IG for Ilford. Apparently, the letters were chosen in preference to 'IL' to avoid confusion with 11 or LL.
According to the list of postcode areas on Wikipedia, this could be Ilford and Chigwell, or Ilford and Barking.
IG for Ilford. Apparently, the letters were chosen in preference to 'IL' to avoid confusion with 11 or LL.
If I am not mistaken, doesn't Richmond have some postcode areas of Surrey despite it being within Greater London?
High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire has HP even though it contains no "p". I thought HP might stand for High Wycombe and Princes Risborough, but apparently it stands for Hemel Hempstead, which is in Hertfordshire (another example of a postcode area covering parts of two neighbouring counties).
The main district in the HP postcode area is Hemel Hempsted, which contains both an H and a P.
I don't think just listing non-main districts with letters not in the name of that district really adds anything to the discussion, most postcodes satisfy this condition. Only the main district in an area has any reason to bear any relation to the letters.
Virtually all places in Greater London that weren't in the old London County Council area have non-London postcodes e.g. Bromley BR1.If I am not mistaken, doesn't Richmond have some postcode areas of Surrey despite it being within Greater London?
I think "CH" for the whole of the Wirral is a bit strange, especially as most of it is in Merseyside.
Though if I remember correctly, certain areas of the peninsula came were included in the "L" postcode area until the late 1990s.
Bit ironic - Peterborough was part of Cambridgeshire before it became a Unitary Authority. Huntingdonshire meanwhile was once a separate County in its own right!
The PE postcode also extends into southern parts of Lincolnshire.
Does this include areas like Huntingdon, which is very much in Cambridgeshire but has a PE postcode.
The problem is that Royal Mail design postcodes purely for the distribution of mail but also sell the Postal Address File, Multiple Occupancy File and Not Yet Built File. Some companies buy one or all of those.Far too much attention is paid to postcodes when in fact they are merely there for the organisation of mail deliveries. Other organisations that have adopted them as defining other aspects of life have just created an obsession of postcode snobbery, just like telephone codes, (remember the Beattie Bellmasn jibes when London was split into 071 (inner) and 081 (outer) areas?).
Misapplication of postcodes is rife in insurance (see the reference to L postcodes above) where assumptions have carried on as snobbery by the residents themselves. In some respects, a purely numerical system, like the US zip code could remove some of the more devisive aspects of postcodes, especially if it was randomly allocated.
Blackpool = FY
Rochester = ME
Galashiels = TD
Cleveland = TS
Southall = UB
Lerwick = ZE (it comes from Zetland) > As Norn was gradually replaced by Scots in the form of the Shetland dialect, Hjaltland became Ȝetland. The initial letter is the Middle Scots letter, "yogh", the pronunciation of which is almost identical to the original Norn sound, "/hj/". When the use of the letter yogh was discontinued, it was often replaced by the similar-looking letter z, hence Zetland, the form used in the name of the pre-1975 county council.
Far too much attention is paid to postcodes when in fact they are merely there for the organisation of mail deliveries. Other organisations that have adopted them as defining other aspects of life have just created an obsession of postcode snobbery, just like telephone codes, (remember the Beattie Bellmasn jibes when London was split into 071 (inner) and 081 (outer) areas?).
Misapplication of postcodes is rife in insurance (see the reference to L postcodes above) where assumptions have carried on as snobbery by the residents themselves. In some respects, a purely numerical system, like the US zip code could remove some of the more devisive aspects of postcodes, especially if it was randomly allocated.
CH is Chester, and because the Wirral used to be in Cheshire and they didn't want to be associated with Liverpool, they managed to get CH postcodes. I think high levels of car insurance prices under "L" postcodes also had something to do with it.
If Southport ever loses its PR postcode, there'd be trouble!CH is Chester, and because the Wirral used to be in Cheshire and they didn't want to be associated with Liverpool, they managed to get CH postcodes. I think high levels of car insurance prices under "L" postcodes also had something to do with it.
LL covers the whole of North Wales so take your pick! Bangor, Rhyl, Colwyn Bay!