Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Leece

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OS grid reference
  
SD242693

Country
  
England

Post town
  
ULVERSTON

Local time
  
Tuesday 9:00 PM

District
  
South Lakeland

Civil parish
  
Aldingham

Region
  
North West

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Postcode district
  
LA12

Shire county
  
Cumbria

Dialling code
  
01229

UK parliament constituency
  
Barrow and Furness

Leece

Weather
  
8°C, Wind W at 16 km/h, 79% Humidity

Leece is a village on the Furness peninsula in Cumbria, England, between the towns of Ulverston and Barrow-in-Furness.

Contents

Map of Leece, Ulverston, UK

Amenities

The village is built around a tarn and a village green, and Henry Armer & Son, a smithy established in 1914 that has since become an agricultural engineering business.

History

Historically part of Lancashire, the name Leece is probably from the Old English leah, which means 'woodland clearing', and the plural of which is Leas. It was recorded in the Domesday Book as Lies, in the Manor of Hougun held by Earl Tostig. It appears later in 1269 as Lees.

Leece used to contain the United Methodist Free Church. It was founded in 1881, but closed in 1912. The building, which was taken down in the late 1920s, can still be seen on some photographs from the period. The church did not have a cemetery. St. Matthew's Church, in the hamlet of Dendron, built in 1642, also served the village, as both a church and a school. It was funded by Robert Dickinson, a citizen of London, who had formerly lived in Leece.

In the 1990s and 2000s, Leece played a part in the Lady in the Lake murder trial. Gordon Park, a resident of Leece, bludgeoned his 30-year-old wife Carol to death with an ice axe, then dumped her body in Coniston Water, telling police investigating her disappearance that she had left their home for another man.

References

Leece Wikipedia


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