IN this edition of nostalgia, we are looking back at some of the past nights out that everyone has enjoyed in Cumbria.

Some of the clubs featured include Jumpin Jaks which opened its doors for the first time in April 2004, at a time when Britney Spears' Toxic ruled the music charts, and attracted everyone from eager Carlisle freshers to spirited hen and stag parties.  In June 2006, the club closed.

An estimated 1500 youngsters flocked through the doors of Whitehaven Civic Hall to listen to Radio One Club's live broadcast featuring DJ Noel Edmunds during April 1971. There was little room for dancing as music blared from the stage , heads bobbed and feet stomped to numbers like You Could Have Been a Lady, Joy to the World and Hot Love.

Buskers was one of the most popular nightclubs in Carlisle throughout the 90's and early noughties.

Between its grand opening in 1989 and its last hurrah on New Year’s Eve 2005, The Park was the place to be on a Saturday night for many people in Whitehaven and surrounding towns.

Yankees Bar in Workington opened in 1986 after Glenys and Brian Walker bought a terraced house on Washington Street and converted it.

Fusion club in Workington first opened in 1999 and had some big names including Tidy Boys and Clubland in its early days. As business grew, Fusion regularly attracted big name acts such as Basement Jaxx, N-Trance and Sash! However, June 2008,  the club was closed resulting in 30 staff members losing their jobs.

Cosmo in Carlisle was originally the Argyll Cinema in the mid-fifties before it was changed into the dance hall in the late sixties. In its day, it was coined as one of the most popular and busiest nightclub.