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Scarisbrick is a sprawling rural parish that bridges the gap between the Victorian seaside town of Southport and the market town of Ormskirk. Crisscrossed by the A570 and the Leeds and Liverpool Canal, it is a landscape defined by Grade I listed agricultural soil and wide, open mosslands. The village’s skyline is dominated by the gothic finial of Scarisbrick Hall, a masterpiece by the Pugins that now serves as a local school and landmark. Residents here tend to rely on the nearby railway stations at Bescar Lane or Meols Cop for connections into Southport, Wigan, and Manchester. Life in the parish is largely centred around its independent farm shops, traditional pubs like the Morris Dancers, and a network of quiet lanes that are popular with cyclists and walkers heading toward the Marina. It is a place where the infrastructure feels practical and spread out, maintaining a genuine sense of West Lancashire’s farming heritage despite its proximity to the more developed coastal suburbs.