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Mablethorpe

Mablethorpe is a seaside town in the civil parish of Mablethorpe and Sutton, in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire, England.[1] In 1961 the civil parish had a population of 3,611.[2] On 1 April 1974 the parish was changed to form "Mablethorpe and Sutton".[3] The population including nearby Sutton-on-Sea was 12,531 at the 2011 census and estimated at 12,633 in 2019.[4]

Mablethorpe
Clockwise from top: St Mary's Church, Sandtrain on Mablethorpe Beach, High Street, Seats on ramp looking towards town centre, Promenade and aerial view of Mablethorpe
Mablethorpe
Location within Lincolnshire
Population12,531 (2011. with Sutton-on-Sea)
OS grid referenceTF506850
• London130 mi (210 km) SSW
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Areas of the town
Post townMABLETHORPE
Postcode districtLN12
Dialling code01507
PoliceLincolnshire
FireLincolnshire
AmbulanceEast Midlands
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Lincolnshire
53°20′27″N 0°15′40″E / 53.3409°N 0.261°E / 53.3409; 0.261

The town was visited regularly by Alfred, Lord Tennyson, a 19th-century Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom. Some town features have been named after him, such as Tennyson Road and the now closed Tennyson High School.

History edit

Roman Empire edit

A hoard of Roman treasure was found in Mablethorpe in the 1980s, as were a Roman brooch and pottery.[5][6]

Mablethorpe Hall edit

Mablethorpe has existed as a town for many centuries, gaining its market town charter in 1253. Coastal erosion means some of it was lost to the sea in the 1540s. Records of the Fitzwilliam family of Mablethorpe Hall date back to the 14th century. In the 19th century, it was a centre for ship breaking in the winter. Mablethorpe Hall is to the west of the town along Alford Road near the Church of St Mary.[7] The Mablethorpe church parish includes Trusthorpe.

Town lifeboats edit

In 1883 Mablethorpe's first lifeboat station was built, and ran until the First World War, when it closed temporarily due to crew shortages. These continued and the station closed permanently after the war. It reopened as an inshore lifeboat station in 1965. An additional station was opened in 1996.[8] A D-class lifeboat, D-506 Patrick Rex Moren, went into service on 9 July 1996, followed in 2001 by a B-class Atlantic 75-class lifeboat, B–778 Joan Mary, and in 2005 by a more modern D-class lifeboat, D–653 William Hadley.

In 1998, a bronze medal was awarded to the helmsman for service on 12 April, when the lifeboat rescued a crew of two and saved the fishing vessel Lark, which had broken down in the surf and was drifting towards the shore without her anchor. The lifeboat was launched in a force 7 gale and a heavy swell – extreme conditions for this class. The helmsman had difficulty in negotiating the rough seas to reach the fishing boat, decided it was too hazardous to take off the crew and passed a line and towed her from danger – a considerable feat in huge seas for a lifeboat smaller than the fishing boat and powered by one 40-hp outboard engine.

East Coast floods edit

In 1953, Mablethorpe was hit by the disastrous East Coast floods. The seawall was breached on 31 January. A granite rock memorial was unveiled on the coast on 31 January 2013 on the 60th anniversary of the disaster, in memory of the town's 42 victims.[9][10]

In literature edit

 
One of Britain's most renowned historical poets, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, once frequented Mablethorpe. It is said that he used to shout his poetry aloud towards the sea.

Mablethorpe is the destination for the fictional Morel family's first holiday in the still popular D. H. Lawrence novel, Sons and Lovers, published in 1913: "At last they got an answer from Mablethorpe, a cottage such as they wished for thirty shillings a week. There was immense jubilation. Paul was wild with joy for his mother's sake. She would have a real holiday now. He and she sat at evening picturing what it would be like. Annie came in, and Leonard, and Alice, and Kitty. There was wild rejoicing and anticipation. Paul told Miriam. She seemed to brood with joy over it. But the Morels' house rang with excitement."

Mablethorpe is the seaside setting for the Ted Lewis crime novel GBH, published in 1980.[11] The novel was his last and has been described as a "lost masterwork".[12]

Transport edit

Mablethorpe and much of east Lincolnshire lost its rail service in 1970 to the Beeching Axe, despite its long history.[13] The station site is now the town's sports centre.

Stagecoach operate an hourly service to Skegness, as well as a service to Louth and Lincoln. Grayscroft Coaches operates several services from a base in Victoria Road. Brylaine runs a service between Mablethorpe and Alford and Spilsby, usually every two hours.[14]

Lincolnshire County Council operates a demand-responsive CallConnect service linking remoter areas to connection points at Alford, Chapel St Leonards and Mablethorpe for mainline bus services.[15]

Geography edit

Mablethorpe, in the East Lindsey council district, is administered with Sutton-on-Sea and Trusthorpe as the civil parish of Mablethorpe and Sutton. The original parish of Mablethorpe covers a rectangular area inland along Alford Road towards Maltby le Marsh, as far as Grange Leisure Park, where Earl's Bridge crosses West Bank.[16][17][18][19] The south of the former parish follows the Trusthorpe Drains, which are crossed at Bamber's Bridge on Mile Lane.[20] Out towards Alford lies Strubby Airfield, with the Strubby Aviation Club and Lincs Gliding Club. To the north is the large parish of Theddlethorpe St Helen, which extends to the River Great Eau at Saltfleetby. The town is the eastern terminus of the A52. The town is also accessed by the A1104 and A16 through Alford. The A157 heads west towards Louth and is said to be the "sixth bendiest A-road in the UK".[21]

Commerce edit

The town's one retail bank branch, Barclays, closed in July 2019.[22] There are three supermarkets – a Co-op (which also includes a branch of Boyes), Lidl and from October 2021 the very first Tesco opened its doors. Branches of some high street chains are present, but most shops in Mablethorpe are independently operated. Market days vary through the year: Monday (Summer),Thursday (year round).

 
The Time and Tide Bell

Leisure edit

Family attractions include a small fairground and an award-winning beach with traditional seaside amusement arcades and one of the largest family entertainment centers in England named The Mirage. One of Mablethorpe's long-standing features, its sand train, takes visitors to and from the northern end of the beach.[23][24] Mablethorpe Seal Sanctuary and Wildlife Centre is also north of the town.

A Time and Tide Bell installed on the beach near the Seal Sanctuary in 2019 is one of a series around the UK, rung by high tides.[25][26]

Mablethorpe's cinema, the Loewen in Quebec Road, was previously known as the Bijou. The Dunes leisure complex lies on Mablethorpe's seafront. The seafront also gained a skatepark in 2008, which includes a small funbox, a spine and two quarter pipes.

Several small caravan parks and guest houses provide tourist accommodation.

Electric power edit

Just over a mile north-east of the town, near the Seal Sanctuary, was the now-closed Theddlethorpe Gas Terminal, which supplied 5 per cent of the UK's gas. To the west is the Bambers wind farm, housing eight turbines and producing five MW of power since November 2004. An extension called Bambers II opened in November 2006 and produces an additional five MW of power.[27] The two turbines of Mablethorpe wind farm, which produce 1.2 MW of power, were the first such in Lincolnshire when built in July 2002. All three wind farms are owned by Ecotricity and stand at the corner of West Bank and the Trusthorpe Drains. Mablethorpe's Star of the East is on the seafront.

Media edit

The local weekly newspapers are the Mablethorpe Leader and The Target.[28]

Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC Yorkshire and Lincolnshire and ITV Yorkshire. Television signals are received from the Belmont TV transmitter. [29]

Radio coverage for Lincolnshire is provided by BBC Radio Lincolnshire and Lincs FM. In October 2012, volunteers created a local community radio station, Coastal FM.[30]

Education edit

The community's primary school is Mablethorpe Primary Academy School.[31] The Mablethorpe site of Monks' Dyke Tennyson College closed in August 2016.[32]

Events edit

 
A decorated beach hut on Mablethorpe's seafront

Mablethorpe hosts a unique beach-hut festival each September.[33] Privately owned beach huts compete in outward design, amidst a backdrop of poetry, music, and drama.[34]

Mablethorpe has long hosted motorbike sand racing each winter and spring. This has inspired the Lincolnshire Bike Week, following the Mablethorpe and Sutton-on-Sea Bike Nights.[35]

Each summer Mablethorpe hosts an illuminations event (a "switch on"), for which a celebrity is invited. Those officiating have included Barbara Windsor, Timmy Mallett and Wolf and Hunter of Gladiators.

References edit

  1. ^ OS Explorer map 283:Louth and Mablethorpe: (1:25 000):ISBN 978 0319238240
  2. ^ "Population statistics Mablethorpe AP/CP through time". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 7 September 2023.
  3. ^ "Louth Registration District". UKBMD. Retrieved 7 September 2023.
  4. ^ City Pop site. Retrieved 13 April 2021.
  5. ^ "HeritageGateway - Home *". www.heritagegateway.org.uk. Retrieved 5 November 2022.
  6. ^ UK.[dead link]
  7. ^ St Mary's church geograph.org.uk
  8. ^ "Geograph:: Mablethorpe Lifeboat © Michael Patterson".
  9. ^ BBC News. Retrieved 16 June 2019.
  10. ^ Mablethorpe info. Retrieved 16 June 2019.
  11. ^ Powers, John (7 May 2015). "Gangsters, Goons And 'Grievous Bodily Harm' In Ted Lewis' London". NPR.org. Retrieved 1 July 2020.
  12. ^ About GBH, Penguin Random House. Retrieved 28 June 2020.
  13. ^ Stewart E Squires, The Lost Railways of Lincolnshire, Castlemead Publications, Ware, 1986 ISBN 0-948555-14-9, pp. 38–39.
  14. ^ Grayscroft services. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  15. ^ Mablethorpe Transport. Retrieved 7 May 2020.
  16. ^ A1104.
  17. ^ . Archived from the original on 23 December 2007.
  18. ^ "Geograph:: Earl's Bridge © Stephen Horncastle".
  19. ^ "Geograph:: West Bank © Stephen Horncastle".
  20. ^ "Geograph:: Trusthorpe Drains and the Wind Farm © Geoff Pick cc-by-sa/2.0".
  21. ^ "BBC NEWS – UK – England – Dorset – Bendiest roads in the UK revealed". 6 February 2006.
  22. ^ East Lindsey District Council site. Retrieved 07 October 2019.
  23. ^ "Geograph:: The train calling at platform 6 © Rog Frost".
  24. ^ "Geograph:: Tracks of the Sand Train, Mablethorpe © Tim Hallam cc-by-sa/2.0".
  25. ^ "The Mablethorpe Bell". Time and Tide Bell. Retrieved 30 September 2021.
  26. ^ "Mablethorpe hosts the latest Time and Tide Bell for Lincolnshire". Transition Town Louth. Retrieved 30 September 2021.
  27. ^ "Geograph:: Wind Farm near Mablethorpe © Ian Paterson".
  28. ^ "Louth Leader".
  29. ^ https://ukfree.tv/transmitters/tv/Belmont
  30. ^ Coastal FM.
  31. ^ Mablethorpe Community Primary School.
  32. ^ . Archived from the original on 26 January 2018.
  33. ^ Bathing Beauties
  34. ^ "BBC NEWS – In Pictures – Picture Gallery: Mablethorpe huts". 22 September 2007.
  35. ^ archived from the original on 4 August 2019. Retrieved 9 April 2022

Further reading edit

  • Winston Kime, Mablethorpe and Sutton-on-Sea in Times Past, Skegness: C. H. Major & Co., 1990
  • Alfred J. Ludlam, Louth, Mablethorpe and Willoughby Loop, Locomotion Papers, no. 162, Oxford: Oakwood Press, 1987
  • Jeff Morris, The Story of the Mablethorpe and North Lincolnshire Lifeboats, Coventry: Lifeboat Enthusiasts' Society, 1989
  • A. E. B. Owen, "Coastal Erosion in East Lincolnshire", The Lincolnshire Historian, vol. 1, no. 9, 1952, pp. 330–341
  • A. E. B. Owen, "Salt, Sea Banks and Medieval Settlement on the Lindsey Coast", N. Field and A. White, eds, A Prospect of Lincolnshire, Lincoln: privately published, 1984, pp. 46–49
  • A. E. B. Owen, "Mablethorpe St Peter's and the Sea", Lincolnshire History and Archaeology, vol. 21 (1986), pp. 61–62
  • T. S. Patchett, The History of Mablethorpe County School, Mablethorpe: Mablethorpe County Primary School, 1968
  • Simon Pawley, "Lincolnshire Coastal Villages and the Sea c. 1300–c. 1600: Economy and Society", PhD thesis, University of Leicester, 1984
  • R. E. Pearson, "Railways in Relation to Resort Development in East Lincolnshire", East Midlands Geographer, vol. 4, 1968, pp. 281–295
  • David N. Robinson, The Book of the Lincolnshire Seaside: The Story of the Coastline from the Humber to the Wash, Barracuda, 1981
  • David N. Robinson, "The Changing Coastline", Dennis R. Mills (ed.), Twentieth Century Lincolnshire, History of Lincolnshire, no. 12, Lincoln: History of Lincolnshire Committee of the Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology, 1989, pp. 155–180
  • Ruth N. Neller, The Growth of Mablethorpe as a Seaside Resort, 1800–1939, Mablethorpe: SBK Books, 2000
  • Ruth N. Neller, "Skegness, Mablethorpe and Cleethorpes: contrasts of land ownership and investment in the development of seaside resorts", Lincolnshire History and Archaeology, vol. 47, 2012, pp. 35–47
  • Sally Scott, "The early days of planning", Dennis R. Mills, ed., Twentieth Century Lincolnshire, History of Lincolnshire, no. 12, Lincoln: History of Lincolnshire Committee of the Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology, 1989, pp. 181–211

External links edit

  Media related to Mablethorpe at Wikimedia Commons

  • Mablethorpe's Town Website
  • The largest public collection of Mablethorpe photos and information
  • The Rotary Club of Alford and Mablethorpe
  • Business and Events directory for Mablethorpe and surrounding areas
  • Photos of Skegness, Mablethorpe, Chapel St. Leonards from the past to present day 2 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  • Mablethorpe and Sutton Town Council
  • Mablethorpe Wind Farm
  • Coastal Community Challenge

News items edit

  • Star of the East in January 2007
  • Bambers Wind Farm opens in November 2004

Video clips edit

  • Seal sanctuary
  • Pathe newsreel, 1953, Flood victims evacuated to Mablethorpe
  • Pathe newsreel, 1953, Queen visiting flood victims in Tilbury & Mablethorpe
  • Pathe newsreel, 1955, Duke of Edinburgh visits flood defences

mablethorpe, seaside, town, civil, parish, sutton, east, lindsey, district, lincolnshire, england, 1961, civil, parish, population, april, 1974, parish, changed, form, sutton, population, including, nearby, sutton, 2011, census, estimated, 2019, clockwise, fro. Mablethorpe is a seaside town in the civil parish of Mablethorpe and Sutton in the East Lindsey district of Lincolnshire England 1 In 1961 the civil parish had a population of 3 611 2 On 1 April 1974 the parish was changed to form Mablethorpe and Sutton 3 The population including nearby Sutton on Sea was 12 531 at the 2011 census and estimated at 12 633 in 2019 4 MablethorpeClockwise from top St Mary s Church Sandtrain on Mablethorpe Beach High Street Seats on ramp looking towards town centre Promenade and aerial view of MablethorpeMablethorpeLocation within LincolnshirePopulation12 531 2011 with Sutton on Sea OS grid referenceTF506850 London130 mi 210 km SSWCivil parishMablethorpe and SuttonDistrictEast LindseyShire countyLincolnshireRegionEast MidlandsCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomAreas of the townList Miami BeachSaltfleetbySaltfleetby All SaintsSaltfleetby St ClementsSaltfleetby St PeterSandilandsSutton on SeaTheddlethorpeTheddlethorpe All SaintsTheddlethorpe St HelenThorpeTrusthorpePost townMABLETHORPEPostcode districtLN12Dialling code01507PoliceLincolnshireFireLincolnshireAmbulanceEast MidlandsUK ParliamentLouth and HorncastleList of places UK England Lincolnshire 53 20 27 N 0 15 40 E 53 3409 N 0 261 E 53 3409 0 261The town was visited regularly by Alfred Lord Tennyson a 19th century Poet Laureate of the United Kingdom Some town features have been named after him such as Tennyson Road and the now closed Tennyson High School Contents 1 History 1 1 Roman Empire 1 2 Mablethorpe Hall 1 3 Town lifeboats 1 4 East Coast floods 1 5 In literature 2 Transport 3 Geography 4 Commerce 4 1 Leisure 5 Electric power 6 Media 7 Education 8 Events 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External links 11 1 News items 11 2 Video clipsHistory editRoman Empire edit A hoard of Roman treasure was found in Mablethorpe in the 1980s as were a Roman brooch and pottery 5 6 Mablethorpe Hall edit Mablethorpe has existed as a town for many centuries gaining its market town charter in 1253 Coastal erosion means some of it was lost to the sea in the 1540s Records of the Fitzwilliam family of Mablethorpe Hall date back to the 14th century In the 19th century it was a centre for ship breaking in the winter Mablethorpe Hall is to the west of the town along Alford Road near the Church of St Mary 7 The Mablethorpe church parish includes Trusthorpe Town lifeboats edit In 1883 Mablethorpe s first lifeboat station was built and ran until the First World War when it closed temporarily due to crew shortages These continued and the station closed permanently after the war It reopened as an inshore lifeboat station in 1965 An additional station was opened in 1996 8 A D class lifeboat D 506 Patrick Rex Moren went into service on 9 July 1996 followed in 2001 by a B class Atlantic 75 class lifeboat B 778 Joan Mary and in 2005 by a more modern D class lifeboat D 653 William Hadley In 1998 a bronze medal was awarded to the helmsman for service on 12 April when the lifeboat rescued a crew of two and saved the fishing vessel Lark which had broken down in the surf and was drifting towards the shore without her anchor The lifeboat was launched in a force 7 gale and a heavy swell extreme conditions for this class The helmsman had difficulty in negotiating the rough seas to reach the fishing boat decided it was too hazardous to take off the crew and passed a line and towed her from danger a considerable feat in huge seas for a lifeboat smaller than the fishing boat and powered by one 40 hp outboard engine East Coast floods edit In 1953 Mablethorpe was hit by the disastrous East Coast floods The seawall was breached on 31 January A granite rock memorial was unveiled on the coast on 31 January 2013 on the 60th anniversary of the disaster in memory of the town s 42 victims 9 10 In literature edit nbsp One of Britain s most renowned historical poets Alfred Lord Tennyson once frequented Mablethorpe It is said that he used to shout his poetry aloud towards the sea Mablethorpe is the destination for the fictional Morel family s first holiday in the still popular D H Lawrence novel Sons and Lovers published in 1913 At last they got an answer from Mablethorpe a cottage such as they wished for thirty shillings a week There was immense jubilation Paul was wild with joy for his mother s sake She would have a real holiday now He and she sat at evening picturing what it would be like Annie came in and Leonard and Alice and Kitty There was wild rejoicing and anticipation Paul told Miriam She seemed to brood with joy over it But the Morels house rang with excitement Mablethorpe is the seaside setting for the Ted Lewis crime novel GBH published in 1980 11 The novel was his last and has been described as a lost masterwork 12 Transport editMablethorpe and much of east Lincolnshire lost its rail service in 1970 to the Beeching Axe despite its long history 13 The station site is now the town s sports centre Stagecoach operate an hourly service to Skegness as well as a service to Louth and Lincoln Grayscroft Coaches operates several services from a base in Victoria Road Brylaine runs a service between Mablethorpe and Alford and Spilsby usually every two hours 14 Lincolnshire County Council operates a demand responsive CallConnect service linking remoter areas to connection points at Alford Chapel St Leonards and Mablethorpe for mainline bus services 15 Geography editMablethorpe in the East Lindsey council district is administered with Sutton on Sea and Trusthorpe as the civil parish of Mablethorpe and Sutton The original parish of Mablethorpe covers a rectangular area inland along Alford Road towards Maltby le Marsh as far as Grange Leisure Park where Earl s Bridge crosses West Bank 16 17 18 19 The south of the former parish follows the Trusthorpe Drains which are crossed at Bamber s Bridge on Mile Lane 20 Out towards Alford lies Strubby Airfield with the Strubby Aviation Club and Lincs Gliding Club To the north is the large parish of Theddlethorpe St Helen which extends to the River Great Eau at Saltfleetby The town is the eastern terminus of the A52 The town is also accessed by the A1104 and A16 through Alford The A157 heads west towards Louth and is said to be the sixth bendiest A road in the UK 21 Commerce editThe town s one retail bank branch Barclays closed in July 2019 22 There are three supermarkets a Co op which also includes a branch of Boyes Lidl and from October 2021 the very first Tesco opened its doors Branches of some high street chains are present but most shops in Mablethorpe are independently operated Market days vary through the year Monday Summer Thursday year round nbsp The Time and Tide BellLeisure edit Family attractions include a small fairground and an award winning beach with traditional seaside amusement arcades and one of the largest family entertainment centers in England named The Mirage One of Mablethorpe s long standing features its sand train takes visitors to and from the northern end of the beach 23 24 Mablethorpe Seal Sanctuary and Wildlife Centre is also north of the town A Time and Tide Bell installed on the beach near the Seal Sanctuary in 2019 is one of a series around the UK rung by high tides 25 26 Mablethorpe s cinema the Loewen in Quebec Road was previously known as the Bijou The Dunes leisure complex lies on Mablethorpe s seafront The seafront also gained a skatepark in 2008 which includes a small funbox a spine and two quarter pipes Several small caravan parks and guest houses provide tourist accommodation Electric power editJust over a mile north east of the town near the Seal Sanctuary was the now closed Theddlethorpe Gas Terminal which supplied 5 per cent of the UK s gas To the west is the Bambers wind farm housing eight turbines and producing five MW of power since November 2004 An extension called Bambers II opened in November 2006 and produces an additional five MW of power 27 The two turbines of Mablethorpe wind farm which produce 1 2 MW of power were the first such in Lincolnshire when built in July 2002 All three wind farms are owned by Ecotricity and stand at the corner of West Bank and the Trusthorpe Drains Mablethorpe s Star of the East is on the seafront Media editThe local weekly newspapers are the Mablethorpe Leader and The Target 28 Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC Yorkshire and Lincolnshire and ITV Yorkshire Television signals are received from the Belmont TV transmitter 29 Radio coverage for Lincolnshire is provided by BBC Radio Lincolnshire and Lincs FM In October 2012 volunteers created a local community radio station Coastal FM 30 Education editThe community s primary school is Mablethorpe Primary Academy School 31 The Mablethorpe site of Monks Dyke Tennyson College closed in August 2016 32 Events edit nbsp A decorated beach hut on Mablethorpe s seafrontMablethorpe hosts a unique beach hut festival each September 33 Privately owned beach huts compete in outward design amidst a backdrop of poetry music and drama 34 Mablethorpe has long hosted motorbike sand racing each winter and spring This has inspired the Lincolnshire Bike Week following the Mablethorpe and Sutton on Sea Bike Nights 35 Each summer Mablethorpe hosts an illuminations event a switch on for which a celebrity is invited Those officiating have included Barbara Windsor Timmy Mallett and Wolf and Hunter of Gladiators nbsp Looking towards the fairground nbsp The seafront nbsp Kite buggying on the town s beach nbsp Ye Olde Curiosity Museum nbsp The town s sand train seen in the summer of 2007 nbsp Assorted food stalls near the beachReferences edit OS Explorer map 283 Louth and Mablethorpe 1 25 000 ISBN 978 0319238240 Population statistics Mablethorpe AP CP through time A Vision of Britain through Time Retrieved 7 September 2023 Louth Registration District UKBMD Retrieved 7 September 2023 City Pop site Retrieved 13 April 2021 HeritageGateway Home www heritagegateway org uk Retrieved 5 November 2022 UK dead link St Mary s church geograph org uk Geograph Mablethorpe Lifeboat c Michael Patterson BBC News Retrieved 16 June 2019 Mablethorpe info Retrieved 16 June 2019 Powers John 7 May 2015 Gangsters Goons And Grievous Bodily Harm In Ted Lewis London NPR org Retrieved 1 July 2020 About GBH Penguin Random House Retrieved 28 June 2020 Stewart E Squires The Lost Railways of Lincolnshire Castlemead Publications Ware 1986 ISBN 0 948555 14 9 pp 38 39 Grayscroft services Retrieved 7 May 2020 Mablethorpe Transport Retrieved 7 May 2020 A1104 Grange Leisure Park Archived from the original on 23 December 2007 Geograph Earl s Bridge c Stephen Horncastle Geograph West Bank c Stephen Horncastle Geograph Trusthorpe Drains and the Wind Farm c Geoff Pick cc by sa 2 0 BBC NEWS UK England Dorset Bendiest roads in the UK revealed 6 February 2006 East Lindsey District Council site Retrieved 07 October 2019 Geograph The train calling at platform 6 c Rog Frost Geograph Tracks of the Sand Train Mablethorpe c Tim Hallam cc by sa 2 0 The Mablethorpe Bell Time and Tide Bell Retrieved 30 September 2021 Mablethorpe hosts the latest Time and Tide Bell for Lincolnshire Transition Town Louth Retrieved 30 September 2021 Geograph Wind Farm near Mablethorpe c Ian Paterson Louth Leader https ukfree tv transmitters tv Belmont Coastal FM Mablethorpe Community Primary School Mablethorpe CLIP Archived from the original on 26 January 2018 Bathing Beauties BBC NEWS In Pictures Picture Gallery Mablethorpe huts 22 September 2007 Lincolnshire Bike Week homepage archived from the original on 4 August 2019 Retrieved 9 April 2022Further reading editWinston Kime Mablethorpe and Sutton on Sea in Times Past Skegness C H Major amp Co 1990 Alfred J Ludlam Louth Mablethorpe and Willoughby Loop Locomotion Papers no 162 Oxford Oakwood Press 1987 Jeff Morris The Story of the Mablethorpe and North Lincolnshire Lifeboats Coventry Lifeboat Enthusiasts Society 1989 A E B Owen Coastal Erosion in East Lincolnshire The Lincolnshire Historian vol 1 no 9 1952 pp 330 341 A E B Owen Salt Sea Banks and Medieval Settlement on the Lindsey Coast N Field and A White eds A Prospect of Lincolnshire Lincoln privately published 1984 pp 46 49 A E B Owen Mablethorpe St Peter s and the Sea Lincolnshire History and Archaeology vol 21 1986 pp 61 62 T S Patchett The History of Mablethorpe County School Mablethorpe Mablethorpe County Primary School 1968 Simon Pawley Lincolnshire Coastal Villages and the Sea c 1300 c 1600 Economy and Society PhD thesis University of Leicester 1984 R E Pearson Railways in Relation to Resort Development in East Lincolnshire East Midlands Geographer vol 4 1968 pp 281 295 David N Robinson The Book of the Lincolnshire Seaside The Story of the Coastline from the Humber to the Wash Barracuda 1981 David N Robinson The Changing Coastline Dennis R Mills ed Twentieth Century Lincolnshire History of Lincolnshire no 12 Lincoln History of Lincolnshire Committee of the Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology 1989 pp 155 180 Ruth N Neller The Growth of Mablethorpe as a Seaside Resort 1800 1939 Mablethorpe SBK Books 2000 Ruth N Neller Skegness Mablethorpe and Cleethorpes contrasts of land ownership and investment in the development of seaside resorts Lincolnshire History and Archaeology vol 47 2012 pp 35 47 Sally Scott The early days of planning Dennis R Mills ed Twentieth Century Lincolnshire History of Lincolnshire no 12 Lincoln History of Lincolnshire Committee of the Society for Lincolnshire History and Archaeology 1989 pp 181 211External links edit nbsp Media related to Mablethorpe at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Mablethorpe Mablethorpe s Town Website The largest public collection of Mablethorpe photos and information The Rotary Club of Alford and Mablethorpe Business and Events directory for Mablethorpe and surrounding areas Photo gallery for Mablethorpe Trusthorpe Sutton On Sea with images old and new Photos of Skegness Mablethorpe Chapel St Leonards from the past to present day Archived 2 February 2016 at the Wayback Machine Visit Lincolnshire Mablethorpe and Sutton Town Council Mablethorpe Wind Farm Coastal Community ChallengeNews items edit Star of the East in January 2007 Bambers Wind Farm opens in November 2004Video clips edit Seal sanctuary Pathe newsreel 1953 Flood victims evacuated to Mablethorpe Pathe newsreel 1953 Queen visiting flood victims in Tilbury amp Mablethorpe Pathe newsreel 1955 Duke of Edinburgh visits flood defencesPortals nbsp England nbsp United Kingdom Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mablethorpe amp oldid 1186535411, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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