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10 Best place to visit in Immingham United Kingdom

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10 Most Miserable Towns in the UK

What are the most miserable towns in the United Kingdom? Many of the towns in the United Kingdom are not doing too badly in terms of basic amenities. The quality of life in those towns is higher even than in places recognized as cities in other countries. Still, it can’t be said that all those towns are having it equally. Assessing the standard of living and quality of life in the UK as a whole, we can describe certain towns in the United Kingdom as miserable. Granted, those towns are not inherently terrible. Yet, the situation there is not acceptable in the light of what we see in other villages, towns, and cities, in the UK. In this video, we shall be discussing the 10 most miserable towns in the UK.
10. Cumbernauld, Scotland
We will start our discussion with a town in Scotland. To give you a hint; this is the first of the three Scottish towns on this list of the 10 most miserable towns in the UK. We are talking about Cumbernauld, a large town in North Lanarkshire with an area of 8.3 square miles or 21.5 square kilometers. Under normal circumstances, it should be a city because of its city-like huge population of 51,000.
It has not shed that horrible description as “Scotland’s most dismal town.” Truly speaking, this town is lacking in anything of the good things you would find in Glasgow or Edinburgh. The center of Cumbernauld has been described as the “Kabul of the North.” This says it all. Whatever you know about Kabul has its miniature in this miserable town.
9. Grimsby, England
The first of the 5 cities in England on this list is Grimsby. Maybe we should stop calling it Great Grimsby. If it were great indeed, this port town and the North East Lincolnshire administrative center on the south bank of the Humber Estuary would have all amenities that would make it rank among the best. But the comments from its residents and one-time visitors indicated that life is miserable in this place that has been voted several times as one of the worst places to live in England.
Therefore, the town of around 100,000 residents is one of the most miserable towns in the UK. Its entire area of 88 square miles (or 230 square kilometers) has been ranked the 18th worst place to live a while ago.
8. Airdrie, Scotland
Back in Scotland; we are now examining Airdrie, a town in North Lanarkshire. It also is one of the most miserable towns in the UK. The town on a plateau with an elevation of 400 feet or 130 meters above sea level is about 12 miles (or 19 kilometers) east of Glasgow city center. During its industrial heyday in the 19th century, coal mining and cotton milling were the major industries, no one could then think of this former industrial town as miserable.
However, the exit of those industries has made life there miserable to extent of being branded the most dismal town in the UK. The PR manager for the town admits it deserves its grim reputation as the worst in Scotland. The town is boring and the buildings are ugly.




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Top 5 Hotels to Visit in Grimsby | England - English

#GrimsbyHotels #HotelsInGrimsby #GrimsbyUK #Grimsby
With the plentiful options available in Grimsby best hotels, travelers are spoiled for choice when it comes to best hotels in Grimsby. For those on a budget, Grimsby has many great hotels in Grimsby and guest houses that provide both safety and comfort. Some of the newly built hotels have been awarded for their design, and more continue to open up. There are also capsule hotels in Grimsby, some of which are women-only. For more privacy, there are mid-tier and business famous hotels in Grimsby that provide convenience and all the basic amenities, making a great option for travelers who plan to spend most of their time out exploring the city.

Grimsby or Great Grimsby is a port town and the administrative centre of North East Lincolnshire, Lincolnshire, England. Grimsby adjoins the town of Cleethorpes directly to the south-east forming a conurbation. This is one eclectic list of hotels to visit in Grimsby – but you’d probably expect nothing less from Grimsby best hotels. From our collective time spent in this amazing city and from feedback gathered from our travel network here is a list of our favorite top 10 hotels in Grimsby.

Apricot Wanderer's mission is to promote the beauty of the capitals of the world as well as cities and promote the tourism of those cities.

There are many beautiful hotels in Grimsby. England has some of the best hotels in Grimsby. We collected data on the top 10 hotels to visit in Grimsby. There are many famous hotels in Grimsby and some of them are beautiful hotels in Grimsby. People from all over England love these Grimsby beautiful hotels which are also Grimsby famous hotels. In this video, we will show you the beautiful hotels to visit in Grimsby.

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Cleethorpes Walk: Town Centre & Beach【4K】

Located in the county of North East Lincolnshire, around 150 miles north of London and just next door to Grimsby, is the town of Cleethorpes.

The name 'Cleethorpes' literally means 'clay hamlets' ('thorpe' being an old Norse word for hamlet - a common suffix among Lincolnshire villages and towns of today). Like many seaside towns, it started life as a tiny fishing village with a population of less than 300 up until the first census of 1801.

The first developments of Cleethorpes transforming into a seaside resort occurred in the 1820s. Sea bathing for medicinal reasons was becoming fashionable in late Georgian England. The town's growth accelerated significantly during Queen Victoria's reign. In the 1840s the first railway connection arrived in Cleethorpes. With this came an influx of tourists who were now able to make day trips to the coast.

In 1873 Cleethorpes Pier opened. It was built by heavy industrial firm Head Wrightson at a cost of £8000. Originally the pier was 370 metres/1200 feet long. However, a section was cut out during the Second World War to help prevent it from being used in a German invasion attempt. The present-day pier is 102 metres/335 feet long.

In 1885 Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway built a mile-long promenade to prevent continuing coastal erosion of the cliffs. This included Ross Castle - a mock ruin of a castle, named after Edward Ross, secretary of the railway company.

In 1899, Blundell Park opened. Situated just north of the promenade, this has been home to Grimsby Town Football Club ever since. This is despite Cleethorpes being an entirely separate town to Grimsby, albeit located just next to it in a continuous stretch of urban development.

With family activities including mini golf, arcades and donkey rides as well as the beach itself, Cleethorpes receives millions of visitors every year.

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Filmed: 14th August 2021

Link to the walk on Google Maps:

Filmed on a Sony FDR-AX700 with a Zhiyun Crane 2 and a Sony ECM-XYST1M Stereo Microphone.

TIMESTAMPS:

0:00 Cambridge Street
0:42 Sea View Street
1:56 Alexandra Road
6:08 Sea Road
6:14 Cleethorpes Pier Gardens
8:52 Cleethorpes Waterfall
9:00 Cleethorpes Pier Gardens
9:04 Central Promenade
9:42 Ross Castle
9:53 Central Promenade
13:00 The Pier
13:22 Central Promenade
14:16 North Promenade
21:18 Cleethorpes Beach
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Driving From Grimsby To Birmingham | Grimsby

In this video we drove from Grimsby to Birmingham. we used the motorway way for a greater part of the journey. the rest was completed using secondary road .

15 Best Things to Do in Grimsby (Lincolnshire, England)
In the 1950s Grimsby was the largest fishing port in the world. This came after more than a century of constant expansion, leaving the town’s docks with giant monuments like the Victoria Mill and the Grimsby Dock Tower. It’s sobering to think that thousands of men have lost their lives on fishing expeditions from this port.

In the 1950s alone, 32 Grimsby-based ships were lost. Even if the industry has contracted since the Cod Wars (1958-1976), fishing is entwined with Grimsby’s personality, and the food industry remains a big employer.

Grimsby is contiguous with the Victorian seaside resort of Cleethorpes. So while you can get to grips with the nitty-gritty of the North Sea fisheries, there’s a more genteel town with a beach, pier and seafront gardens a couple of stops on the train.

Let’s explore the best things to do in Grimbsy:

1. Grimsby Fishing Heritage Centre
The place to come to terms with one of the toughest jobs on the planet, the Grimsby Fishing Heritage Centre takes you back to when this was the world’s premier fishing port.

2. Ross Tiger
Berthed on the Alexandra Dock in front of the Grimsby Fishing Heritage Centre is the oldest surviving sidewinder trawler in Grimsby. The Ross Tiger entered service in 1957 and at that time belonged to the world’s largest commercial fishing fleet. The Ross Tiger is a symbol of the bravery of Grimsby’s fishermen in the mid-20th century, and a monument to the many who died on the job

3. Time Trap Museum
At Grimsby Town Hall you can take a privileged look inside the former police cells and prisoner exercise area to lift the lid on the history of the town and get to know some of its characters.

4. Grimsby Dock Tower
An enduring landmark for Grimsby, this Grade I-listed 94-metre Gothic Revival tower guards the entrance to the Royal Dock.

5. Corporation Bridge
Traversing the Old Dock, in the shadow of the hulking Victoria Mill, is a Scherzer rolling lift bascule bridge dating to 1925. There’s almost no water traffic on the dock, so the bridge is only rarely lifted these days, normally for tests to comply with a law that requires it to be in working order.

6. Grimsby Minster
Designated a minster in 2010, the Church of St James has been Grimsby’s main Christian
place of worship since 1586. The building is even older, dating from well before the 12th century, when it was enlarged by the Bishop of Lincoln Robert Bloet.

7. People’s Park
A five-minute walk from Grimsby Town Station is a Victorian park that opened in 1883. On a U-shaped plot, the park has just come through a restoration and has a few things to recommend it on a warm day.

8. Grimsby Auditorium
An important stop for touring musicians, musicals, comedians and famous personalities, the Grimsby Auditorium is the largest theatre in Lincolnshire and one of largest in the East of England. Built in 1995, this receiving theatre can seat 1,200, and has a capacity of 2,000 for standing audiences.

9. Cleethorpes Beach
If you need to feel the sand between your toes, head a little way along the Humber Estuary and you’ll be met by Cleethorpes’ 4.5 miles of vast sandy beaches. The beach is broad and flat.

10. Cleethorpes Coast Light Railway
Now over 70 years old, the Cleethorpes Light Railway is an icon for the resort, and obligatory for families. Beginning at Kingsway by the leisure centre, the vintage steam engines track the waterfront for just over a mile down to the point where the Buck Beck flows into the North Sea.

11. Cleethorpes Country Park
In the south of Cleethorpes the town opens onto this 150-acre nature reserve of woods and grassland around a lake. The meadows are embroidered with wildflowers in May and June, while waterfowl and wildfowl make a home in this environment at different times of year

12. Weelsby Woods
The park has lots of tall mature firs and broadleaf, and there are cultivated areas with clipped grass, as well as wilder parts that have been left to grow out and become a nature reserve.

13. Cleethorpes Pier
In 2016 the restored Cleethorpes Pier was named Pier of the Year by the National Pier Society.
The structure dates from 1873, and used to be much longer before several hundred metres were chopped off the end to help prevent an invasion by sea in the Second World War.

14. Jungle Zoo
Among the animals at the Jungle Zoo are common marmosets, meerkats, ring-tailed lemurs, capuchins, an array of exotic birds, as well as large tarantulas and a Burmese python.

15. Golf
If you know how to handle a wood or iron you may not find a better place to pass a sunny afternoon than Grimsby Golf Club.
This 18-hole course on the west side of the town is well-reviewed, and given the standard the green fees are reasonable, at £35.50 for 18 holes on weekdays and £40.50 on weekends.
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Visit Lincolnshire (2011)

First piece of professional work completed. I project managed / produced this video and filled in with some camera and editing work also.

Project was used for Visit Lincolnshire's Tourism Department for Lincolnshire County Council in order to promote tourism to the area. The video file is uploaded on various social media sites and on the departments website.

GREAT COATES: North East Lincolnshire Parish #2 of 21

NORTH EAST LINCOLNSHIRE PARISH #2: GREAT COATES

Welcome to Great Coates, one of the longest villages in the county and one of the newer parishes in North East Lincolnshire, having been re-established in 2003

The parish is made up of a narrow strip of land running in a southwest–northeast fashion with Great Coates railway station approximately in the centre. Half of it lies within a Conservation Area

The parish extends North to include part of the South Humber Bank industrial area, including Grimsby’s Novartis plant and the site of the former British Titanium Products or Tioxide plant

Human habitation in Great Coates dates to at least the 11th century. In the Domesday Book, the village was recorded as Great Cotes, but at that time, Cotes was spelt C O T E S

The village was quite a small place all the way up until the late 19th century. In 1887 the village only consisted of around 20 dwellings. Up to that point, the most it had ever had was 46

But, thanks to the industrialisation of the Humber Estuary, massive growth occurred from the 1950s onwards which changed Great Coates immeasurably. In 1968 it was absorbed into Healing

Its now essentially contiguous with Grimsby, the urban spread of the town reaching Great Coates by the 1980s. Although not in its boundaries, Great Coates is also overlooked a former biscuit factory

It’s a village of railways, war memorials and plants. Its Great Coates!

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#GreatCoates, #Grimsby, #NorthEastLincolnshire, #Lincolnshire,

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GENUKI:


Primitive Chapel site:


Healing Pedalway:


Capt. Herbert Lewis:


Church/Barnardistons:


Grimsby and Immingham Light Railway/Pyewipe Crossing:




Novartis:


Coldwater:


Demographics:


Rightmove:


Some of the following music tracks may appear in this video:
Brendan Perkins - “Foxsnow” (B. Perkins)

Brendan Perkins - “Mickey's House” (B. Perkins)

The Keyhouse - Voices (H. Flunder)

The Keyhouse - Circles (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - Sun (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “Angels” (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “C Song” (H. Flunder)


I have me a Facebook page too!


And now an INSTAGRAM - @andythevillageidiot

Come and join The Village People! (Subscribers only!)


Please consider buying me a coffee to support the channel! The more I get the faster I'll get to your parish!

A (4K) Drivers Eye View Hull to Gilberdyke. Under the Humber Bridge.

This Video is for entertainment purposes only. Welcome to our trip across from Hull to Stockport via Gilberdyke - Selby - Leeds - Huddersfield and Stalybridge on board an English Electric Type 3 Class 37 locomotive. This is from Hull - Gilberdyke under the Humber Bridge. Should anyone question why this is uploaded in parts like this, it is due to the file sizes when editing, rendering and uploading video to YouTube, If you have done this then you will know exactly what we are on about. Hope you enjoy our little trip in these Covid second wave Tier 3 plus lockdown times.
In cab sounds were recorded at both ends as Drivers were under instruction so a lot of talking was taking place in the lead cab. That is why there are some bits without AWS etc. We hope you enjoy this video. Many thanks to LSL TOC LTD for affording us access with our camera. Apologies for the bits and bobs of dirt on the windscreen and the fact it is shot straight into the Sun. Couldn't do much about that!


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I have just switched over to the Go Pro 8 Camera and as you have seen the footage is awesome.
Go Pro 8

Other equipment I use.
Garmin Virb Ultra Camera:
Mount:
Adobe Premier Pro:
Adobe Creative Cloud:
Camera Backpack:

Grimsby| Immingham| Bus 5 from Grimsby to Immingham, UK| August 2023

Views from the upper deck of bus 5 from Grimsby to Immingham, UK. The bus accepts contactless payments as well as cash payment.

Enjoy the journey and the country views.

Bus: MX06 XAG| 19007
Company: Stagecoach

Date filmed: Saturday 12 August 2023

Filming location: Lincolnshire, UK

Please like, comment, subscribe and share.

Support the Channel:

Thank you for watching!
#imminghan #grimsby #northeastlincolnshire

Grimsby to Scunthorpe Drive With Me October 2023

Drive With Me grimsby to scunthorpe
Grimsby is a port Town in North East Lincolnshire
Scunthorpe is an industrial Town in the North Lincolnshire
England
Thanks For Watching
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#2023 #travel #vanlife #drivingtour #drive #england #lincolnshire #uk

Grimsby Walk: Town Centre【4K】

Located in the county of North East Lincolnshire, and around 150 miles north of London, is the town of Grimsby.

The origins of Grimsby go back to the 9th century AD. The name comes from a Danish fisherman called Grim. The legend goes that Grim fled to these shores when handed the task of murder. He had been ordered to drown the young Prince Havelock. Unable to go through with the task, he escaped across the North Sea. Having discovered the Humber estuary, Grim found it ideally situated to become a fishing village, Hence 'Grim's by' was established ('by' meaning village in Old Norse).

Due to its geographic location on the bank of the River Freshney just adjacent to the Humber estuary leading out to the North Sea, Grimsby has been an established fishing port since around the 12th century. A town charter was granted by King John in 1201.

By 1801 the population of Grimsby was just over 1,500. After a widening of the waterways leading to the River Humber, the town began to grow. The arrival of the railway in Grimsby in 1848 allowed for more goods to be transported to and from the port. Typically, iron, timber, wheat, hemp and flax were imported while coal from South Yorkshire was exported.

In 1852 the Royal Dock was built. During the same year, Grimsby Dock Tower was constructed. Modelled on the Torre del Mangia in Siena, Italy, this tower stands at 94 metres/309 ft high. Its purpose was to lift and power the machinery via hydraulic pressure. Use of the Dock Tower ceased in 1892 when its function was replaced by a newer structure. Nevertheless, it remains standing as a Grade I listed building and an iconic landmark of Grimsby.

By the 1860s there were over 100 fishing vessels in Grimsby. A number of additional docks were added over the coming decades including Alexandra Dock and Union Dock.

During the Second World War the Royal Dock was used as the UK's largest base for minesweepers to patrol the North Sea. Several trawlers were repurposed for this task, with crews typically consisting of ex-trawlermen. With much of the same equipment, they were able to bring mines to the surface. Due to the dangerous nature of the task, over 2000 lives were lost, and more vessels were sunk than any other Royal Navy branch in the Second World War.

At its peak in the 1950s Grimsby had around 600 trawlers and laid claim to the title of the largest fishing port in the world. Its fortunes changed drastically following entry into the European Economic Community in 1974, or European Union as it is now known. The Common Fisheries Policy, adopted in 1983, set out quotas for each member state within 200 nautical miles of the UK coast, allocating them a share of the fish. This left Grimsby suddenly only able to access a small percentage of the very waters they had been trawling for over a century.

Within a short space of time the fleet of active trawlers dwindled from hundreds down to zero. One such trawler can be seen in the town today - Ross Tiger. Having entered service in 1957, Ross Tiger was retired in 1984. She now serves as a museum, docked just outside the Grimsby Fishing Heritage Centre. This is also a museum which tells the tale of the fishing trade in the town with the aid of a series of waxwork figures.

Following the demise of the trawlers, the economy of Grimsby now revolves mainly around the service industry. Freshney Place Shopping Centre employs over 2000 retail workers. Young's Seafood are headquartered in Grimsby and help to keep the fishing legacy alive as a producer and distributor of frozen, fresh and chilled seafood.

Grimsby is represented in sport by Grimsby Town Football Club. Nicknamed The Mariners, they play their home games at Blundell Park, which is actually located in the neighbouring town of Cleethorpes.

Elton John's 1974 album Caribou featured the song 'Grimsby', inspired by lyricist Bernie Taupin's visits to the docks whilst growing up.

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Filmed: 14th August 2021

Link to the walk on Google Maps:

Filmed on a Sony FDR-AX700 with a Zhiyun Crane 2 and a Sony ECM-XYST1M Stereo Microphone.

TIMESTAMPS:

0:00 River Freshney
0:18 Victoria Street South
1:21 Victoria Street West
2:00 Town Hall Street
3:01 Town Hall Square
3:38 Osborne Street
5:26 South St Mary's Gate
6:22 Bethlehem Street
7:07 Old Market Place
8:07 Victoria Street South
11:40 Freshney Place Shopping Centre
11:50 Victoria Street South
13:02 River Freshney Water Front
16:18 Grimsby Fishing Heritage Centre
16:40 Alexandra Dock
17:41 Ross Tiger (only surviving middle water side trawler in the UK, now a museum)
18:33 Alexandra Dock
20:05 Corporation Bridge
20:55 Dock Tower (built 1852)
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Freeman Street & East Marsh Grimsby England By drone 2023

Freeman Street ( Freemo) and East Marsh Grimsby North East Lincolnshire England 2023

Thanks For Watching
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#drone #djimini2 #dji #travel #england #uk #grimsby #lincolnshire

BARNETBY LE WOLD: North Lincolnshire Parish #47 of 56

NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE PARISH #47: BARNETBY LE WOLD

Barnetby le Wold is a village – not a town as I originally thought in the intro – located between Brigg and Immingham in North Lincolnshire. Despite not being an official town, it is its own post town

The village appeared in the Domesday Book, where it was called Bernodebi, a name which is derived from the Scandinavian name Beornnoth.

It has been settled since at least Roman times and saw major expansion in the 19th century with the coming of the railways which for many years was the major employer in the village.

Because this part of Lincolnshire has several steep inclines, many freight trains passing through Barnetby required extra locomotives in order to cope with the gradients.

For this purpose, a locomotive depot was built at nearby Wrawby junction, which falls within Barnetby’s boundaries. The remains of its turntable pit are all that’s left of it now

Barnetby features two churches – one which is active, the other redundant, but both have stories to tell. It’s also littered (in a good way) with other fascinating old buildings and folklore tales

The village has a selection of shops, pubs and a well regarded primary school. There are also many thriving community groups which together make it a popular village to live in.

Its another brilliant North Lincolnshire village on the Lincolnshire Wolds. Let’s go!

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#BarnetbyleWold, #Brigg, #NorthLincolnshire, #Lincolnshire,

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Remains of Turntable:


Barnetby Boys Memorial:


GENUKI:


Village Hall Mural:


Barnetby United:


Co Op/Deborah Scaffolding:


Parish Council:


Listed buildings:


Post Office:


Stothard House:


Holcombe Guest House:


Surgery:


St Barnabas Church:


Primitive Chapel:


Wesleyan Chapel:


Barnetby Silver Band:


National School:


Mill image:
By Paul Glazzard, CC BY-SA 2.0,

Demographics:


Zoopla:


Jaime’s Fitness Studio:


Pastdays:


Some of the following music tracks may appear in this video:
Brendan Perkins - “Foxsnow” (B. Perkins)

Brendan Perkins - “Mickey's House” (B. Perkins)

The Keyhouse - Voices (H. Flunder)

The Keyhouse - Circles (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - Sun (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “Angels” (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “C Song” (H. Flunder)


I have me a Facebook page too!


And now an INSTAGRAM - @andythevillageidiot

Come and join The Village People! (Subscribers only!)


Please consider buying me a coffee to support the channel! The more I get the faster I'll get to your parish!

SOUTH KILLINGHOLME: North Lincolnshire Parish #55 of 56

NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE PARISH #55: SOUTH KILLINGHOLME

Welcome to the second of the Killingholmes. This is South Killingholme, which is much larger than its Northern counterpart, and by some margin. That wasn’t always the case however

The parish was predominately agricultural and sparsely populated less than 100 years. That all changed when the oil refineries to the North and East of the village were built in the 1960s

Unlike North Killingholme, which generally avoided mass expansion, South Killingholme became much larger almost overnight, providing homes for workers in the refineries

Most of the village was built in the early 1970s. Since then development has slowed somewhat. Like its Northern twin, the parish is split roughly 50:50 between residential and industrial use

Industry here consists mainly of petroleum storage, oil refining and power generation. Part of Immingham Dock falls within its boundaries too. Some agricultural land remains, albeit little

South Killingholme is split into two parts by a road – the A160 – which when built, cut off one side of the village from the other. These two parts are linked today by a brand new bridge

Now because it was raining heavily, I’ve had to cut some bits of video here and there because they looked and sounded shocking. Nonetheless, I reckon what remains still looks pretty good

Time to stop jabbering and get walking. Here’s South Killingholme

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#SouthKillingholme, #Lincolnshire, #NorthLincolnshire, #Immingham,

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Primitive Methodist Chapel:


GENUKI:


Cross Keys:


Pilgrim Fathers:


Immingham Transport:


Landfill/Wind Turbine:


Bridge/A160 Road Improvement Scheme:


Lighthouses:





Haven Pits:



Killingholme Station:





Demographics:


Rightmove:


Jaime’s Fitness Studio:


Pastdays:


Some of the following music tracks may appear in this video:
Brendan Perkins - “Foxsnow” (B. Perkins)

Brendan Perkins - “Mickey's House” (B. Perkins)

The Keyhouse - Voices (H. Flunder)

The Keyhouse - Circles (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - Sun (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “Angels” (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “C Song” (H. Flunder)


I have me a Facebook page too!


And now an INSTAGRAM - @andythevillageidiot

Come and join The Village People! (Subscribers only!)


Please consider buying me a coffee to support the channel! The more I get the faster I'll get to your parish!

Phillips 66 Humber Refinery Killingholme Lincolnshire England By Drone 2023

Phillips 66 Humber Refinery is Located on the East Coast of England in North Linconshire Uk.
Humbers Facilities include Crude distilling,Naphtha Reforming,Fluid Catalytic Cracking, Hydrodesulfurization, Thermal cracking and Delayed Coking units.

Thanks For Watching
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#oil #refinery #drone #dji #england #uk #travel #4k #factory

Crofts Virtual Viewing - 8 Brewster Ave, Immingham. £99,950

Crofts Estate Agents are delighted to offer sale with NO FORWARD CHAIN this three bedroom semi detached house located in the heart of Immingham. Enjoying the benefits of being within walking distance of a range local amenities, nearby local bus routes and excellent road links via the A180. Internal viewing will reveal an entrance hallway, lounge-diner and kitchen. To the side of the property, there is a WC, utility and understairs storage. To the first floor, there are three good size bedrooms and a bathroom. Externally there is off road parking and well proportioned gardens to the front and rear. Viewings can be arranged by contacting our Immingham branch. | EPC Rating D | Council tax band A | Call Crofts for full details on (01469) 564294
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Cleethorpes UK

Opis

Scunthorpe Walk: Town Centre【4K】

Located in North Lincolnshire, around 13 miles southwest of the Humber Bridge, is the town of Scunthorpe.

It is recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as 'Escumesthorpe', which is derived from Old Norse, meaning 'Skuma's village/hamlet' - Skuma presumably being the name of a Viking settler.

Scunthorpe was just a collection of five quiet villages up until 1860. It was around this time that vast iron ore deposits were discovered in the area, leading to the subsequent development of its steel industry. At first the iron ore was exported to iron producers in South Yorkshire. Later on, with the development of the Trent, Ancholme and Grimsby Railway, Scunthorpe was able to receive coal/coke from colliery towns such as Doncaster. With this, they were able to produce homegrown foundries for iron production.

During the Second World War Scunthorpe was subject to some air raid attacks from the German Luftwaffe, albeit not to the same degree as certain other towns and cities. Iron and steel manufacturing continued during these years in spite of the apparent risk. A monument dedicated to the steelworkers of the time is situated on the High Street (visible just before the 4-minute mark).

In 1967 three major steelworks companies in Scunthorpe (Appleby-Frodingham, Redbourn Iron Works and Normanby Works) merged under the umbrella of the newly-formed British Steel. Privatisation of British Steel occurred in 1988, and after a merger, became Corus, then Tata Steel Europe. British Steel Ltd bought back the company in 2016, though in 2019 entered insolvency.

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Filmed: 10th March 2021

Link to the walk on Google Maps:

Filmed on a Sony FDR-AX700 with a Zhiyun Crane 2 and a Rode Stereo VideoMic Pro.

What's cute and fluffy, loves windy days and never needs feeding? This ---

TIMESTAMPS:

0:00 Trafford Street
0:14 St John's Church (now a visual arts centre)
0:33 High Street
3:38 Scunthorpe Steelworkers Sculpture
4:00 High Street
10:56 Oswald Road
15:30 North Lincolnshire Museum
15:53 Oswald Road

Road trip to Skegness UK

#Roadtrip #travel #Skegness #beverlybright

Road trip to Skegness with friends...

Immingham estate

Immingham estate

Grimsby| Louth| Lincolnshire Worlds| Bus 51 from Grimsby Town to Louth Bus Station, UK| July 2023

Views from the upper deck of bus 51 from Grimsby Town to Louth Bus Station, UK. The bus accepts contactless payments as well as cash payment.

This bus travels through farm land and villages. Enjoy the journey and the country views.

Date filmed: Saturday 01July 2023

Filming location: Lincolnshire, UK

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#grimsby #stagecoachbus #louth #licolnshirewolds

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