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Meols / ˈmɛlz / (sometimes known as Great Meols) is a suburb in the Metropolitan Borough of Wirral, Merseyside, England. On the north coast of the Wirral Peninsula, it forms a contiguous built up area with the nearby town of Hoylake which lies to the west.
- North Meols
North Meols (/ ˈ m iː l z /) is a civil parish and electoral...
- Meols railway station
0.271 million. 2022/23. 0.337 million. Notes. Passenger...
- North Meols
Find out more. Meols (pronounced Mells) is located on the north coast of the Wirral peninsula. The north Wirral shoreline has suffered significant coastal change and erosion in the past 200 years, and thousands of archaeological discoveries have resulted from this process.
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Meols is a village on the northern coast of the Wirral Peninsula in Cheshire. It is contiguous with the larger town of Hoylake, situated immediately to the west. The 2001 Census recorded the population of Meols as 5,110 (2,380 males, 2,730 females). [1] . The population of Meols was no longer recorded at the Census 2011. Contents. [ hide ]
Meols, on the north Wirral coast, is now seen as one of the most significant ancient sites in the north west of England. For thousands of years, people had made use of a natural harbour called the Hoyle Lake. This gave its name in modern times to Hoylake, the town which grew up nearby.
Shops near Meols railway station - geograph.org.uk - 1044882.jpg 640 × 479; 64 KB Signpost on Birkenhead Road Meols - geograph.org.uk - 1044877.jpg 640 × 479; 60 KB Starboard lateral post, Meols-by-Peter-Craine.jpg 480 × 640; 19 KB