplex cinema in the town centre, operated by
Apollo Cinemas, and a
theatre named for the building's former use as the , which plays host to touring comedians and musical acts, as well as staging amateur dramatics. A second performance space, the purpose-built £1.5m , opened nearby in 2005. For
art lovers, there is a small contemporary visual arts gallery, the , and - on the outskirts of Burnley - larger galleries in the town's two
stately homes,
Towneley Hall, which was bought by Burnley
Corporation in 1901,
[33] and
Gawthorpe Hall, bequeathed to the
National Trust in 1970. There are also two local
museums: the town's Historical Society operates the Museum of Local History in the historic surroundings of the , while the celebrates Burnley's weaving past.
Once a year, Burnley hosts the two-day , one of the largest
Blues festivals in the country, drawing fans from all over Britain to venues spread across the town. In the 1970s, it was also an important venue for
Northern Soul;
[34] several local pubs still hold regular Northern Soul nights. In recent years, the town has also hosted an annual
balloon festival in the setting of
Towneley Park.
Burnley has a lively nightlife, drawing clubbers from all over the north-west. The town is dominated by the club ; other major bars and
nightclubs include Barcode, Calamity Jane's (
cowboy-themed), (electro, retro, ghetto, house and techno), , The Mix, Pharaoh's, Posh, Red Room, and . Burnley has a small
gay scene, centred on the Guys as Dolls bar in St James Street. There are also chain-owned bars, such as
Wetherspoons and
Walkabout.
The local brewery,
Moorhouse's, was founded in 1865, produces a range of award winning beers - including the very popular Pride of Pendle and Blond Witch - and currently operates six
pubs in the area, while more
Bénédictine is drunk in one local
working men's club, the Burnley Miners' Club, than anywhere else in the world, after a local regiment stationed in
Normandy during
World War I brought back a taste for the drink.
[35]
Media
Local radio for Burnley and its surrounding area is currently provided by
2BR and
BBC Radio Lancashire.
There are two local
newspapers: the
Burnley Express, published on Tuesdays and Fridays, and the daily
Lancashire Telegraph, which publishes a local edition for Burnley and
Pendle. There are also two free advertisement supported newspapers called and The Reporter, both of which are posted to homes throughout the town.
thumb
Burnley was one of seven sites chosen to be part of
Channel 4's
The Big Art project in which a group of 15 young people from all over the entire town commissioned artist
Greyworld to create a piece of
public art in the town. The artwork , named "Invisible" is a series of UV paintings placed all around the town centre displaying "public heroes". The bright spectacles are best seen at the night time.
Filmography
Parts of the film
Whistle Down the Wind (1961) and the television series
All Quiet on the Preston Front and
Juliet Bravo were filmed in the town. (For example, Burnley
Fire Station was the location of Social Services in the first series of Juliet Bravo, and was used for exterior shots of the
magistrates' court in the same series.)
Education
A boys'
grammar school was first founded in St Peter's Church in 1559, its first
headmaster a former
chantry priest, Gilbert Fairbank. In 1602, one of the governors, John Towneley, paid for a new
schoolhouse to be built in the churchyard;
[36] the school moved again in 1876 to a new building on Bank Parade, which can still be seen today.
[37]
The equivalent school for girls, Burnley Girls' High School, was established in 1909 on a site in Ormerod Road,
[38] and moved on Kiddrow Lane in the 1960s.
The borough moved to
comprehensive education in 1981,
[39] and today has five 11-16
secondary schools:
- Blessed Trinity RC College
- Hameldon Community College
- Shuttleworth College
- Sir John Thursby Community College
- Unity College
These opened in September 2006 as part of the first wave of a nationwide 10-15 year programme of capital investment funded by the
Department for Education and Skills called . Shuttleworth College moved into new buildings in September 2008; the remaining schools, which currently occupy the buildings of five former secondary schools in the town, are to be completely rebuilt over the next three years.
Thomas Whitham Sixth Form, which forms a sixth element of the BSF programme, offers sixth form provision on a newly-built campus on Barden Lane.
Burnley College is the borough's main
tertiary education provider, offering
vocational and professional training,
adult education, and a small number of
degree courses, as well as some
GCSE courses and a full range of
A levels. It is scheduled to move to a new £70million campus off Princess Way in September 2009.
Attainment
The town's educational attainment is significantly below the national average at all levels. In 2007, 72% of children at the end of
Key Stage 2 achieved at least Level 4 in English (national average 80%), and 70% in Mathematics (national average 77%).
[40] At the end of
Key Stage 3, the figures achieving at least Level 5 were 66% in English (national average 74%), and 66% in Mathematics (national average 76%).
[41] 41.1% of students at the end of
Key Stage 4 achieved at least 5 A*-C grades at GCSE (national average 62.0%).
[42] Three of the town's five secondary schools are currently in the bottom 5% nationally for adding value between the end of Key Stage 2 and the end of Key Stage 4;
[43] two of the five schools are currently in
special measures.
[44]
Twin towns
Burnley is twinned with:
- Vitry-sur-Seine, France (since 1958
)
[45]
People
Entertainment
Probably the best-known Burnley figure in the field of entertainment is
actor and
gay rights activist Sir Ian McKellen,
[46] who was born in the town in 1939. Other actors born in the town include
Julia Haworth [47] (Coronation Street)
,
Richard Moore [48] and
Lisa Riley [49] (Emmerdale)
,
Alice Barry [50] and
Jody Latham [51] (Shameless)
,
Hannah Hobley [52] (Benidorm)
and film actor
Lee Ingleby.
[53] Paul Abbott,
[54] [55] creator of
Shameless
, is another native of the town. Television producer and executive
Peter Salmon [56] was also born in Burnley.
Musicians born in the town include
Danbert Nobacon,
Alice Nutter,
Lou Watts and
Boff Whalley (Chumbawamba)
,
[57] as well as classical composer
John Pickard.
[58]
The 19th century author and
clergyman Silas Hocking [59] wrote his most famous work,
Her Benny
(1879), while living in Burnley. Crime writer
Stephen Booth is another native of the town.
[60]
Politics and the church
Phil Willis,
[61] Liberal Democrat MP for
Harrogate & Knaresborough, and Sir Vincent Fean,
[62] HM ambassador to
Libya, were born in Burnley, as were
James Yorke Scarlett,
[63] commander of the
Heavy Brigade at the
Battle of Balaclava, and the 16th century
Catholic martyr Robert Nutter.
[64] Suffragette Ada Nield Chew died in Burnley in 1945.
Burnley and the Royal Family
Charles, Prince of Wales occasionally visits the milltown to undertake inspections on the youth program that the prince's trust has in place there to help 350 disadvantaged 14–25 year olds get their lives back on track in the borough. And Prince Charles has set Burnley at the top of his priority list for his popular charity. The prince has focused his regeneration efforts on deprived parts of the country since a bid to improve Halifax in the 1980s. Prince Charles’ interest in Burnley stems from a visit in 2005, when he saw first-hand the work being done to regenerate the town. At the time he described Burnley as a “remarkable town” and added: “Recent years have not been at all kind to Burnley and all sorts of difficulties and challenges are placed in its way.
“But I hope my charities can make what small contribution they can, in partnership with the borough council and the NWDA, in this really crucial project to give, I hope, Burnley the future it deserves.
Science and industry
Engineer Sir
Willis Jackson [65] wa s born and educated in the town.
Sport
Burnley's sporting figures include England and Lancashire
cricketer James Anderson,
[66] England and Everton Women's goalkeeper
Rachel Brown,
[67] Pakistan and
Tranmere Rovers midfielder
Adnan Ahmed,
[68] Ex-
Bury FC manager
Chris Casper,
[69] Commonwealth Games Gold Medal-winning gymnast
Craig Heap,
[70] and
Neil Hodgson, 2003
World Superbike champion.
[71] Ron Greenwood,
[72] former manager of the
England football team, was born in nearby
Worsthorne.
Notes
- Lancashire County Council. Accessed 27 October 2007
- Burnley: A Short History
- Burnley Borough Council. Accessed 6 September, 2007.
- www.visionofbritain.org.uk. Accessed 6 September, 2007.
- Burnley Task Force report. Accessed 6 September 2007
- Burnley Borough Council. Accessed 18 September 2007.
- Burnley Borough Council. Accessed 6 November 2007.
- Declared result for election held on 04 June 2009 Lancashire County Council - URL accessed 5 June 2009]
- Red rose county turns Tory blue bbc.co.uk URL accessed 5 June 2009
- Lancashire County Council. Accessed 6 November 2007.
- ''LEP'' Burnley Results
- First county council seat for BNP bbc.co.uk URL accessed 5 June 2009
- www.greenflagaward.org.uk. Accessed 10 September, 2007.
- www.panopticons.uk.net. Accessed 6 September, 2007.
- www.weaverstriangle.co.uk. Accessed 6 November, 2007.
- Office for National Statistics. Accessed 6 September, 2007.
- Office for National Statistics. 2001 census. Accessed 6 September, 2007.
- www.visionofbritain.org.uk. Accessed 18 September 2007.
- www.bbc.co.uk, 24 June, 2007. Accessed 6 September, 2007.
- www.ukbusawards.co.uk. Accessed 10 September, 2007.
- "Prestige: some jobs are saved". ''Lancashire Evening Telegraph'', 5 July 1997. Accessed 11 September 2007.
- "End of an era". ''Lancashire Evening Telegraph'', 30 December 2002. Accessed 11 September 2007.
- Institute for Public Policy Research. Accessed 6 September 2007.
- www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk. Accessed 26 January 2008.
- www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk. Accessed 1 April 2008.
- Office for National Statistics. Accessed 11 September, 2007.
- Central Lancashire City Region Development Programme. Accessed 11 September, 2007.
- "Debenhams Pulls Out!", ''Burnley Express'', 19 December, 2006. Accessed 7 September, 2007.
- Burnley Borough Council. Accessed 7 September 2007.
- www.burnley.gov.uk. Accessed 4 December 2007.
- Burnley Borough Council. Accessed 7 September 2007.
- Internet Football Grounds Guide. Accessed 12 February, 2008.
- Towneley Hall Official Site. Accessed 24 September, 2008.
- Roberts, ''Northern Soul Top 500'', p.369
- "The Tommies' tipple is back in vogue", ''Manchester Evening News'', 2 August, 2002. Accessed 23 October, 2007.
- Hall & Spencer, ''Burnley: A Pictorial History'', p.[1]
- www.visitburnley.com. Accessed 6 November, 2007.
- www.visitburnley.com. Accessed 6 November, 2007
- Burnley St Peter's Heritage - Story of Church and Town. Accessed 13 November, 2007.
- Department for Children, Schools and Families. Accessed 6 February, 2008.
- Department for Children, Schools and Families. Accessed 11 March, 2008.
- Department for Children, Schools and Families. Accessed 6 February, 2008.
- www.bbc.co.uk. Accessed 10 January, 2008.
- "Third Burnley super school under fire", ''Lancashire Telegraph'', 4 March 2008. Accessed 4 March, 2008.
- Minutes of Burnley Borough Council meeting, 14 February, 2007. Accessed 21 August, 2007.
- Barratt, ''Ian McKellen: An Unofficial Biography'', p.1
- www.whatsontv.co.uk. Accessed 22 October, 2007.
- www.thisislancashire.co.uk. Accessed 22 October, 2007.
- www.tv.com. Accessed 22 October, 2007.
- Urban Talent Acting Agency. Accessed 22 October, 2007.
- www.tv.com. Accessed 22 October, 2007.
- [1] Accessed 1 December, 2008.
- Daryn's Lee Ingleby Page. Accessed 2 October, 2007.
- British Film Institute screenonline database. Accessed 22 October, 2007.
- "Estate of Play", ''The Guardian'', 12 July, 2008. Accessed 14 July, 2008.
- "Salmon's leap of faith", ''The Guardian'', 11 December, 2006. Accessed 22 October, 2007.
- A Chumbawumba FAQ. Accessed 22 October, 2007.
- Rickards, 'Icarus Soaring: The Music of John Pickard', p.2
- Burnley Borough Council. Accessed 23 October, 2007.
- Stephen Booth official site. Accessed 28 April, 2008.
- Liberal Democrats official site. Accessed 23 October, 2007.
- www.omc.it. Accessed 24 October, 2007.
- Chapples, ''General Scarlett: The Burnley Hero of Balaclava'', p.6
- Catholic Encyclopedia. Accessed 23 October, 2007.
- www.aim25.ac.uk. Accessed 23 October, 2007.
- www.cricinfo.com. Accessed 24 October, 2007.
- www.bbc.co.uk. Accessed 24 October, 2007.
- Tranmere Rovers official site. Accessed 23 October, 2007.
- Bury FC official site. Accessed 24 October, 2007.
- "Town says thanks to its golden boy", ''Burnley Citizen'', 28 August, 2002. Accessed 24 August, 2007.
- www.superbikeplanet.com. Accessed 24 October, 2007.
- www.bbc.co.uk. Accessed 24 October, 2007.
References
- Lancashire County Council. Accessed 27 October 2007
- Burnley: A Short History
- Burnley Borough Council. Accessed 6 September, 2007.
- www.visionofbritain.org.uk. Accessed 6 September, 2007.
- Burnley Task Force report. Accessed 6 September 2007
- Burnley Borough Council. Accessed 18 September 2007.
- Burnley Borough Council. Accessed 6 November 2007.
- Declared result for election held on 04 June 2009 Lancashire County Council - URL accessed 5 June 2009]
- Red rose county turns Tory blue bbc.co.uk URL accessed 5 June 2009
- Lancashire County Council. Accessed 6 November 2007.
- ''LEP'' Burnley Results
- First county council seat for BNP bbc.co.uk URL accessed 5 June 2009
- www.greenflagaward.org.uk. Accessed 10 September, 2007.
- www.panopticons.uk.net. Accessed 6 September, 2007.
- www.weaverstriangle.co.uk. Accessed 6 November, 2007.
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