Inskip
Inskip maps (2 available)
Map of Lancashire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Lancashire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Inskip books (13 available)
Lancaster Town Walk Guide
Paperback
Lytham St Anne's Town and City Memories
Paperback
Heart of Lancashire Pocket Album
Paperback
- 4 photos on Inskip appear in 1 Frith books - View photos of Inskip
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Inskip and Lancashire
Inskip memories
Be the first to add a memory of Inskip.
You can also read memories of nearby places in Lancashire below.
Lancashire memories
Bilsborrow
My dad grew up in Bilsborrow in the house next door to the White Bull pub. I spent many a happy day at my nanna and granddad's house. My nanna used to be a cook at Bilsborrow Primary School and my granddad was a bus driver. They were very involved with the community. Our first born son is buried with my grandparents in St Hilda's. I love the place, it is peaceful and beautiful. When I visit to put flowers on our son's grave we always eat at the Roebuck.
A memory of Bilsborrow contributed by Kathryn Heathcote
Village Centre
I moved to this village in 1967 aged 14. The main building in the centre of the picture is a bank, I think it was the National which later became the National and Westminster Bank. Beyond the bank and to the right on the corner was a Post Office. Hidden by the bank in the same row as the Post Office was a fish and chip shop, the owner used to give us free bags of "bits" from the fryers, usually bits of batter. Out of shot and to the left of the bank was Snape's Butchers. My father built his freezer room for him at the rear of the shop.
To the right of the people shown and out of ...read more here
A memory of Freckleton contributed by David Moore
Shovels Inn - 1952 to 1971
My grandparents, John & Betty Whiteside, were Landlord & Landlady of The Shovels Inn 1952-1971. I was born in 1955 and clearly remeber the pub as it was then, before they tore down walls! The old men of the village taught me how to play dominoes in one of the little rooms that used to be off the main bar. As you walked through the door there used to be an open fire on the right with the dartboard above it. On the photograph, on the extreme right, just outlined against the white building, you can see the petrol pump which was used to fill the charabancs that used to call at the pub on day trips to the Over Wyre ...read more here
A memory of Hambleton contributed by Lynda James
Little Nellie
Hi anyone remember "Little Nellie" (husband Joe) and their daughter Annie and grand daughter Margaret, from Sultan Street in Accrington. We used to travel down on the same bus with them every Friday night. In those days, we got the bus from the bottom of Water Street/Melbourne Street (now Eastgate). They had a caravan on Thornfield for years and years. When you passed the shop and turned onto the site, their caravan was way down the bottom, tucked in a corner. Little Nellie was extremely small and always seemed to wear mens wide legged trousers, with turn ups!
June
A memory of Staining contributed by june huntingdon
Extracts From Inskip & Lancashire books
Inskip was the cradle of Methodism in the Fylde along with Elswick, which was reckoned the headquarters of non-conformity. William Bramwell, born in a thatched cottage, heard the preaching of Christopher Hopper (who was known as ‘son of thunder’) and determined to establish Methodism in rural Fylde. These small villages took the message to their hearts. The first vicar of St Peter’s Church was the Rev Arthur Sharples. He and the vicars who followed stressed the need for physical fitness, and some formed football teams. Young men were encouraged to use the Reading Room at Inskip to keep abreast of events by reading the newspapers provided, and to keep busy by attending Bible classes when not working. This was all part of the drive by churches to stamp out drunkenness. With this in mind, the Old Hall Inn had its licence revoked and became the Temperance Inn, but the Cavendish Arms remained.
An extract from from"The Fylde Photographic Memories".
This Fylde village changed only with the advent of motorised traffic. Many of the thatched cottages on the winding lanes remained the same except for the replacement of their wheat straw roofs by corrugated metal sheets; an instance is the old Reading Room between Carr’s Green Common and the Derby Arms Hotel, demolished in 1932.
An extract from from"The Fylde Photographic Memories".
Embowered in trees, this modest building typical of the Baptist faith stands on land mentioned in the Domesday Book. Inskip-with-Sowerby has had links with local families (Butlers, Cliftons, Molyneux, de Carletons, even William Cavendish of Devonshire, who was given Inskip as a dowry from his wife). Inskip Church, St Peter’s, was built in 1848. Part of the Goosnargh rentals were given by Thomas Knowles to the poor of Inskip.
An extract from from"The Fylde Photographic Memories".
Preston cheese factors favoured the Fylde for their milk, and set up a cheese factory in Inskip to which farmers from all over the Fylde brought supplies. Local girls worked at the model dairy and cows grazed on Carrs Green, once common land. The factory was kept very busy, especially at Christmas, when besides Lancashire cheese, sage and cheddar cheeses were produced; but it was demolished in 1991, and houses were built on the site.
An extract from from"The Fylde Photographic Memories".
This is the corner of St Anne’s Road West and Garden
Street (right) before it was fully surfaced. The rather
solitary buildings are now part of the urban sprawl
that characterises every shopping centre.
An extract from from"Lytham St Anne's Town and City Memories".






