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Submission declined on 6 November 2023 by Vanderwaalforces (talk). This draft's references do not show that the subject qualifies for a Wikipedia article. In summary, the draft needs multiple published sources that are:
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- Comment: The essence of this is for us to see the plaques... Half of the table does not have an image. Please add them and resubmit. Also, add more sources. Vanderwaalforces (talk) 07:43, 6 November 2023 (UTC)
Blackburn has several plaques placed in locations of historic significance.
A blue plaque scheme, consisting of twenty-four plaques in the style of the English Heritage Plaques, was managed by Blackburn Civic Society until it folded.[1] Later, Blackburn Local History Society agreed to take on responsiblity of managing the local scheme and worked with Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council to add additional plaques as part of a local heritage festival in 2014.[2] A number of the blue plaques have since gone missing, though some have been replaced by granite plaques to make them less appealing to metal thieves.[3]
The British Film Institute placed two plaques in Blackburn as part of the Centenary of Cinema celebration in 1996.[4]
In addition to these, other plaques have been placed that do not belong to any organised scheme.
Locations of plaques edit
Subject | Image | Location | Plaque Text |
---|---|---|---|
Plug Plot Riots | BBC Radio Lancashire, Darwen Street, Blackburn 53°44′49″N 2°28′58″W / 53.74698°N 2.48280°W | Here in Darwen St on 15th August 1842, textile workers protesting against wage cuts in the famous "Plug Plot" were fired upon by troops of the 72nd Regiment. Up to three of the demonstrators are thought to have been killed. | |
Jack Walker | Randall Street, Blackburn 53°45′08″N 2°28′58″W / 53.75235°N 2.48281°W Note - The original blue plaque was placed in May 2001, but stolen in February 2014. [5][6] It was later replaced with a black granite plaque. [7] |
Jack Walker 1929 - 2000. Entrepreneur, philanthropist, benefactor, and patron of Blackburn Rovers was born here. | |
Blackburn Corporation Tramways | Jubilee Street, Blackburn 53°44′47″N 2°14′53″W / 53.74633°N 2.248054°W | Blackburn Corporation Tramways. Electrification commenced here March, 1899. Electricity generated here, the site of the town's first power station. A.S. Giles, Engineer. | |
John Noel Nichols | Bank House, 8 Adelaide Terrace, Dukes Brow, Blackburn 53°45′07″N 2°29′46″W / 53.75184°N 2.49599°W
|
Birthplace of John Noel Nichols, 1883 - 1966. Educated at Queen Elizabeth's Grammar and the inventor of Vimto. | |
Rev. Dr. Chad Varah, CH, CBE, MA | 105 New Park Street, Blackburn 53°45′06″N 2°29′22″W / 53.75165°N 2.48954°W | Rev. Dr. Chad Varah, CH, CBE, MA, was vicar of Holy Trinity Blackburn from 1942 to 1949. He founded the Samaritans in 1953. | |
Alfred Wainwright | 331 Audley Range, Blackburn 53°44′47″N 2°27′26″W / 53.74643°N 2.45733°W | The birthplace of Alfred Wainright, author and fell walker (1907 - 1991). | |
Professor John Garstang | Strawberry Bank, Blackburn 53°45′05″N 2°29′16″W / 53.75149°N 2.48764°W | Professor John Garstang (1876 - 1956) Egyptologist. Was born here 5th May, 1876. | |
Blackburn Rovers | Image available externally - Flickr | Ewood Park, Nuttall Street, Blackburn 53°43′43″N 2°29′25″W / 53.72849°N 2.49014°W | Blackburn Rovers. A founder member of the football league, 1888 |
Sir Robert Peel, Bart | Barton Street, Blackburn 53°44′53″N 2°29′09″W / 53.74800°N 2.48578°W | A farmhouse here was the early home of Sir Robert Peel, Bart., (1750 - 1830). Father of Robert Peel, Prime Minister. | |
Mitchell and Kenyon | Lord Street, Blackburn 53°44′58″N 2°29′09″W / 53.74954°N 2.48572°W | Mitchell and Kenyon. Blackburn's pioneer cinematographers and producers of Norden Films were based here 1897 - 1901. | |
Dorothy Whipple | Edgeware Road, Blackburn 53°45′22″N 2°30′03″W / 53.75600°N 2.50095°W | The novelist Dorothy Whipple nee Strirrup (1893 - 1966) was born in this house on 26th February 1893. | |
Blackburn and Over Darwen Tramway | Postal Order, 15 - 19 Darwen Street, Blackburn 53°44′48″N 2°28′57″W / 53.74668°N 2.48251°W | Blackburn and Over Darwen Tramway. This road junction was the northern terminus of the first street tramway in the kingdom to be worked entirely by steam, officially opened 14th April, 1881. | |
William Wolstenholme | Mill Lane, Blackburn 53°44′45″N 2°29′02″W / 53.74582°N 2.48380°W | Here, on 24 February 1865, was born William Wolstenholme MUS.BAC (OXON) F.R.C.O. -HON.CAUSA-, the gifted blind organist and composer. | |
A. N. Hornby | 41 King Street, Blackburn 53°44′47″N 2°29′14″W / 53.74635°N 2.48712°W | A. N. 'Monkey' Hornby (1847 - 1925) Captain of England at cricket and rugby and footballer for Blackburn Rovers, was born here 10th February 1847. | |
Nicolò Paganini | Paganini Inn, Lord Street, Blackburn 53°44′57″N 2°29′08″W / 53.74918°N 2.48559°W | Nicolò Paganini celebrated violinist stayed at an inn here when he gave a recital in Blackburn 5th September 1833. | |
River Blakewater | Darwen Street, Blackburn 53°44′41″N 2°14′54″W / 53.74467°N 2.248239°W Note - Plaque has been removed |
This crossing of the River Blakewater marks the site of the original ford. By the south side of the bridge stood the 18th century lock-up. | |
John Morley | Clayton Street, Blackburn 53°44′46″N 2°29′11″W / 53.74617°N 2.48631°W | John Morley, Viscount Morley of Blackburn (1838 - 1923). Author, Cabinet Minister and Secretary of State for India, was born in a house on this site on Christmas Eve 1838. | |
Harry Hornby | King Street, Blackburn 53°44′50″N 2°29′05″W / 53.74734°N 2.48479°W | The Leyland House, built 1741. Grade II listed. The birthplace of Sir Harry Hornby M.P. 29th August, 1841. | |
Blackburn Hundred | Billinge Wood, Blackburn 53°45′00″N 2°31′05″W / 53.74991°N 2.51815°W | On 15th May, 1429, the Three Weekly Court of the Blackburn Hundred was held on this hill. Here John Nowell paid homage for land that he held in Great Harwood from Thomas Hesketh of Rufford, the Lord of the Manor of Great Harwood | |
Gilbert Hoghton | 6 Adelaide Terrace, Blackburn 53°45′07″N 2°29′45″W / 53.75206°N 2.49572°W | Early in the English Civil War, Sir Gilbert Hoghton and his Preston Royalists bombarded Blackburn with cannon fire from here, Christmas Day, 1642 | |
Blackburn railway station (Two plaques) | Blackburn Railway Station (Foyer), Railway Road, Blackburn 53°44′48″N 2°28′46″W / 53.74654°N 2.47956°W
Note - These were in the Station foyer, but have now been removed. |
- Blackburn Railway Station. Railtrack acknowledges the contribution to the cost of restoration of the station frontage building in 1996 from the Railway Heritage Trust, Lancashire County Council, and the Borough of Blackburn.
- Blackburn Railway Station. This station was completed by the Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway in 1888, replacing the town's first station opened by the Blackburn & Preston Railway at this site in Stonybutts on 1st June 1846. The station frontage building is listed Grade II and stands in a Conservation Area.[9] | |
Lyceum Theatre [10] | Market Street Lane, Blackburn 53°44′49″N 2°29′01″W / 53.74708°N 2.48364°W
|
Lyceum Theatre. This building, then a theatre, was the venue for the first moving picture show in Blackburn. 28th September 1896. | |
Daniel Burley Woolfall | Image available externally - cottontowncat | 1 Crosshill Road, Blackburn 53°45′01″N 2°30′18″W / 53.75017°N 2.50497°W Note - Plaque has been removed |
Daniel Burley Woolfall, first British President of FIFA, 1900 - 1918, lived here. |
Kathleen Ferrier | 57 Lynwood Road, Blackburn 53°45′13″N 2°30′13″W / 53.75354°N 2.50373°W | The home from 1913 to 1933 of Kathleen Ferrier, contralto singer (1912 to 1953) | |
Wensley Fold C E School | Manor Road, Blackburn 53°44′57″N 2°30′25″W / 53.74924°N 2.50684°W | Wensley Fold C E School. The Victorian house formerly in these grounds became Crosshill Preparatory School, attended by Kathleen Ferrier contralto (1912 - 1953) | |
All Hallows Spring Well [12] | Image available externally - YouTube | Railway Road, Blackburn 53°44′50″N 2°28′45″W / 53.74734°N 2.47926°W
Note - No public access |
Below this plaque is the site of All Hallows Spring Well, in ancient times a place of pilgrimage and healing. Erected 1955 |
The Revidge Tank [13] | Image available externally - Lancashire Telegraph | Revidge Road, Blackburn 53°45′35″N 2°29′39″W / 53.75968°N 2.49421°W
Note - Plaque has been removed |
The Revidge Tank. This tank was built by Ashton Frost of Blackburn as a water service reservoir in 1987. It stands on the site of a bronze age burial mound dating from about 1,500 B.C. |
References edit
- ^ "Local historians bid to protect commemorative blue plaques in Blackburn". Lancashire Telegraph. 7 February 2014. Retrieved 5 November 2023.
- ^ "Council wants to remember leading lights with plaques in Blackburn". Lancashire Telegraph. 8 April 2014. Retrieved 5 November 2023.
- ^ "Blue plaques to honour Blackburn's stars". Lancashire Telegraph. 28 February 2014. Retrieved 5 November 2023.
- ^ British Film Institute. "Thanks for the Memories" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 11 September 2011. Retrieved 5 November 2023.
- ^ "Plaque for Jack unveiled". Lancashire Telegraph. Lancashire Telegraph. 14 May 2001. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
- ^ Jacobs, Bill (8 April 2014). "Council wants to remember leading lights with plaques in Blackburn". Lancashire Telegraph. Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
- ^ "Blue plaques to honour Blackburn's stars". Lancashire Telegraph. Lancashire Telegraph. 28 February 2014. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
- ^ Clough, Dan (19 September 2014). "Blackburn man who invented Vimto to be remembered with new plaque". Lancashire Telegraph. Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 12 April 2024.
- ^ "cottontowncat - Blue Plaques". www.cottontowncat.com. Retrieved 5 November 2023.
- ^ Roe, Ken. "Lyceum Theatre in Blackburn, GB - Cinema Treasures". cinematreasures.org. Retrieved 12 April 2024.
- ^ Farnworth, Amy (30 March 2023). "Missing film studio plaque mystery solved following Northgate shop renovations". Lancashire Telegraph. Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 10 April 2024.
- ^ Johnson, Gill (1 July 2018). "Secret history of ancient well in Blackburn town centre". Lancashire Telegraph. Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 12 April 2024.
- ^ Riding, Barbara. "A Brief History of Blackburn's Ancient Water Supply Leading up to the Construction of The Tank". Cotton Town. Retrieved 12 April 2024.