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Preston England Temple

The Preston England Temple is the 52nd operating temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints . The LDS Church took root in Preston, Lancashire, when the first Mormon missionaries arrived in 1837. Because of its place in LDS Church history and the growth of membership in Preston, LDS Church president Gordon B. Hinckley announced the area would be the site for Britain's second temple (the first was in Surrey, near London). The Preston England Temple is located in the town of Chorley, 10 miles (16 km) south of Preston, in Lancashire. It is the centrepiece of a 15-acre (6 hectare) complex that includes a stake centre, a missionary training centre, a family history facility, a distribution centre, temple patron housing, temple missionary accommodations and a grounds building. The temple itself has a modern, single-spire design and an exterior finish of Olympia white granite from Sardinia. The white granite exterior and zinc roof have caused it to be described as reminiscent of England's old churches. Hinckley dedicated the Preston England Temple on 7 June 1998. The temple has four ordinance rooms and four sealing rooms, and is the largest LDS temple in Europe, at 69,630 square feet (6,470 m²). The older London England Temple is smaller, at 46,174 square feet (4,290 m²) and is the second-largest temple in Europe, followed by the Madrid Spain Temple at 45,800 square feet (4,250 m2). The temple serves Latter-day Saints from the Midlands and northern parts of England, the whole of Scotland, the Isle of Man, the Belfast Stake in Northern Ireland and the Dublin Stake in the Republic of Ireland. The Limerick District in the Republic of Ireland is served by the London England Temple.

Knightmare

Knightmare is a Schwarzkopf/Zierer custom roller coaster that is SBNO at the now defunct Camelot Theme Park in Chorley, Lancashire, UK. It was originally built in 1987 for a theme park in Kobe, Japan called Portopialand under the name BMRX/Bavarian Mountain Railroad and was originally a dark indoor ride with a huge mountain themed structure surrounding it. After Portopialand closed in 2005, the roller coaster was dismantled and shipped over to the UK, after Camelot Theme Park successfully acquired it, it cost the theme park £3 million to build the roller coaster. The track and trains arrived at Camelot in late 2006 without the mountain structure that was originally surrounding it. In early 2007, the construction of the ride began at Camelot, with the ride finally opening to the public in the summer of 2007 as Knightmare. The ride originally featured five different coloured trains. But when the rollercoaster was relaunched at Camelot, the park chose to refurbish three of the five trains. Some of the steam train theming was removed from the front of the train. The three trains were painted differently with one being partly maroon, one partly purple and the other partly green. The other two trains were no longer used after the relaunch, it is unknown what happened to them. Each train had a capacity of 14 persons, and the ride had a minimum height restriction of 1.3 metres. The ride takes the train up in a semi-spiral chain lift, up to its tallest point at 80 feet tall, then it then drops the train into an overbanked turn. The ride then takes you through various sharp turns, multiple helixes and a near vertical bend halfway through the ride where you experience almost 5G, reaching speeds of about 40 mph. Knightmare was arguably one of the most intense rollercoasters in the UK. It was located and still stands in the Land of the Brave area of the park, situated on the former sites of Camelots long defunct flagship roller coasters; it was also next to the site of the Excalibur 2 ride. Knightmare was a unique rollercoaster, as it is one of only three of its kind in the world- Jetline at Gröna Lund and Lisebergbanan at Liseberg . After having much trouble with low visitor numbers and low incomes, The Story Group and Knights Leisure Limited announced that they were permanently closing Camelot Theme Park in November 2012, after 29 years of being open to the public. The rollercoaster still remains standing within the abandoned park, but is now protected by security to keep trespassers out.

Healey Nab

Healey Nab or "The Nab" is an area of countryside owned by Lancashire County Council containing rolling hills, moorland, woodland, ponds and streams to the east of Chorley, Lancashire, between the M61 and the West Pennine Moors. To the south east is Anglezarke Reservoir and to the north east White Coppice. The name "Healey Nab" is derived from heagh and ley . "Nab" is believed to derive from the Middle-English word nabb meaning a promontory or headland. The area is popular with walkers and a network of hiking trails criss-crosses the area. The Healey Nab area has two small man-made lakes, "Bottom Lodge" and "Top Lodge", a private fishing lake. The two used to be linked to Lower Healey Bleach Works, a finishing works of the town's cotton industry, the remaining structure of which has been incorporated into the sites conversion into a small industrial estate. The summit is Grey Heights, and near it is a disused quarry known as "Devil's Rock". Grey Heights and its cairn at 682 feet form the highest point and from there are views over Chorley and it is possible to see the skyline of Preston, Fiddlers Ferry power station in Merseyside, the silhouette of Blackpool Tower and the Irish Sea. From Chorley, "The Nab" dominates the landscape and is the first significant height gain in the transition from a heavily populated area to the moorland of the West Pennine Moors. There are two maintained mountain bike trails across healey nab, a 2km red loop with fun descents and tricky climbs, with a short but technical black dh run down the front. These are maintained by a local volunteer dig crew with lots of work planned for the next few years. There is also a bridleway.

Pikestones

Pikestones is the remains of a Neolithic Burial Cairn, located on Anglezarke moor in Lancashire, England. The site is approximately 150 feet long and 60 feet across at its widest point. It consisted of one burial chamber constructed of large upright slabs, capped by two lintel slabs, forming a chamber of 15 feet long, 3 feet wide and 3 feet high, covered by a huge mound of stones and turves. The cairn was aligned almost exactly North-South, with the burial chamber under the wider northern end. At the northern edge of the cairn, a double wall could be made out, curving inwards to form an entrance to a forecourt. Today the cairn has been badly robbed and the main features are the five large gritstone slabs, the remains of the burial chamber. Surprisingly, evidence suggests that the bodies were not interred directly in the tomb, but were left outside, perhaps at the entrance to the cairn, for birds and wild animals to consume the flesh and then, probably after elaborate ceremonies, the bones were placed inside the chamber. Pikestones is the earliest man-made structure in the area and only one other chambered tomb has been found in Lancashire. The monument must have taken an immense amount of labour to construct and like most long barrows was erected in a prominent position, located on a ridge at a height of just over 900 feet . This gave the neolithic builders excellent views, and made the structure visible from a wide area of the Lancashire plain, perhaps warning other people that the land belonged to the builders.

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