Bolton-le-Sands
Bolton-Le-Sands is a large village in the
Lancaster district of
Lancashire,
England.
As of 2001, it had a population of around 7000.
Referred to as
Bodeltone in the
Domesday book, the village was known as Bolton until the arrival of the railways, when the name was changed to Bolton-Le-Sands to differentiate from similarly named towns on the same line, such as
Bolton near
Manchester.
The oldest church in the village, founded prior to 1094, is the Church of England Holy Trinity church, originally dedicated to St Michael. The oldest part of the current building is the tower, supposed to have been built around 1500. The nave and chancel date from the 19th century. The other churches are the Roman Catholic St. Mary of the Angels and the Christ Church United Reformed Church.
The
Lancaster Canal, built in the 1790s, is a major feature of the village. Also passing through the village is the
A6 and the
West Coast Main Line, although the railway station closed in
1969.
The village has one school, Bolton-le-Sands Church of England Primary School, with around 300 pupils from the ages of 4 to 11 in a modern school building. The school is a successor to the old Boys' Free Grammar School, which dates from 1657, with the 19th century school building still used for community education.
{{simple-compass-table|place=Bolton-Le-Sands|fmt=width=75%
N=Carnforth, Kendal | W=Morecambe Bay, Barrow-in-Furness | E= | S=Lancaster, Morecambe, Heysham
|