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To get a sense of Langho, you really have to look at its position between the industrial heritage of Blackburn and the open landscape of the Ribble Valley. The village is split into two distinct parts: the old village up the hill, centered around the 16th-century Chapel of St Leonard, and the "new" Langho which grew around the railway station in the valley bottom. It’s a practical spot to live because of that train link, which puts you in Manchester or Clitheroe relatively easily, and the A59 provides a direct route toward Preston or the Yorkshire border. Geographically, it sits on the edge of the Forest of Bowland, so while you have the convenience of local amenities and a well-regarded primary school (St Mary’s), you’re only ever a few minutes' walk from being out in the fields with views across to Pendle Hill. It’s a quiet, residential pocket that has managed to retain its own identity despite being so close to the larger neighboring towns.