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St Brelade

St Brelade (Jèrriais and French: Saint Brélade) is one of the twelve parishes of Jersey in the Channel Islands. It is around 7 kilometres (4.3 mi)[a] west of St Helier. Its population was 11,012 as of 2021.[2]

Saint Brelade
St. Brelade's coastline of promontories and bays includes Portelet and its tidal island, L'Île au Guerdain with Portelet Tower (also known as Janvrin's Tomb)
Location of Saint Brelade in Jersey
Crown DependencyJersey, Channel Islands
Government
 • ConnétableMichael Jackson
Area
 • Total12.8 km2 (4.9 sq mi)
 • RankRanked 2nd
Population
 (2021)
 • Total11,012
 • Density860/km2 (2,200/sq mi)
Time zoneGMT
 • Summer (DST)UTC+01
Postcode district
Postcode sector
8
Websitewww.parish.gov.je/st_brelade/

The parish is the second-largest parish by surface area, covering 7,103 vergées (12.78 km2), which is 11% of the total land surface of the island and it occupies the southwestern part of the island. It is the only parish to border only one other parish, St. Peter.

The parish is largely a suburban commuter area for St Helier, with expansive low rise residential development, especially in the urban area of Les Quennevais. However, the parish also has a number of notable natural sites, such as the sand dunes of St Ouen's Bay.

History edit

Its name is derived from a 6th-century Celtic or Welsh "wandering saint" named Branwalator or St. Brelade (also Branwallder, Broladre, Brelodre, Brélade), who is said to have been the son of the Cornish king, Kenen. He is also said to have been a disciple of Samson of Dol, and worked with this churchman in Cornwall and the Channel Islands. A large section of the Jersey Railway linking La Corbière with Saint Helier ran through the parish between 1870 and 1936.

The town of St. Aubin is named for St. Aubin, Bishop of Angers in France.

The Jersey parish system has been in place for centuries. By Norman times, the parish boundaries were firmly fixed and remain largely unchanged since.[3]

In 1180 Jersey was divided by the Normans into three ministeria for administrative purposes. St. Brelade was part of Crapoudoit. Crapoudoit likely refers to the stream running through St. Peter's Valley.[3]

Towards the end of the 18th century, after the Battle of Jersey, trade with the New World from Jersey grew, as did Jersey's shipbuilding industry. Jersey has had a long tradition of shipbuilding. In 1683, the Constable of St. Brelade fined four men living near St. Aubin for cluttering up the road from their houses to Le Boulevard.

Governance edit

The parish is a first-level administrative division of the Bailiwick of Jersey, a British Crown dependency. The highest official in the parish is the Connétable of St. Brealde. The incumbent office holder is Michael Jackson, who has held the office since 2005.[4] The parish administration is headquartered in the village of St. Aubin.

At present, the parish forms two electoral districts for States Assembly elections and elects three Deputies, as well as eight Senators in an islandwide constituency. The current Deputies for St. Brelade are listed below.[5] Under the proposed electoral reform, St. Brelade will form a single constituency, electing four representatives alongside its Connétable.[6]

Electoral districts and vigntaines of St. Brelade
District Vigntaines Deputy/ies
1 La Vingtaine de Noirmont

La Vingtaine du Coin

John Young
2 La Vingtaine des Quennevais

La Vingtaine de la Moye

Monty Tadier

Graham Truscott

Geography edit

 
An overview of Saint Brélade's Bay on a hot summer day at low tide.

St. Brelade is in the south-west of the island of Jersey, part of the Channel Islands archipelago. It is the only parish to border one other parish, St. Peter. It is located 4.7 kilometres (2.9 mi) west of St Helier. The parish has a number of popular bays, St. Brelade's Bay, Ouaisné, Portelet and parts of both St. Ouen's Bay and St. Aubin's Bay falling within the parish boundaries.

The parish is quite urbanised, with 29% of the land area being built environment. It is also the least agricultural, with only 24% of the parish dedicated to cultivation. However, 38% dedicated to the natural environment, as the parish has notable natural coastal areas.[7]

The parish's population is largely centred around three primary areas of development. The largest is the Les Quennevais built-up area, developed largely in incorporating St. Brelade's Bay. This area has a number of shops, a leisure centre and a secondary school. The other areas are the developments around Noirmont and Mont Nicolle and the town of St. Aubin, the historic centre of the parish - originally a fishing port facing St. Helier on the opposite side of St. Aubin's Bay.

Portelet Bay is found in the parish at the bottom of the Noirmont headland, between St. Brelade and St. Aubin's Bay. It features an islet named Île au Guerdain (named for a local family) on which stands a Martello Tower.[8] In the 1920s, one of the first holiday camps on Jersey opened overlooking the bay, at one point owned by Sir Billy Butlin, though the camp closed in 2000.[9][10][11] The bay featured a controversy around 2010, with planning permission granted for a number of homes overlooking the bay.[12]

Demography edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
19919,331—    
19969,560+2.5%
200110,134+6.0%
201110,568+4.3%

Culture and community edit

The traditional nickname for St. Bréladaises (inhabitants of St. Brelade) is carpéleuses (caterpillars). The emblem or symbol of the parish is a fish, legendarily linked to the saint himself, and though the type of fish has been debated, a 2010 redesign, based on heraldic research, depicted it as a cod.[13]

In 2009 the parish won a Britain in Bloom award in the small coastal resort category.[14] Britain in Bloom awards too in 2012, 2014 & 2015.

The parish has a number of community facilities. The Sir Winston Churchill Memorial Park is located in St. Brelade's Bay and the Elephant Park is located near the Les Quennevais Precinct. There is a branch of the Jersey Library called the Les Quennevais Brach Library. It was formerly located within Les Quennevais school until that site was moved in 2020. It is now located in the Communicare Centre.[15]

 
The new large and modern Les Quennevais school, opened in 2020

Les Quennevais leisure centre in St. Brelade will be redeveloped in two phases as part of the Government's Inspiring Active Places Strategy. First will be to provision of a new skate park and a four court netball facility as well as a 3G football pitch. The Jersey indoor netball facility is current at Les Ormes (also in St. Brelade), which is being closed and redeveloped by March 2023. The target date for this phase of development is 2024. By 2032, phase 2 will be complete: the existing sports centre buildings will be demolished and replaced with parking after the construction of a new leisure centre, incorporating an eight lane 25 m swimming pool, an eight court sports hall, a permanent recreational gymnastics facility and a large fitness suite. The site will also be the new home of the Jersey Library Les Quennevais Branch.[16]

Twin towns edit

St. Brelade is twinned with:

Transport edit

 
The Railway Walk

There are a large number of main roads in the parish, including the western terminus of the A1 and the Five Mile Road.

The parish was formerly served by the Jersey Railway, which connected Corbière to St. Aubin then onto St. Helier along the coast. In 1871, it was proposed that the Jersey Railway, which at the time only extended to St. Aubin, should be extended to La Moye to serve the Granite quarry. The line was closed in 1936 after a fire in a station. The Germans re-utilised the track during the Occupation.[18]

The old railway track has been converted into a shared-use countryside park and pathway known as the Railway Walk. As part of the Sustainable Transport Policy, there will be a toucan crossing installed at the junction of the Walk with La Rue du Pont Marquet,[19] which is an accident black spot.[20]

Landmarks edit

Jersey's prison is situated at La Moye, and the island's desalination plant is also sited in the parish.

St Aubin's Fort is located on an islet in St Aubin's Bay. It was built at the command of Sir Henry Cornish in 1542. It became a fort in 1643, during the English Civil War. The islet was refortified during the Occupation.[21]

 
Corbière Lighthouse

The lighthouse at La Corbière features on the Jersey £5 note (see Jersey pound) and the Jersey 20-pence piece (see coins of the Jersey pound). "La Corbière" means the place of ravens or crows. This corner of the island had a fearsome reputation amongst sailors and was the scene of many wrecks. The lighthouse was constructed in 1873, designed by Sir John Coode. A causeway connects the lighthouse to the mainland but is cut off for large parts of the day.[22]

Religious sites edit

 
La Chapelle ès Pêcheurs, situated alongside St. Brélade's Parish Church, contains the best-preserved examples of mediaeval art in Jersey

St. Brelade's Church is situated at the end of St. Brelade's Bay, an unusual situation being comparatively distant from historic centres of population. The small Fisherman's Chapel alongside contains mediaeval frescoes which survived the iconoclasm of the Reformation. According to folklore, the reason for the siting of the parish church is that originally the St. Bréladais intended to build the church inland, much nearer to the homes of the congregation. However les p'tits faîtchieaux (the little people) who had their temple in a nearby dolmen were disturbed by the construction of the foundations and, every night, would undo the construction work and magically transport all the tools and materials down to the shoreline. Eventually the humans gave up and built the church where the fairies had indicated.

Another church is located close to the Parish Hall in St. Aubin. St Aubin on the Hill is an Anglican church in the Parish of St. Brelade dedicated to St. Aubin of Angers. The church that stands today was built in the 19th century and is a fine example of Victorian Gothic style, with beautiful stained glass windows. When this was built the appointed minister of the Anglican church also supported the building of a local primary school just a short walk from the church. St. Brelade's School served the whole parish until it closed in 1984 and became St. Brelade's College, a school that teaches English to foreign pupils.

Notable people edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Measured from the church to the Royal Square

See also edit

  • Jersey Folk Lore, John H. L'Amy, Jersey 1927

References edit

  1. ^ "St.Brelade Homepage". Parish.gov.je. Retrieved 4 October 2012.
  2. ^ Report on the 2011 Jersey Census 1 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ a b Syvret, Marguerite (2011). Balleine's History of Jersey. The History Press. ISBN 978-1860776502.
  4. ^ "Members". statesassembly.gov.je. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  5. ^ "Results 2018". Vote.je - States of Jersey Elections. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  6. ^ https://statesassembly.gov.je/assemblypropositions/2020/p.139-2020.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  7. ^ "Size and land cover of Jersey". Government of Jersey. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
  8. ^ Liddiard, Tim. Portelet: site of special (ecological) interest (PDF). Jersey: Jersey Biodiversity Centre. pp. 1–2.
  9. ^ ""The Clerk's Holiday Guide"". The Clerk. National Union of Clerks and Administrative Workers. August 1926. p. 119. JERSEY -- HOLIDAY CAMP -- Bathing, boating, tennis. Beautifully situated in an ideal camping climate.--Write for Illustrated Booklet.--Secretary, Portelet, Jersey.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  10. ^ Smith, Len (15 November 2004). "WW2 People's War - The Beginning". BBC. Retrieved 28 September 2022. In September 1939 when the declaration of war was broadcast on radio by Chamberlain, I was enjoying the weekend following the first week of a fortnight holiday at Jersey Holiday Camp, Portlet Bay in Jersey.
  11. ^ "HAVE A STARRY TIME AT BUTLINS [from the Sunday Mirror]". The Free Library. 5 January 1997. Retrieved 28 September 2022. Island holidays are available at Portelet and Plemont Bay on Jersey...
  12. ^ "Minister's baffling decision". jerseyeveningpost.com. Retrieved 28 April 2021.
  13. ^ Vay, Kenny (2010). "Fishy goings on!". La Baguette. Retrieved 27 June 2022.
  14. ^ "BBC News - St Brelade wins gold in Entente Florale Europe". Bbc.co.uk. 25 September 2010. Retrieved 7 October 2012.
  15. ^ Lewis, Kevin (30 October 2020). "Communicare Centre, Ground Floor Wing, Route des Quennevais, St. Brelade: Lease for Les Quennevais Branch Library". Government of Jersey.
  16. ^ Inspiring Active Places Strategy 2021 (PDF) (Report). Government of Jersey. 2021.
  17. ^ "Jersey Evening Post - St Brelade twins with Granville". jerseyeveningpost.com. 11 April 2005. Retrieved 4 July 2021.
  18. ^ "Disused Stations: Corbière Station". www.disused-stations.org.uk. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  19. ^ "Crossing on Railway Walk delay". jerseyeveningpost.com. Retrieved 13 March 2021.
  20. ^ Road signs on La Rue du Pont Marquet. 13 March 2021.
  21. ^ Heritage, Jersey. "St Aubin's Fort". JerseyHeritage.org. Retrieved 21 December 2020.
  22. ^ Heritage, Jersey. "La Corbière Lighthouse". JerseyHeritage.org. Retrieved 21 December 2020.

External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Saint Brélade at Les Pages Jèrriaises

49°11′49″N 2°11′48″W / 49.19696°N 2.19658°W / 49.19696; -2.19658

brelade, celtic, saint, branwalator, jèrriais, french, saint, brélade, twelve, parishes, jersey, channel, islands, around, kilometres, west, helier, population, 2021, saint, breladeparishst, brelade, coastline, promontories, bays, includes, portelet, tidal, is. For the Celtic saint see Branwalator St Brelade Jerriais and French Saint Brelade is one of the twelve parishes of Jersey in the Channel Islands It is around 7 kilometres 4 3 mi a west of St Helier Its population was 11 012 as of 2021 2 Saint BreladeParishSt Brelade s coastline of promontories and bays includes Portelet and its tidal island L Ile au Guerdain with Portelet Tower also known as Janvrin s Tomb FlagCoat of armsLocation of Saint Brelade in JerseyCrown DependencyJersey Channel IslandsGovernment 1 ConnetableMichael JacksonArea Total12 8 km2 4 9 sq mi RankRanked 2ndPopulation 2021 Total11 012 Density860 km2 2 200 sq mi Time zoneGMT Summer DST UTC 01Postcode districtJE3Postcode sector8Websitewww wbr parish wbr gov wbr je wbr st wbr brelade wbr The parish is the second largest parish by surface area covering 7 103 vergees 12 78 km2 which is 11 of the total land surface of the island and it occupies the southwestern part of the island It is the only parish to border only one other parish St Peter The parish is largely a suburban commuter area for St Helier with expansive low rise residential development especially in the urban area of Les Quennevais However the parish also has a number of notable natural sites such as the sand dunes of St Ouen s Bay Contents 1 History 2 Governance 3 Geography 4 Demography 5 Culture and community 6 Twin towns 7 Transport 8 Landmarks 9 Religious sites 10 Notable people 11 Notes 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksHistory editIts name is derived from a 6th century Celtic or Welsh wandering saint named Branwalator or St Brelade also Branwallder Broladre Brelodre Brelade who is said to have been the son of the Cornish king Kenen He is also said to have been a disciple of Samson of Dol and worked with this churchman in Cornwall and the Channel Islands A large section of the Jersey Railway linking La Corbiere with Saint Helier ran through the parish between 1870 and 1936 The town of St Aubin is named for St Aubin Bishop of Angers in France The Jersey parish system has been in place for centuries By Norman times the parish boundaries were firmly fixed and remain largely unchanged since 3 In 1180 Jersey was divided by the Normans into three ministeria for administrative purposes St Brelade was part of Crapoudoit Crapoudoit likely refers to the stream running through St Peter s Valley 3 Towards the end of the 18th century after the Battle of Jersey trade with the New World from Jersey grew as did Jersey s shipbuilding industry Jersey has had a long tradition of shipbuilding In 1683 the Constable of St Brelade fined four men living near St Aubin for cluttering up the road from their houses to Le Boulevard Governance editThe parish is a first level administrative division of the Bailiwick of Jersey a British Crown dependency The highest official in the parish is the Connetable of St Brealde The incumbent office holder is Michael Jackson who has held the office since 2005 4 The parish administration is headquartered in the village of St Aubin At present the parish forms two electoral districts for States Assembly elections and elects three Deputies as well as eight Senators in an islandwide constituency The current Deputies for St Brelade are listed below 5 Under the proposed electoral reform St Brelade will form a single constituency electing four representatives alongside its Connetable 6 Electoral districts and vigntaines of St Brelade District Vigntaines Deputy ies1 La Vingtaine de Noirmont La Vingtaine du Coin John Young2 La Vingtaine des Quennevais La Vingtaine de la Moye Monty Tadier Graham TruscottGeography edit nbsp An overview of Saint Brelade s Bay on a hot summer day at low tide St Brelade is in the south west of the island of Jersey part of the Channel Islands archipelago It is the only parish to border one other parish St Peter It is located 4 7 kilometres 2 9 mi west of St Helier The parish has a number of popular bays St Brelade s Bay Ouaisne Portelet and parts of both St Ouen s Bay and St Aubin s Bay falling within the parish boundaries The parish is quite urbanised with 29 of the land area being built environment It is also the least agricultural with only 24 of the parish dedicated to cultivation However 38 dedicated to the natural environment as the parish has notable natural coastal areas 7 The parish s population is largely centred around three primary areas of development The largest is the Les Quennevais built up area developed largely in incorporating St Brelade s Bay This area has a number of shops a leisure centre and a secondary school The other areas are the developments around Noirmont and Mont Nicolle and the town of St Aubin the historic centre of the parish originally a fishing port facing St Helier on the opposite side of St Aubin s Bay Portelet Bay is found in the parish at the bottom of the Noirmont headland between St Brelade and St Aubin s Bay It features an islet named Ile au Guerdain named for a local family on which stands a Martello Tower 8 In the 1920s one of the first holiday camps on Jersey opened overlooking the bay at one point owned by Sir Billy Butlin though the camp closed in 2000 9 10 11 The bay featured a controversy around 2010 with planning permission granted for a number of homes overlooking the bay 12 Demography editHistorical populationYearPop 19919 331 19969 560 2 5 200110 134 6 0 201110 568 4 3 Culture and community editThe traditional nickname for St Breladaises inhabitants of St Brelade is carpeleuses caterpillars The emblem or symbol of the parish is a fish legendarily linked to the saint himself and though the type of fish has been debated a 2010 redesign based on heraldic research depicted it as a cod 13 In 2009 the parish won a Britain in Bloom award in the small coastal resort category 14 Britain in Bloom awards too in 2012 2014 amp 2015 The parish has a number of community facilities The Sir Winston Churchill Memorial Park is located in St Brelade s Bay and the Elephant Park is located near the Les Quennevais Precinct There is a branch of the Jersey Library called the Les Quennevais Brach Library It was formerly located within Les Quennevais school until that site was moved in 2020 It is now located in the Communicare Centre 15 nbsp The new large and modern Les Quennevais school opened in 2020Les Quennevais leisure centre in St Brelade will be redeveloped in two phases as part of the Government s Inspiring Active Places Strategy First will be to provision of a new skate park and a four court netball facility as well as a 3G football pitch The Jersey indoor netball facility is current at Les Ormes also in St Brelade which is being closed and redeveloped by March 2023 The target date for this phase of development is 2024 By 2032 phase 2 will be complete the existing sports centre buildings will be demolished and replaced with parking after the construction of a new leisure centre incorporating an eight lane 25 m swimming pool an eight court sports hall a permanent recreational gymnastics facility and a large fitness suite The site will also be the new home of the Jersey Library Les Quennevais Branch 16 Twin towns editSt Brelade is twinned with nbsp Granville Normandy 17 Transport edit nbsp The Railway WalkThere are a large number of main roads in the parish including the western terminus of the A1 and the Five Mile Road The parish was formerly served by the Jersey Railway which connected Corbiere to St Aubin then onto St Helier along the coast In 1871 it was proposed that the Jersey Railway which at the time only extended to St Aubin should be extended to La Moye to serve the Granite quarry The line was closed in 1936 after a fire in a station The Germans re utilised the track during the Occupation 18 The old railway track has been converted into a shared use countryside park and pathway known as the Railway Walk As part of the Sustainable Transport Policy there will be a toucan crossing installed at the junction of the Walk with La Rue du Pont Marquet 19 which is an accident black spot 20 Landmarks editJersey s prison is situated at La Moye and the island s desalination plant is also sited in the parish St Aubin s Fort is located on an islet in St Aubin s Bay It was built at the command of Sir Henry Cornish in 1542 It became a fort in 1643 during the English Civil War The islet was refortified during the Occupation 21 nbsp Corbiere LighthouseThe lighthouse at La Corbiere features on the Jersey 5 note see Jersey pound and the Jersey 20 pence piece see coins of the Jersey pound La Corbiere means the place of ravens or crows This corner of the island had a fearsome reputation amongst sailors and was the scene of many wrecks The lighthouse was constructed in 1873 designed by Sir John Coode A causeway connects the lighthouse to the mainland but is cut off for large parts of the day 22 Religious sites edit nbsp La Chapelle es Pecheurs situated alongside St Brelade s Parish Church contains the best preserved examples of mediaeval art in JerseySt Brelade s Church is situated at the end of St Brelade s Bay an unusual situation being comparatively distant from historic centres of population The small Fisherman s Chapel alongside contains mediaeval frescoes which survived the iconoclasm of the Reformation According to folklore the reason for the siting of the parish church is that originally the St Breladais intended to build the church inland much nearer to the homes of the congregation However les p tits faitchieaux the little people who had their temple in a nearby dolmen were disturbed by the construction of the foundations and every night would undo the construction work and magically transport all the tools and materials down to the shoreline Eventually the humans gave up and built the church where the fairies had indicated Another church is located close to the Parish Hall in St Aubin St Aubin on the Hill is an Anglican church in the Parish of St Brelade dedicated to St Aubin of Angers The church that stands today was built in the 19th century and is a fine example of Victorian Gothic style with beautiful stained glass windows When this was built the appointed minister of the Anglican church also supported the building of a local primary school just a short walk from the church St Brelade s School served the whole parish until it closed in 1984 and became St Brelade s College a school that teaches English to foreign pupils Notable people editIsaac LeVesconte 12 August 1822 26 October 1879 Nova Scotia businessman and political figure Charles Robin Robert Pipon Marett of La Haule Manor Claude Cahun Andre Gide Simon Laurens Derek Warwick former British Formula One driver Ronald Price Hickman car designer and inventor who designed the original Lotus Elan the Lotus Elan 2 and the Lotus Europa as well as the Black amp Decker Workmate Bob Murray businessman businessman and former chairman of Sunderland A F C An accountant by trade he made his fortune through the growth and sale of the Spring Ram kitchen manufacturing company Jack Higgins pseudonym of British novelist Harry Patterson author of The Eagle Has LandedNotes edit Measured from the church to the Royal SquareSee also editJersey Folk Lore John H L Amy Jersey 1927References edit St Brelade Homepage Parish gov je Retrieved 4 October 2012 Report on the 2011 Jersey Census Archived 1 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine a b Syvret Marguerite 2011 Balleine s History of Jersey The History Press ISBN 978 1860776502 Members statesassembly gov je Retrieved 13 March 2021 Results 2018 Vote je States of Jersey Elections Retrieved 13 March 2021 https statesassembly gov je assemblypropositions 2020 p 139 2020 pdf bare URL PDF Size and land cover of Jersey Government of Jersey Retrieved 21 December 2020 Liddiard Tim Portelet site of special ecological interest PDF Jersey Jersey Biodiversity Centre pp 1 2 The Clerk s Holiday Guide The Clerk National Union of Clerks and Administrative Workers August 1926 p 119 JERSEY HOLIDAY CAMP Bathing boating tennis Beautifully situated in an ideal camping climate Write for Illustrated Booklet Secretary Portelet Jersey a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Smith Len 15 November 2004 WW2 People s War The Beginning BBC Retrieved 28 September 2022 In September 1939 when the declaration of war was broadcast on radio by Chamberlain I was enjoying the weekend following the first week of a fortnight holiday at Jersey Holiday Camp Portlet Bay in Jersey HAVE A STARRY TIME AT BUTLINS from the Sunday Mirror The Free Library 5 January 1997 Retrieved 28 September 2022 Island holidays are available at Portelet and Plemont Bay on Jersey Minister s baffling decision jerseyeveningpost com Retrieved 28 April 2021 Vay Kenny 2010 Fishy goings on La Baguette Retrieved 27 June 2022 BBC News St Brelade wins gold in Entente Florale Europe Bbc co uk 25 September 2010 Retrieved 7 October 2012 Lewis Kevin 30 October 2020 Communicare Centre Ground Floor Wing Route des Quennevais St Brelade Lease for Les Quennevais Branch Library Government of Jersey Inspiring Active Places Strategy 2021 PDF Report Government of Jersey 2021 Jersey Evening Post St Brelade twins with Granville jerseyeveningpost com 11 April 2005 Retrieved 4 July 2021 Disused Stations Corbiere Station www disused stations org uk Retrieved 13 March 2021 Crossing on Railway Walk delay jerseyeveningpost com Retrieved 13 March 2021 Road signs on La Rue du Pont Marquet 13 March 2021 Heritage Jersey St Aubin s Fort JerseyHeritage org Retrieved 21 December 2020 Heritage Jersey La Corbiere Lighthouse JerseyHeritage org Retrieved 21 December 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Saint Brelade Official website nbsp Saint Brelade at Les Pages Jerriaises 49 11 49 N 2 11 48 W 49 19696 N 2 19658 W 49 19696 2 19658 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title St Brelade amp oldid 1177266960, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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