Jump to content

Wardleys Creek

Coordinates: 53°52′37″N 2°58′04″W / 53.87687°N 2.96790°W / 53.87687; -2.96790
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wardleys Creek
Wardleys Creek, viewed from the western banks of the River Wyre (2024)
Wardleys Creek is located in the Borough of Wyre
Wardleys Creek
Wardleys Creek
Location within Wyre Borough
Wardleys Creek is located in the Fylde
Wardleys Creek
Wardleys Creek
Location on the Fylde
Wardleys Creek is located in Lancashire
Wardleys Creek
Wardleys Creek
Location within Lancashire
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townStalmine-with-Staynall
Postcode districtFY6
Dialling code01253
PoliceLancashire
FireLancashire
AmbulanceNorth West
List of places
UK
England
Lancashire
53°52′37″N 2°58′04″W / 53.87687°N 2.96790°W / 53.87687; -2.96790

Wardleys Creek is an area of Stalmine-with-Staynall, near the village of Hambleton, Lancashire, England. It is located on the eastern banks of the River Wyre, around 4 miles (6.4 km) from the river's mouth at the Irish Sea.

An ancient port, the creek is believed to have been used since Roman times. In the 16th and 17th centuries, Russian ships sailed along the Wyre estuary to Wardleys Creek and nearby Skippool Creek.[1] In 1708, customs were established in Poulton-le-Fylde to take advantage of the trade,[2] while warehouses, to store wool, linen, yarn, flax and guano, had been built on Wardleys Creek by the early 1740s.[3] A three-masted vessel was built at the harbour.[2]

Prior to nearby Fleetwood's emergence as a harbour,[2] people emigrated to the Americas from the creek, including aboard the Quebec-bound Six Sisters on 3 April 1833.[4][5] The harbour's foundation rocks are still visible beneath today's wooden jetty.[2]

Until the 1930s, a ferry used to run from Cockle Hall, on the western side of the river, to Wardleys Creek. Some of the passengers were employees of United Alkali Company at Burn Naze, the predecessor to ICI Hillhouse.[6] Parts of the pier are still visible in the marsh in front of where Cockle Hall once stood.[7][8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Rothwell, Catherine (1976). The Fylde as it was. Hendon Publishing Company. p. 40. ISBN 978-0-902907-92-8.
  2. ^ a b c d Porter, John (1876). History of the Fylde of Lancashire. W. Porter (published 141).
  3. ^ Timmins, Geoffrey (15 December 1998). Made in Lancashire: A History of Regional Industrialisation. Manchester University Press. p. 49. ISBN 978-0-7190-4539-4.
  4. ^ A History of Blackpool, the Fylde and South Wyre – Nick Moore (2018), p. 120
  5. ^ Fandrey, Georgina Roberta (1974). The Craggs of Greenbank. sn. p. 110.
  6. ^ Ellis, John (1 October 2013). Blackpool at War: A History of the Fylde Coast during the Second World War. The History Press. ISBN 978-0-7509-5176-0.
  7. ^ Lancashire Footnotes Minisode Fifteen - Stanah and Skippool – Lancashire Footnotes, YouTube, 12 June 2021
  8. ^ Clarke, Allen (1918). Windmill Land: Rambles in a Rural Old-fashioned Country, with a Chat about Its History and Romance. Dent. p. 401.