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Barnsley » Transport » Sea Transport And Car Ferries
Barnsley Sea Transport And Car Ferries
Get carried away with the UFindus Sea Transport listings. This comprehensive category is composed of sites for car ferries and the transport of your sea vessels across land, including transport for boats and yachts. Also categorised here are sea transport sites dedicated to freight as an alternative to road, air and rail. Shipment by sea is perhaps the best way to transport heavier or larger goods abroad, and through UFindus you can contact companies in the ideal location offering the ideal price for your freight and shipping requirements.
About Barnsley - show infohide info
Barnsley is a South Yorkshire town on the River Dearne, north of Sheffield. It lies on the M1 route and has a railway station from the Hallam and Penistone lines. Barnsley is first mentioned in the Domesday Book and is described as a combination of two villages, Crevesford and Bernesiai, with a total population of probably not more than two hundred people. The name £Barnsley' is derived from the Anglo-Saxon 'Beorn's lay' (where a 'lay' is a clearing). In 1249, Barnsley was granted a Charter to hold an annual fair and weekly market, and early in its history coal mining began. Although the majority of coal mining was in villages surrounding the town, Barnsley Main colliery was in town, and closed in 1991. All the coal mines in the borough are now closed. Barnsley's coal mining industry was supported by glass blowing, which emerged early in the 17th century. In 1744, William Wilson introduced linen weaving. In 1850, the first railway station was opened in Barnsley, instigated by George and Robert Stevenson and Joseph Locke who was a Barnsley man. Barnsley is home to a proud tradition of Brass Bands, originally created as social clubs for the mining communities.
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