Hest Bank
Hest Bank 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!
Hest Bank books (6 available)
- 3 photos on Hest Bank appear in 1 Frith books - View photos of Hest Bank
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Hest Bank and Lancashire
Hest Bank memories
Hest Bank /Bolton le Sands
I lived with my grandparents in Bolton le Sands. I used to cycle to Morecambe most mornings, to J. W. Blands, painters and decorators, where I was apprenticed, hail rain and snow. I knew every inch of the coast road, the top of Hest Bank hill and down past the Cinderella Home, past the golf links and Happy Mount Park.
Lovely memories now ..
Contributed by john wilson
fish and chips at hest bank
when i was young i would go for fish and chips they were great and there was always
something to do some where to ride on our bikes at hest bank.
I now live in australia and in 2006 took my three girls to england for a holiday
and went for a walk along the canal and over the railway crossing they thought
it was wonderfull.
my only sad memory of hest bank was of a girl guide who was killed crossing the road
to the fish and chip shop i knew her brother gordon from the scouts.
I look back at those days as some of my best. Allan Holmes.
Contributed by allan holmes
Lancashire memories
Hest Bank /Bolton le Sands
I lived with my grandparents in Bolton le Sands. I used to cycle to Morecambe most mornings, to J. W. Blands, painters and decorators, where I was apprenticed, hail rain and snow. I knew every inch of the coast road, the top of Hest Bank hill and down past the Cinderella Home, past the golf links and Happy Mount Park.
Lovely memories now ..
A memory of Hest Bank contributed by john wilson
fish and chips at hest bank
when i was young i would go for fish and chips they were great and there was always
something to do some where to ride on our bikes at hest bank.
I now live in australia and in 2006 took my three girls to england for a holiday
and went for a walk along the canal and over the railway crossing they thought
it was wonderfull.
my only sad memory of hest bank was of a girl guide who was killed crossing the road
to the fish and chip shop i knew her brother gordon from the scouts.
I look back at those days as some of my best. Allan Holmes.
A memory of Hest Bank contributed by allan holmes
Extracts From Hest Bank & Lancashire books
Station Road led down to the railway station, now long gone. They called
the main railway line from Crewe to Glasgow the West Coast Main
Line, but here at Hest Bank is the only spot where you can actually see
the coast and the sea beyond. Hest Bank is the name used for the whole
settlement. Three forms of transport have cut through the area at various
times: the main Roman road, later the A6, the Lancaster Canal, and the
railways, all bringing prosperity and extra work to the area. The railway
was so busy a century ago that a footbridge was built so that visitors did
not have to wait to cross the line to get to the beach. We can see this
bridge in our picture at the bottom of the road.
An extract from from"Lancaster, Morecambe and Heysham Pocket Album".
Hest was part of Bolton-le-Sands, and was a hamlet near Morecambe
Bay. Hest Bank was the seaward side of the village, right at the
southern side of the mouth of the River Kent. At one time, the area was
referred to as Slyne with Hest. The Lancaster Canal Act was passed in
1792; the canal from Kendal to Carnforth opened first in 1797, and
then this section opened, Bolton-le-Sands via Hest Bank to Lancaster.
As soon as the canal opened, it proved an easier and more comfortable
way of travelling and moving goods than along the poor roads that
existed at the time.
An extract from from"Lancaster, Morecambe and Heysham Pocket Album".
This is the junction of Coastal Road and Station Road, with ‘Halt’
signs painted on the road and squared T-shaped traffic signs gently
controlling what little traffic there was. There are no yellow lines, no
posts everywhere with instructions and restrictions—oh, it was such a
gentle time for motor travel. The name Hest comes from ‘hyrst’ (a copse
or wood), and the name was first recorded in 1184.
An extract from from"Lancaster, Morecambe and Heysham Pocket Album".
The southern part of Morecambe was always referred to as
the West End. Here we see the exclusive part of Morecambe.
Our view takes in Werwick’s Revolving Tower and shows what
working-class people did for their week’s holiday: they sat and
relaxed and took in the sea air.
An extract from from"Lancaster, Morecambe and Heysham Pocket Album".
The old Town Hall was erected around 1781 on the site of an earlier
town hall. Major Thomas Jarratt was the designer of the building, which
opened in 1783. Market Square is the open area in front of the Town
Hall, and Market Street runs to the left. The locals liked the large Tuscan
portico and its four plain columns. The cupola and top were designed
by Thomas Harrison, and were added just after the building opened.
Harrison also designed Skerton Bridge. The total cost of the building
was £2,054 13s 7d, including a £20 bonus that Mr Dickinson, one
of the builders, had thought due to him.
An extract from from"Lancaster, Morecambe and Heysham Pocket Album".





