Country: | England |
Official Name: | Leyland |
Type: | Town |
Population: | 38,578 |
Population Ref: | [1] (2001 census) |
Shire District: | South Ribble |
Shire County: | Lancashire |
Region: | North West England |
Constituency Westminster: | South Ribble |
Post Town: | LEYLAND |
Postcode District: | PR25, PR26 |
Postcode Area: | PR |
Dial Code: | 01772 |
Os Grid Reference: | SD549232 |
Static Image: | File:The Parish Church of St Andrews, Leyland - geograph.org.uk - 500122.jpg |
Static Image Width: | 240px |
Static Image Caption: | Parish church of St Andrews |
Pushpin Map: | United Kingdom Borough of South Ribble |
Pushpin Map Caption: | Shown within South Ribble |
Leyland is a town in South Ribble, Lancashire, England, 6 miles (10 km) south of Preston. The population was 35,578 at the 2011 Census.[2]
The name of the town is Anglo-Saxon, meaning "untilled land".
Leyland was an area of fields, with Roman roads passing through, from ancient Wigan to Walton-le-Dale. It is mentioned in the Domesday Book (1085). In 1066, King Edward the Confessor presided over the whole of Leyland. The manor was divided into three large ploughlands, which were controlled by local noblemen. In the 12th century, it came under the barony of Penwortham.
The area of Worden, which is now Worden Park, was one of nine oxgangs of land granted to the Knights Hospitaller, by Roger de Lacy, in Lancashire, but the land was not assigned to any individual and a local man, who was a very close friend of de Lacy, Hugh Bussel, was assigned holder of the land in 1212.
Notable features that remain include the St Andrew's Parish Church, built around 1200 AD, and the large stone Leyland Cross, thought to date back to Saxon times.
The town is famous primarily for the bus and truck manufacturer Leyland Motors, which between the 1950s and 1970s expanded and grew to own several British motor manufacturers, including British Motor Corporation, Standard-Triumph and Rover, culminating in the massive British Leyland company. The truck business still operates today as Leyland Trucks, and is owned by Paccar.[3]
Leyland is also home to one of the leading maintenance and utility companies in the United Kingdom, Enterprise plc on Centurion Way.
The town has been home to the Dr. Oetker pizza factory on Marathon Place, Moss Side, since 1989.[4]
The town centre is dominated by the large Tesco Extra supermarket and adjacent car park.[5]
The Anglican church of St Ambrose, on Moss Lane, is a Grade II listed building dating from 1882-85 by Charles Aldridge and Charles Deacon. It is constructed of stone and has green slate roofs with red ridge tiles. It is in a mixed Early English and early French Gothic style.[6]
Since July 2007, the former Primitive Methodist Church on Leyland Lane has been home to the Greek Orthodox Church of the Holy Apostles.[7]
Most of the residential dwellings in Leyland falls are semi-detached, detached and bungalows. There are a few modern housing estates, but about 65% of the accommodation in the town was built in the 1970s.
There are two tiers of local government covering Leyland, at district and county level: South Ribble Borough Council and Lancashire County Council. The borough council is based in Leyland, at the Civic Centre on West Paddock.[8]
Leyland was an ancient parish. In 1863 the parish was made a local government district, governed by a local board.[9] Such local government districts were reconstituted as urban districts in 1894.[10] [11] Leyland Urban District was abolished in 1974 to become part of the new borough of South Ribble. No successor parish was created for the former urban district and so Leyland is directly administered by South Ribble Borough Council.[12] Shortly before its abolition, the urban district council had built itself a new headquarters on West Paddock, which subsequently became the South Ribble Civic Centre.
Leyland railway station is on the West Coast Main Line and is operated by Northern. There is one train an hour between Liverpool Lime Street and Preston. There is also one train an hour from Manchester Victoria/Hazel Grove to Blackpool North.
There is a marker adjacent to the old Leyland Motors Spurrier works at the halfway point on the railway journey between Glasgow and London, some 198 miles in either direction. John Fishwick & Sons which served the town's public transport needs, and connected the town to Chorley and Preston, ceased trading in 2015 and Stagecoach Merseyside & South Lancashire took over the route.[13]
Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC North West and ITV Granada. Television signals are received from the Winter Hill transmitter.[14]
Local radio stations are BBC Radio Lancashire on 103.9 FM, Heart North West on 96.9 FM, Smooth North West on 100.4 FM, Capital Manchester and Lancashire on 106.5 FM, Greatest Hits Radio Lancashire on 96.5 FM, Central Radio North West, an DAB station[15] and Radio Leyland, a community based station which is broadcast on 104.8 FM.[16] [17]
The Lancashire Telegraph and Lancashire Evening Post are main newspapers that cover the town.[18] [19]
High schools in Leyland include Balshaw's CE High School near Leyland Cross, St Mary's Catholic High School, Worden Academy, a smaller high school situated to the west of the town and Wellfield Academy near the town centre.[20]
To the east of Worden Park is Runshaw College.[21]
Leyland is made up by six different areas, the town centre itself counts as the main retail side, with the railway station, library and shops nearby. The other areas include Broadfield, Moss Side, Worden Park, Turpin Green and the Wade Hall estate.
Having been joined by Clayton Brook, draining the village of the same name to the east, after skirting Lostock Hall, the River Lostock flows south west, past Farington and through the western suburbs of the Leyland, collecting Mill Brook (from Worden Park) and Hollin's Brook (draining Runshaw Moor), before moving west towards Croston.
Notable people who have grown up or lived in Leyland include: