- Bidston
infobox UK place
country= England
official_name= Bidston
latitude= 53.4021
longitude= -3.0783
population= 10,446 (2001 Census)citeweb|url=http://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=561370&c=bidston&d=14&e=16&g=361334&i=1001x1003x1004&m=0&enc=1|title=2001 Census: Bidston|work=Office for National Statistics|accessdate=2 July|accessyear=2007 ]
metropolitan_borough= Wirral
metropolitan_county=Merseyside
region= North West England
constituency_westminster= Birkenhead
post_town= PRENTON
postcode_district = CH43
postcode_area= CH
dial_code= 0151
os_grid_reference= SJ284900
map_type= MerseysideBidston is a suburb of
Birkenhead , on theWirral Peninsula ,Merseyside ,England . Administratively, it is also a ward of theMetropolitan Borough of Wirral . Before local government reorganisation on1 April 1974 , it was part of theCounty Borough of Birkenhead, within the geographical county ofCheshire . At the 2001 census, the population of Bidston was 10,446, consisting of 4,725 males and 5,721 females.Description
Located close to the
M53 motorway , the village of Bidston is situated on a hill, with an elevation of approximately 60 metres above sea level. Bidston is a mixture of the well-preserved Bidston Village, Bidston Hill, the industrial estate Bidston Moss and a modern housing estate.The area has one of the largest
Tesco supermarkets on the Wirral, situated at Bidston Moss.Attractions
Bidston Hill comprises convert|100|acre|km2 of heathland and woodland maintained by Wirral Metropolitan Borough Council as anature reserve and publicpark . The land was purchased in stages from 1894 to 1908 by Birkenhead Corporation from local landowner Lord Vyner. It is the site ofBidston Windmill , built around 1800 andBidston Observatory , owned by theProudman Oceanographic Laboratory . The hill also contains a number of ancient rock carvings, including that of a Sun Goddess thought to have been carved by the Norse-Irish around 1000 AD. [citeweb|url=http://www.wirral.gov.uk/LGCL/100006/200073/670/content_0001101.html|title=Bidston Hill|work=Metropolitan Borough of Wirral|accessdate=2 July|accessyear=2007]Tam O'Shanter Cottage was believed to be built about 300 years ago. Its name derives from a stone carving of the poem "Tam O'Shanter" by
Robert Burns , which adorns a wall on the site. In 1950, the building was recognised as having special historical interest for preservation. Despite two fires and threats of demolition in 1954 and 1975, the cottage was rebuilt and restored in the mid 1970s. Four acres around the cottage were developed as acity farm in 1986, known as the Tam O'Shanter Urban Farm. [citeweb|url=http://www.wirral.gov.uk/LGCL/100006/200029/469/content_0001103.html|title=Tam O'Shanter Urban Farm|work=Metropolitan Borough of Wirral|accessdate=2 July|accessyear=2007]Opposite the cottage is Flaybrick Memorial Gardens, Birkenhead's first municipal
cemetery . [citeweb|url=http://www.gavinrymill.com/flaybrick/his.html|title=Flaybrick Memorial Gardens: History|accessdate=18 March|accessyear=2008] The grounds encompass anarboretum and nature trails.Transport
The locality is served by
Bidston railway station . Trains operate toLiverpool andWest Kirby on theWirral Line of theMerseyrail network and toWrexham on theBorderlands Line .ee also
*
St Oswald's Church, Bidston References
External links
* [http://www.tamoshanterfarm.org.uk Tam O'Shanter Urban Farm]
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