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What does Blackpool mean?

Osvaldo Legros
Osvaldo Legros
2025-04-20 17:05:12
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Blackpool is a seaport in western Lancashire, in northwestern England. It is a seaside resort town. Blackpool is a town and resort in NW England, in Blackpool unitary authority, Lancashire on the Irish Sea. It is famous for its tower, 158 m (518 ft) high, and its illuminations. Blackpool is also a unitary authority in NW England, in Lancashire.
Furman Rowe
Furman Rowe
2025-04-20 17:00:58
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Blackpool itself was first seen in medieval ages. It takes its name from the black pool of water was known as 'Le Pull' - a discoloured stream draining Marton Mere and Marton Moss through peat lands. The stream ran alongside Blackpool Old Road to the sea.
Julian Ortiz
Julian Ortiz
2025-04-20 14:24:23
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The name Blackpool was first seen in the Medieval ages. In 1602, ‘Blackpoole’ has its first mention on the baptismal register of the Bispham parish. A historic drainage channel running over a peat bog, which discharged discoloured water into the Irish Sea, gave Blackpool its name. This black pool of water was known as ‘Le Pull’ due to how the peat lands in which the stream ran through discoloured the water. ‘Black Poole’ eventually evolved into ‘Blackpool’. The stream drained Marton Mere and Marton Moss into the sea and close to what we now know as ‘Manchester Square’. In the 15th century, the settlement in the area was known as ‘Pul’. A map from 1532 calls the area ‘the pole howsys alias the north howsys’.