Your weekly retro round-up from the Lancashire Post
View email online
 
 
     
   
     
  Jul 15, 2022  
     
 
Adam Lord
 
Adam Lord
Audience Editor

 

Hello, 

Friday is when we round-up the best of our retro and nostalgia content from the last week. 

Let the good times roll with our look back at forgotten Preston pubs.

We’ve gone back to the archives to find you images of more Preston pubs that are no longer trading. 

Also, the ghost of proms past returns with a look back at Ashton High School’s leavers prom.

Once again the young lads and lasses in Year 11 gathered together for one final blast before closing the door on their high school chapter. 

Our year of choice is 2005, giving a real insight into what was going on in Preston 17 years ago. 

Thanks for reading, 

Adam

adam.lord@nationalworld.com

 

 
     
  29 more pictures of Preston pubs that have called time and are lost forever  
     
  Let the good times roll with our look back at forgotten Preston pubs.  
     
29 more pictures of Preston pubs that have called time and are lost forever
     
 
27 picture memories of Ashton High School's leavers prom nights of the past
27 picture memories of Ashton High School's leavers prom nights of the past
 
The ghost of proms past returns with a look back at Ashton High School’s leavers prom.
 
     
 
30 pictures memories to remind you what life was like in Preston in 2005
30 pictures memories to remind you what life was like in Preston in 2005
 
Taking you back through the years – this week it is the turn of 2005.
 
     
 
Postcards from Morecambe - the 1910s with Peter Wade
Postcards from Morecambe - the 1910s with Peter Wade
 
The perspective of history suggests an idyllic time before the Great War as if it were one long Edwardian summer.
 
     
 
Sir Tom Finney football pitch in Preston becomes a 'peace field' as it's twinned with the site of WW1 Christmas truce
Sir Tom Finney football pitch in Preston becomes a 'peace field' as it's twinned with the site of WW1 Christmas truce
 
A football pitch in Preston has gained international status as a ‘peace field’, after being twinned with the site of the World War One Christmas truce in honour of legendary player Sir Tom Finney.
 
     
     
     
   
     
     
     
   
 
Please note
Due to the unprecedented nature of the ongoing Coronavirus pandemic we have launched this new daily newsletter to keep you up to date with the latest official information and advice.

How to opt out of these emails
We are sending these daily Coronavirus email bulletins in addition to our daily newsletter emails.
If you would like to opt out of only these additional Public Interest emails, and continue to receive your regular daily newsletters, please click here.
 
   
 
You have received this email as you have an account on the Lancashire Evening Post, published by National World Publishing Ltd. To manage your individual newsletter preferences with us, please click here and log in to your account.
 
 
Alternatively you can update your email preferences to choose the types of emails you receive from National World Publishing Ltd, or unsubscribe from all future emails.

 
 
National World Publishing Ltd, a company registered in England and Wales with registered number 11499982, having its registered address at No 1 Leeds, 4th Floor, 26 Whitehall Road, Leeds, England, LS12 1BE, United Kingdom.

We will process your personal data in accordance with our Privacy notice.