View allAll Photos Tagged FLEETWOOD
Fleetwood Museum, Queen's Terrace, Fleetwood, Lancashire.
Mussel Gatherers, Sunderland Point, Lancashire, 1908.
By William Page Atkinson Wells (1872-1923).
Oil on canvas.
This painting depicts a cobbled and sandy shore, strewn with seaweed, on which women are collecting mussels from the waters of the receding tide (a traditional local occupation). Centrally placed on the promontory is a historically important group of buildings, including former warehouses that stored the first consignments of imported cotton from the West Indies. The work is though to be one of the finest known by the artist.
during Fleetwood Town’s Under 18s training session at Poolfoot Farm, Fleetwood, England on 12 August 2021. Photo by Sam Fielding / SLF Studios
Fleetwood Manager, Joey Barton joins the one minute applause being held in memory of the five people that lost their lives in last weekend’s tragic helicopter crash outside The King Power Stadium at Leicester City, including Chairman Vichai Srivaddhanaprabha during the Sky Bet League 1 match between Gillingham and Fleetwood Town at the MEMS Priestfield Stadium, Gillingham, England on 3 November 2018. Photo by Paul Dennis / PRiME Media Images.
Fleetwood Town Manager Joey Barton
during the The Leasing.com Trophy match between Everton U21 and Fleetwood Town at Goodison Park, Liverpool, England on 26 November 2019. Photo by kipax.
A photo of Fleetwood Mac performing at Allphones Arena in Sydney, Australia on the 22nd October, 2015.
© Rohan Anderson Photography.
Website: www.raphotography.com.au
Facebook: www.facebook.com/RohanAndersonPhotography
Instagram: rohanandersonphotography
Do not use without permission; Protected with PIXSY.
during the Sky Bet League One match between Cheltenham Town and Fleetwood Town on Saturday 4 March 2023. Photo by Sam Fielding / Fleetwood Town FC
Self billing applies where appropriate:
sam.fielding@fleetwoodtownfc.com BACS payments to Starling Bank, Account Number: 50967888, Sort Code: 60-83-71
NO UNPAID USE
The Fleetwood ship graveyard is a collection of abandoned ships that have been left to rot on the banks of the River Wyre. The graveyard is home to a variety of ships, including fishing boats, tugboats, and cargo ships, and they have been there for many years. Some of the ships were deliberately sunk as breakwaters, while others were simply abandoned after they became too old or damaged to be used.
Images taken during the EFL Sky Bet League 1 match played between Fleetwood Town and Ipswich Town on the final day of the 2022/23 football season. The match was played at Fleetwood's home ground, Highbury Stadium, on Sunday 7th May 2023. Images taken by Adam Gee for Fleetwood Town Football Club. Copyright © Adam Gee Photography 2023. No reproduction or other use without permission.
Photos taken of North West Women’s Regional League match between Fleetwood Town Wrens Ladies v Wythenshawe Women.
Images taken by Donna Artis Photography for Fleetwood Town Wrens.
Images are the property of Donna Artis Photography and may not be reproduced without permission. © Donna Artis Photography 2025. Sales: donnaartisphotography.zenfoliosite.com/
Fleetwood Town Manager Joey Barton
during the The Leasing.com Trophy match between Everton U21 and Fleetwood Town at Goodison Park, Liverpool, England on 26 November 2019. Photo by kipax.
St Peter, Fleetwood, Lancashire, 1839-41.
Window by Edmundson & Son, 1860.
St Peter with St George & St Luke.
Follow me and I will make you fishers of men.
The history surrounding Ralph Bolton Edmundson (1808-1864) may well be traced back to the opening of a stained glass business by William Wailes in Newcastle in 1838. Wailes was formerly a grocer and tea dealer. He had a great interest in stained glass and opened his business in 1838. Along with Hardman & Co, this became one of the largest provincial studios in England. It is believed that Edmundson learned his trade and became one of the extremely large Wailes workforce. In the early 1840s Edmundson came to Warrington and in 1846 when the stained glass section of Pilkington Brothers commenced, he became head of the department. Edmundson started his own business in 1855 and became quite a prolific producer of stained glass. He operated from Manchester and in particular covered many parts of the North-West of England. The business continued as a family firm after the death of Ralph in 1864.