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Altrincham

Altrincham (/ˈɒltrɪŋəm/ (listen) OL-tring-əm, locally /ˈɒltrɪŋɡəm/[1]) is a market town in Trafford, Greater Manchester, England, south of the River Mersey. It is 8 miles (13 km) southwest of Manchester city centre, 3 miles (5 km) southwest of Sale and 10 miles (16 km) east of Warrington. At the 2011 Census, it had a population of 52,419.[2]

Altrincham

Clock Tower at Altrincham Interchange
Altrincham
Location within Greater Manchester
Population52,419 (2011)
• Density10,272/sq mi (3,966/km2)
OS grid referenceSJ765875
• London161 mi (259 km) SE
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townALTRINCHAM
Postcode districtWA14, WA15
Dialling code0161
PoliceGreater Manchester
FireGreater Manchester
AmbulanceNorth West
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Greater Manchester
53°23′02″N 2°21′17″W / 53.3838°N 2.3547°W / 53.3838; -2.3547Coordinates: 53°23′02″N 2°21′17″W / 53.3838°N 2.3547°W / 53.3838; -2.3547

Within the boundaries of the historic county of Cheshire, Altrincham was established as a market town in 1290, a time when the economy of most communities was based on agriculture rather than trade, and there is still a market in the town. Further socioeconomic development came with the extension of the Bridgewater Canal to Altrincham in 1765 and the arrival of the railway in 1849, stimulating industrial activity in the town. Outlying villages were absorbed by Altrincham's subsequent growth, along with the grounds of Dunham Massey Hall, formerly the home of the Earl of Stamford, and now a tourist attraction with three Grade I Listed Buildings and a deer park.

Altrincham has good transport links to Manchester, Sale, Stretford, Warrington and Stockport among other destinations. The town has a strong middle-class presence: there has been a steady increase in Altrincham's middle classes since the 19th century. It is also home to Altrincham F.C. and three ice hockey clubs: Manchester Storm, Altrincham Aces and Trafford Tornados.

History

Local evidence of prehistoric human activity exists in the form of two Neolithic arrowheads found in Altrincham, and, further afield, a concentration of artefacts around Dunham.[3] The remains of a Roman road, part of one of the major Roman roads in North West England connecting the legionary fortresses of Chester (Deva Victrix) and York (Eboracum), run through the Broadheath area. As it shows signs of having been repaired, the road was in use for a considerable period of time.[4] The name Altrincham first appears as "Aldringeham", probably meaning "homestead of Aldhere's people".[5] As recently as the 19th century it was spelt both Altrincham and Altringham.[6]

 
A milestone along the Barton Bridge and Moses Gate turnpike road near Eccles, showing the spelling of "Altringham"

Until the Normans invaded England, the manors surrounding Altrincham were owned by the Saxon thegn Alweard; after the invasion they became the property of Hamon de Massey,[5][7] though Altrincham is not mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086. The earliest documented reference to the town is from 1290,[8] when it was granted its charter as a Free Borough by Baron Hamon de Massey V.[9] The charter, which exists and is held by Trafford MBC, allowed a weekly market to be held, and it is possible that de Massey established the town to generate income through taxes on trade and tolls. This suggests that Altrincham may have been a planned market town, unusual during the Middle Ages, when most communities were agricultural.[10] Altrincham was probably chosen as the site of the planned town rather than Dunham – which would have been protected by Dunham Castle – because its good access to roads was important for trade.[11]

Altrincham Fair became St James's Fair or Samjam in 1319 and continued until 1895. Fair days had their own court of Pye Powder (a corruption of the French for "dusty feet"), presided over by the mayor and held to settle disputes arising from the day's dealings.[12] By 1348 the town had 120 burgage plots – ownership of land used as a measure of status and importance in an area – putting it on a par with the Cheshire town of Macclesfield and above Stockport and Knutsford.[13] The earliest known residence in Altrincham was "the Knoll", on Stamford Street near the centre of the medieval town. A 1983 excavation on the demolished building, made by South Trafford Archaeological Group, discovered evidence that the house dated from the 13th or 14th century, and that it may have contained a drying kiln or malting floor.[14] During the English Civil War, men from Altrincham fought for the Parliamentarian Sir George Booth. During the war, armies camped on nearby Bowdon Downs on several occasions.[12]

In 1754, a stretch of road south of Altrincham, along the Manchester to Chester route, was turnpiked. Turnpikes were toll roads which taxed passengers for the maintenance of the road. Further sections were turnpiked in 1765 from Timperley to Sale, and 1821 from Altrincham to Stockport. The maintenance of roads passed to local authorities in 1888, although by then most turnpike trusts had already declined.[15] The connection of the Bridgewater Canal to Altrincham in 1765 stimulated the development of market gardening, and for many years Altrincham was noted for its vegetables.[16] By 1767, warehouses had been built alongside the canal at Broadheath, the first step in the development of Broadheath as an industrial area and the beginning of Altrincham's industrialisation. The canal was connected in 1776 to the River Mersey, providing the town not only with a water route to Manchester, but also to the Irish Sea.[17]

 
Postcard of Altrincham railway station

Moves to connect the town to the UK's railway network gained pace in 1845, when the Act of Parliament for the construction of the Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway (MSJAR) was passed. The first train left Altrincham early on 20 July 1849, carrying 65 passengers. The MSJAR had two stations in the town: Altrincham, on Stockport Road, and Bowdon – though not actually in Bowdon – on Lloyd Street/Railway Street. Both were replaced in 1881 by Altrincham & Bowdon railway station on Stamford New Road.[18] The London and North Western Railway's station at Broadheath, on the town's northern edge, was opened in 1854, while a further connection was created on 12 May 1862 by the Cheshire Midland Railway (later the Cheshire Lines Committee), who opened their line from Altrincham to Knutsford.[19]

With its new railway links, Altrincham and the surrounding areas became desirable places for the middle classes and commuters to live.[18][20] Professionals and industrialists moved to the town, commuting into Manchester. While some travelled daily by coach, the less well–to–do commuted by express or "flyer" barges from Broadheath.[21] Between 1851 and 1881 the population increased from 4,488 to 11,250.[22] Broadheath's industrial area, covering about 250 acres (1.0 km2), was founded in 1885 by Harry Grey, 8th Earl of Stamford, to attract businesses. By 1900 Broadheath had its own docks, warehouses and electricity generating station. The site's proximity to rail, canal and road links proved attractive to companies making machine tools, cameras and grinding machines. The presence of companies like Tilghmans Sand Blast, and the Linotype and Machinery Company, established Broadheath as an industrial area of national standing. By 1914, 14 companies operated in Broadheath, employing thousands of workers. One of those was the Budenberg Gauge Company. Linotype also created 172 workers' homes near its factory, helping cater for the population boom created by Broadheath's industrialisation. Between 1891 and 1901 the population of Altrincham increased by 35 per cent, from 12,440 to 16,831.[23]

From the turn of the 20th century to the start of the Second World War, there were few changes in Altrincham. Although the town was witness to some of the Luftwaffe's raids on the Manchester area in the latter war, it emerged from the war relatively unscathed having lost only 23 civilian residents through enemy action,[24] and as with the rest of Britain, experienced an economic boom. This manifested itself in the construction of new housing and the 1960s rebuilding of the town centre. However, during the 1970s employment at Broadheath declined by nearly 40 per cent.[25]

Governance

 
Arms of the former Altrincham Municipal Borough Council

Altrincham became a free borough and a self-governing township when it was granted its charter in June 1290 by the Lord of the Manor, Hamon de Massey V. The charter allowed for the creation of a merchants' guild, run by the town's burgesses to tax people passing through the borough.[26] Burgesses were free men who lived in the town.[27] The borough was ruled by a Court Leet and elected a mayor since at least 1452. Amongst the court's responsibilities were keeping the public peace and regulating the markets and fairs.[28]

The borough was not one of those reformed by the Municipal Corporations Act of 1835, and continued to exist under the control of the Lord of the Manor and the Court Leet until its final abolition in 1886.[29] The Public Health Act of 1848 led to the creation of Altrincham's Local Board of Health in 1851 to address the unsanitary conditions created by the town's growing population – the first such board in Trafford.[30]

The local board was reconstituted as an urban district council in the administrative county of Cheshire under the Local Government Act 1894. Altrincham Urban District was expanded in 1920 when parts of Carrington and Dunham Massey Civil Parishes were added. Altrincham Town Hall was designed by Charles Albert Hindle and completed in November 1901.[31] A further expansion took place in 1936; Timperley Civil Parish was abolished and most of its area incorporated into Altrincham UD. At the same time, there was a minor exchange of areas with Hale Urban District; a minor addition from Bowdon Urban District; and a further substantial portion of Dunham Massey Civil Parish was added.[32] In 1937 the urban district was granted a charter of incorporation and became a municipal borough.[33] The new borough was granted armorial bearings which featured heraldic references to the Masseys and Earls of Stamford.[34] With the passage of the Local Government Act 1972, the administrative counties and municipal boroughs were abolished and Altrincham became part of the Metropolitan Borough of Trafford in Greater Manchester on 1 April 1974.[12]

Trafford Council is responsible for the administration of local services, such as education, social services, town planning, waste collection and council housing. The area is divided into seven electoral wards: Altrincham, Bowdon, Broadheath, Hale Barns, Hale Central, Timperley, and Village. These wards have 21 out of the 63 seats on the Trafford Council; as of the 2014 local elections fifteen of these seats were held by the Conservative Party, three by the Labour Party, and three by the Liberal Democrats.[35] Altrincham was in the eponymous parliamentary constituency which was created in 1885. This lasted until 1945 when it was replaced by Altrincham and Sale. In 1997, this in turn became part of the newly created constituency of Altrincham and Sale West. Since its formation, Altrincham and Sale West has been represented in the House of Commons by the Conservative MP, Graham Brady.[36] This is one of only four Conservative seats in Greater Manchester.[citation needed]

Geography

 
The Metropolitan Borough of Trafford, highlighting the Altrincham area in red.

At 53°23′2″N 2°21′17″W / 53.38389°N 2.35472°W / 53.38389; -2.35472 (53.3838, −2.3547), Altrincham is on the southwestern edge of the Greater Manchester Urban Area, immediately south of the town of Sale, and 8 miles (13 km) southwest of Manchester city centre. It lies in the northwest corner of the Cheshire Plain, just south of the River Mersey. The Bridgewater Canal passes through the Broadheath area of the town. Altrincham's drinking water is supplied by United Utilities.[37] The local bedrock consists mainly of Keuper Waterstone, a type of sandstone, and water retrieved from those rocks is very hard and often saline, making it undrinkable.[38] The town's climate is generally temperate, with few extremes of temperature or weather. The mean temperature is slightly above average for the United Kingdom; whereas both annual rainfall and average hours of sunshine are slightly below the average for the UK.[39]

Along with Sale, Stretford and Urmston, Altrincham is one of the four major urban areas in Trafford. The Altrincham area, as defined by Trafford Council, comprises the south of Trafford. In addition to the town of Altrincham, it includes the villages of Timperley, Bowdon, Hale and Hale Barns. The Broadheath area of the town was a light industrial centre until the 1970s and is now a retail park. The most densely populated part of the town is around the town centre, with the less populated areas and more green space further from the centre of town in villages such as Bowdon and Hale. The Oldfield Brow area lies on the outskirts of the town beside the Bridgewater Canal and close to Dunham Massey.[40][41]

Demography

Ethnicity: Altrincham compared
2011 UK Census Altrincham[42] Trafford[43] England[44]
Total population 52,419 226,578 53,012,456
White 91.6% 85.5% 85.4%
Asian 4.9% 7.9% 7.8%
Mixed 2.0% 2.7% 2.3%
Black 0.8% 2.9% 3.5%
Other 0.7% 1.0% 1.0%

As of the 2011 UK census, the town of Altrincham had a total population of 52,419. Of its 41,530 residents aged 16 and over, 62.1 per cent were couples living together.[42] The town's population density is 37.4 inhabitants per hectare, with the population consisting of 49.0% males and 51.0% females.[42] Of those aged 16 and over, 15.2 per cent had no academic qualifications, similar to the 18.6 per cent in all of Trafford.[42][43] At 8.4 percent, Altrincham has a low proportion of non-white people. Asians are the area's largest ethnic minority, at 4.9 per cent of the population.[42]

In 1931, 14.6 per cent of Altrincham's population was middle class,[clarification needed] slightly higher than the figure for England and Wales, which was 14 per cent. By 1971 this gap had increased to 28.8 per cent compared to 24 per cent nationally, while the town's working class population had declined, from 30.3 per cent in 1931 (36 per cent in England and Wales) to 18.6 per cent (26 per cent nationwide). The remainder comprised clerical and skilled manual workers. This change in social structure was similar to that seen across the nation – although biased towards the middle classes – making Altrincham the middle-class town it is today.[20]

Population change

According to the hearth tax returns from 1664, the township of Altrincham had a population of about 636, making it the largest of the local settlements;[45] this had increased to 1,692 in 1801. In the first half of the 19th century, the town's population increased by 165 per cent, higher than 89 per cent across England and 98 per cent in the Trafford area. The growth of the settlement was a result of the Industrial Revolution, and although Altrincham was one of the fastest-growing townships in the Trafford area, but paled in comparison to new industrial areas such as Ashton-under-Lyne, Hyde, and Manchester. In the second half of the 19th century, Altrincham's population grew by 275 per cent, higher than the 235 per cent for Trafford and 69 per cent nationally in the same period. This was due to the late industrialisation of the area and the introduction of the Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway in 1849.[46]

Population growth in Altrincham since 1801
YearPop.±%
18011,692—    
18112,032+20.1%
18212,302+13.3%
18312,708+17.6%
18413,399+25.5%
18514,488+32.0%
YearPop.±%
18616,628+47.7%
18718,478+27.9%
188111,250+32.7%
189112,440+10.6%
190116,831+35.3%
191117,813+5.8%
YearPop.±%
192120,450+14.8%
193121,356+4.4%
194139,940+87.0%
195139,789−0.4%
196141,122+3.4%
197140,786−0.8%
YearPop.±%
198139,693−2.7%
199140,042+0.9%
200140,695+1.6%
201152,419+28.8%
Source: A Vision of Britain through Time[22][47][48][49]

Economy

Working age population: Altrincham compared
2011 UK Census Altrincham[42] Trafford[43] England[50]
Population aged 16–74 37,743 162,806 38,881,374
Full-time employment 43.4% 41.9% 38.6%
Part-time employment 13.9% 14.0% 13.7%
Self-employed 11.5% 9.7% 9.8%
Unemployed 3.1% 3.8% 4.4%
Retired 13.5% 13.3% 13.7%
 
George Street, Altrincham
 
The Old Market Place

Historically, Altrincham was a market town and the two main areas of employment were agriculture and market trade. Although the town went into decline in the 15th century, it recovered and the annual fairs lasted until the mid-19th century and the market still continues.[51] During the Industrial Revolution, Altrincham grew as an industrial town, particularly the Broadheath area, which was developed into an industrial estate. In 1801 there were four cotton mills in Altrincham, although they had closed by the 1851 census. The decline of the textile industry in Altrincham mirrored the decline of the industry in the Trafford area as a result of a lack of investment and the development of more established industrial areas such as Manchester, Ashton-under-Lyne, and Oldham.[16][52] During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, heavier industries moved into Broadheath, providing local employment. The area steadily declined during the second half of the 20th century, with employment at Broadheath falling from 8,000 to 5,000 between 1960 and 1970.[18][25] Despite the presence of retailers such as Tesco, Sainsbury's and Marks & Spencer in the town, a new Asda superstore in Broadheath, and redevelopment schemes costing over £100 million,[53][54] Altrincham's 15.5 per cent level of employment in retail is below the national average of 16.9 per cent. Altrincham, with its neighbours Bowdon and Hale, is said to constitute a "stockbroker belt", with well-appointed dwellings in an area of sylvan opulence.[55]

The historic market town developed as a residential area in the 19th century although it retains its retail heritage in the Old Market Place (a conservation area) and a new pedestrianised shopping centre. The retail districts of the town have more recently fallen victim to decline due to competition from the nearby Trafford Centre and a regenerated Manchester city centre.[56] In 2006 Trafford Metropolitan Borough Council unveiled plans for a £1.5 million redevelopment for the town centre.[53] The renovation will create 146,000 square feet (13,600 m2) of new retail space and 203,000 square feet (18,900 m2) of refurbished space, providing 349,000 square feet (32,400 m2) in total.[57]

Construction on Altair, a £100 million development on Oakfield Road, began in September 2019[58] after many years of delay. The scheme includes apartments, shops and eating places and will create a new public square linking it to the nearby Altrincham Interchange,[59] which underwent a £19million refurbishment in 2015. A 2010 survey found that despite being in one of the country's most affluent areas, nearly a third of the shops in Altrincham were vacant; Trafford council attributed the high number (78) to the effects of the recession and plans to refurbish Stamford House, which left most of its shops unused.[60]

According to the 2011 UK census, the main industries of employment of residents in Altrincham were wholesale and retail trade (14.8%), human health and social work activities (13.0%), and professional, scientific and technical activities (11.6%).[42] The census recorded the economic inactivity of residents aged 16–74 as 3.5 per cent looking after home or family, 2.8 per cent long-term sick or disabled, 4.1 per cent students, and 1.5 per cent economically inactive for other reasons.[42] The 3.1 per cent unemployment rate of Altrincham was low compared with the national rate of 4.4 per cent.[42][43]

Culture

Landmarks and attractions

The Old Market Place is thought to stand on the site of the original town settlement. Now a registered conservation area it consists of a series of part timber-framed buildings echoing the wattle and daube constructions of the original houses and burgage plots. The cobblestone paving was replaced in 1896. The Buttermarket which stood in the area near the Old Market Place from the 17th century until the late 19th century was also the site for dispensing early local justice. A courtroom, stocks and whipping post saw public floggings take place there until the early 19th century. The whipping post and stocks were restored as a tourist attraction by local traders in the 1990s. However the Buttermarket area was also a site of religious importance, since prospective brides and grooms are thought to have declared their intentions here.[61] In 1814 Thomas de Quincey described the Old Market Place in his Confessions of an English Opium Eater while travelling from Manchester to Chester. He noted how little the place had changed since his visit 14 years earlier at the age of three, and that "fruits, such as can be had in July, and flowers were scattered about in profusion: even the stalls of the butchers, from their brilliant cleanliness, appeared attractive: and bonny young women of Altrincham were all tripping about in caps and aprons coquettishly disposed" [62] In 1974 Altrincham artist George Allen was approached by Trafford Council to paint a picture of The Old Market Place. This picture was used to produce postcards which were sold to promote Altrincham, and are still sold today to raise funds for a local charity.[citation needed] Another of Altrincham's attractions is the historic market, set up over 700 years ago when the town was first established.[63]

 
John Leigh Park

Of the 21 conservation areas in Trafford, ten are in Altrincham: The Downs, The Devisdale, Bowdon, Ashley Heath, Goose Green, Old Market Place, Sandiway, George Street, the Linotype Housing Estate and Stamford New Road.[64] On the town's outskirts is the 18th-century Dunham Massey Hall,[65] surrounded by its 250-acre (1 km2) deer park, both now owned by the National Trust. The hall is early Georgian in style, and along with its stables and carriage house, is a Grade I listed building.[66]

Royd House was built between 1914 and 1916, by local architect Edgar Wood, as his own residence. It has a flat concrete roof, a concave façade, and is faced in Portland red stone and Lancashire brick.[67] It is regarded as one of the most advanced examples of early 20th-century domestic architecture, and is referenced in architectural digests. It has been a Grade I listed building since 1975, one of six such buildings in Trafford.[68][69] The Grade II listed clock outside the main transport interchange was built in 1880.[70]

The 16-acre (6.5 ha) Stamford Park was designed by landscape gardener John Shaw. It opened to the public in 1880, as a sports park with areas for cricket and football. The land was donated by George Grey, the 7th Earl of Stamford, and is now owned and run by Trafford Council. The park is listed as Grade II on the Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in England,[71] and has won a bronze award from the Greenspace award scheme.[72]

John Leigh Park, located in the area of Oldfield Brow, was the site of Oldfield Hall until 1917 when it fell into disrepair after being purchased by the Earl of Stamford. That year Mr John Leigh purchased the land from the widowed Countess of Stamford and gifted it to the local council to be used as a park for soldiers and workers. The park was named 'John Leigh Park' and opened on 22 July 1917.[citation needed]

Events and venues

 
The George Allen Art Gallery, Altrincham

Altrincham has its own music festival that takes place in August. The Goose Green Festival takes place over the August bank holiday weekend in the Goose Green area of Altrincham, and features a number of unsigned bands, local food and drink and entertainment for all the family. Founded in 2015, the two day festival attracts over 6000 visitors over the two days, and headline acts have included Prose, The Jade Assembly, The Rainband, Apollo Junction and Corella.[citation needed] Altrincham has two theatres, the Altrincham Garrick Playhouse and the Club Theatre (latterly known as the Altrincham Little Theatre). The Altrincham Garrick group was formed in 1913. The Garrick held the world stage premier of Psycho in 1982. In 1998, it received a grant of £675,000 from the National Lottery as part of a £900,000 redevelopment of the theatre, which was completed in 1999.[73] The Club Theatre group began in 1896, as the St Margaret's Church Institute Amateur Dramatics Society. It provides a venue for the Trafford Youth Theatre production each year, and it runs the Hale One Act Festival, an annual week-long event started in 1972.[74] The club has received awards from both the Greater Manchester Drama Federation and the Cheshire Theatre Guild.[75] Altrincham also had Greater Manchester's only Michelin starred restaurant, the Juniper.[76]

Sport

Altrincham F.C., nicknamed The Robins, was founded in 1903 and play home matches at Moss Lane. The club plays in the National League. In the 1970s and 1980s, Altrincham F.C. built a reputation for giant-killing acts against Football League teams in FA Cup matches. The club has knocked out Football League opposition on a record 16 occasions,[77] including a 1986 victory against top-flight Birmingham City.[78] Altrincham won the forerunner of the Football Conference in its first two seasons, but was denied election to the Football League on both occasions, falling a single vote short in 1980.[79] Altrincham have since had mixed fortunes. Relegated to the Northern Premier League in 1997, the club has since earned 5 promotions and suffered 5 relegations, most recently gaining promotion to the National League in the 2019-20 season.[80] The club's main rivals are Macclesfield Town and Northwich Victoria.[citation needed]

 
Altrincham Ice Dome is the home of Manchester Storm and Altrincham Aces.

Altrincham is one of the few towns in north-west England with an ice rink and has had an ice hockey team since 1961, when Altrincham Ice Rink was built in Broadheath.[81] The Altrincham Aces (later renamed the Trafford Metros) played from 1961 until 2003, when Altrincham Ice Rink closed.[82] The town then had a three-year period without a rink or ice hockey team, until construction of the 2,500 capacity Altrincham Ice Dome was completed.[83] Manchester Phoenix, a club having a professional presence in the English Premier Ice Hockey League and an extensive junior development aspect, relocated to the Ice Dome during the 2006–07 season, having withdrawn from competition two years earlier due to the high cost of playing matches at Manchester's MEN Arena.[84] In 2009, the Manchester Phoenix English National Ice Hockey League team was renamed Trafford Metros, bringing the old Altrincham team's name back into use.[85] When not being used by Phoenix the Altrincham Ice Dome is open to the public for ice skating.[86]

Founded in 1897,[87] Altrincham Kersal RUFC plays rugby union. They have played at level 6 since being relegated from North One in 2012. Following the withdrawal of a number of Lancashire clubs from the county's union,[88] they have been level transferred to play in the North Lancashire and Cumbria League for 2018–19.[89] The club has produced England and Sale Sharks players Mark Cueto and Chris Jones and continues to produce players for the Sale Jets.[90]

Altrincham and District Athletics Club was founded in 1961 and provides training facilities for track and field, road running, cross-country running and fell running.[91]

Seamons Cycling Club was formed in 1948 in the area of Altrincham known locally as Seamons Moss.[92]

Education

As Altrincham was part of the Bowdon parish, children from the township may have gone to the 16th-century school established at Bowdon; before that point, the town had no formal education system. A salt merchant from Dunham Woodhouses founded a school at Oldfield House intended for 40 boys aged 8–11 from the surrounding area. Sunday schools were set up in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.[93] Altrincham's increasing population prompted the founding of more schools during the early 19th century and by 1856 the town had 9 schools, 1 college, and 23 teachers.[94] The introduction of compulsory education during the second half of the 19th century increased the demand for schools, and by 1886 Altrincham had 12 church schools and 8 private schools.[95]

Responsibility for local education fell to Cheshire County Council in 1903. Loreto Convent, the County High School for Girls, and Altrincham County High School for Boys, were founded in 1909, 1910, and 1912 respectively. Although still open these schools have since changed their names to Altrincham Grammar School for Girls, Altrincham Grammar School for Boys, and Loreto Grammar School.[95] Altrincham received evacuees during the Second World War, and it was in this period that St. Ambrose College was founded.[96]

Altrincham now has eighteen primary schools, one special school and eight secondary schools, including five grammar schools; the Trafford district maintains a selective education system assessed by entrance exams set by each school. Several of Altrincham's secondary schools have specialist status: Altrincham College (arts);[97] Altrincham Grammar School for Boys (language);[98] Altrincham Grammar School for Girls (language);[99] Blessed Thomas Holford Catholic College (maths and computing);[100] Loreto Grammar School (science and maths);[101] and St. Ambrose College (maths and computing).[102] Altrincham College of Arts,[97] Altrincham Grammar School for Boys,[98] Altrincham Grammar School for Girls,[99] Blessed Thomas Holford Catholic College,[100] Loreto Grammar School[101] and St. Ambrose College[102] were all rated as outstanding in 2011–12 Ofsted reports. Brentwood Special School is a mixed school for 11- to 19-year-olds who have special needs or learning difficulties.[103]

Altrincham is home to one of the longest established, family-owned nursery schools in the UK, Oakfield Nursery School. Oakfield was voted 'UK Nursery of the Year' in 2014 [104] and 'Best Individual Nursery' in 2008.[105]

Religion

 
The Grade II listed St George's Church

During the medieval and post-medieval periods the township of Altrincham was part of Bowdon parish. Low population density meant that the town did not have a church until the Anglican church established a chapel of ease in 1799. Nonconformists were also present in Altrincham; Methodists set up a chapel in 1790, and Baptists built one in the 1870s.[106][107] Irish immigrants in the 1830s and 1840s also returned Roman Catholicism to the area, the first Roman Catholic church built in Altrincham being St Vincent's, in 1860.[108]

Several churches in Altrincham are deemed architecturally important enough to be designated Grade II listed buildings. These are Christ Church,[109] the Church of St Alban,[110] the Church of St George,[111] the Church of St John the Evangelist[112] and Trinity United Reformed Church.[113] Of the nine Grade II* listed buildings in Trafford, three are in Altrincham: the Church of St Margaret,[114] the Church of St John the Divine[115] and Hale Chapel in Hale Barns.[116] As of the 2001 UK census, 78.8 per cent of Altrincham's residents reported themselves as being Christian, 1.1 per cent Jewish, 1.1 per cent Muslim, 0.4 per cent Hindu, 0.2 per cent Buddhist and 0.1 per cent Sikh. The census recorded 12.1 per cent as having no religion, 0.2 per cent with an alternative religion, while 6.1 per cent did not state a religion.[117] Altrincham is in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Shrewsbury,[118] and the Church of England Diocese of Chester.[119] The nearest synagogue, belonging to Hale and District Hebrew Congregation, is on Shay Lane in Hale Barns.[120]

Transport

 
Altrincham station in 2010

Construction of the Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway began in 1845. The line was opened in October 1849, with services from Manchester London Road[121] via Sale to Altrincham.[122] In 1931, it became one of Great Britain's first electrified railway lines, with a 1,500 V DC overhead line. At the same time, a new Altrincham station was opened on the same line, at Navigation Road, serving housing developments in the area. By 1937, 130 train services ran daily between Manchester and Altrincham.[19] The line was renovated in the early 1990s to form part of the Manchester Metrolink light rail system.[123] Broadheath railway station served the northern part of Altrincham between 1853 and 1962, on the line from Manchester, via Lymm, to Warrington.[124]

Altrincham Interchange is one of the Metrolink's termini. The interchange was refurbished (2015–16) and now includes a brand new footbridge, with three lifts to cope with increased passenger demands, a larger-scale ticket office and a modern bus interchange. The Interchange connects the town to several locations in Greater Manchester, such as Sale and Bury; the service also includes Navigation Road station. Metrolink services leave around every six minutes, between 07:15 and 19:30 on weekdays and less frequently at other times.[125] National Rail services link the Altrincham and Navigation Road stations with Chester (via Northwich) and with Manchester (via Stockport). Altrincham Interchange, next to the railway station, is a hub for local bus routes. Manchester Airport, the largest in the UK outside London, is 5 miles (8 km) to the south-east of the town and is connected via the Manchester Piccadilly–Crewe line. There are plans to create a new link between Manchester Airport and the Mid-Cheshire Line, which Altrincham Interchange is a station on. Recently the Metrolink completed connections to this airport and opened the line 12 months early, but this is not a direct connection from the Metrolink line at Altrincham Interchange.[126]

Notable people

The artist Helen Allingham, born in 1848, lived in Altrincham and then Bowdon during her childhood years.[127] Abstract artist Jeremy Moon was born in Altrincham in 1934. The composer and music teacher John Ireland was born in Bowdon in 1879. Alison Uttley wrote the Little Grey Rabbit books while living in Bowdon.[127] Dramatist Ronald Gow lived there in his youth and later taught at Altrincham Grammar School for Boys.[127] The town was also the birthplace of the film and television actress Angela Cartwright.[128] Ian Brown and John Squire of The Stone Roses both attended Altrincham Grammar School for Boys,[129] and Paul Young of Sad Café and Mike and the Mechanics lived in Altrincham until his death in 2000.[130]

Nick Estcourt, mountain climber, opened a climbing shop on Stamford New Road in Altrincham shortly before being swept to his death by an avalanche during an expedition to climb K2 in 1978 (the shop was subsequently run for many years by his wife, Carolyn). Estcourt was one of the closest friends of Chris Bonington, who lived for a time in Bowdon.[131]

Hewlett Johnson, later known as the "Red Dean" of Canterbury, was curate, and later vicar of St Margaret's in the town from 1904 to 1924.[132]

Footballer Jack Liggins was born here in 1906.[133] The Lancashire and England Test cricketer Paul Allott was born in Altrincham.[134]

Two Victoria Cross recipients were born at Altrincham. Edward Kinder Bradbury was born (16 August 1881) in the town, he was awarded the Victoria Cross for gallantry and ability in organising the defence of 'L' Battery against heavy odds at Nery on 1 September 1914 in World War I. Altrincham born Bill Speakman received the Victoria Cross for valour in 1951 in the Korean War.[135]

Sir Michael Pollock, an officer in the Royal Navy who rose to the position of First Sea Lord, was born in Altrincham.[136]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Note that neither of these pronunciations includes the sound /tʃ/ suggested by the spelling.
  2. ^ "Town population 2011". Retrieved 8 January 2016.
  3. ^ Nevell (1997), p. 15.
  4. ^ Nevell (1997), p. 18.
  5. ^ a b Dore (1972), p. 12.
  6. ^ Nickson (1935), pp. 3–4.
  7. ^ Nevell (1997), p. 27.
  8. ^ Nevell (1997), p. 32.
  9. ^ Nevell (1997), pp. 39, 52.
  10. ^ Nevell (1997), p. 51.
  11. ^ Bayliss (1992), p. 18.
  12. ^ a b c . Altrincham History Society. Archived from the original on 11 August 2007. Retrieved 24 July 2007.
  13. ^ Nevell (1997), p. 52.
  14. ^ Faulkner, P (2005). . South Trafford Archaeological Group. Archived from the original on 2 May 2007. Retrieved 11 September 2007.
  15. ^ Nevell (1997), pp. 95–97.
  16. ^ a b McNeil & Nevell (2000), p. 61.
  17. ^ Nevell (1997), p. 92.
  18. ^ a b c Nevell (1997), pp. 15, 18, 39, 87, 95, 100, 126–30.
  19. ^ a b Dixon (1994)
  20. ^ a b "Altrincham social class". Vision of Britain. Retrieved 20 December 2007.
  21. ^ Bamford (1995)
  22. ^ a b Nevell (1997), p. 87.
  23. ^ Nevell (1997), pp. 126–130.
  24. ^ "Altrincham, Municipal Borough, with list of casualties". Commonwealth War Graves Commission date accessed=21 February 2019.
  25. ^ a b Bamford (1991), pp. 78, 85.
  26. ^ Nickson (1935), p. 9.
  27. ^ Bayliss (1992), p. 14.
  28. ^ Nickson (1935), pp. 11–13.
  29. ^ Municipal Corporations Act 1883 (C.18)
  30. ^ Nevell (1997), p. 95.
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  74. ^ . The Club Theatre. Archived from the original on 23 July 2007. Retrieved 10 July 2007.
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  89. ^ "North West League Restructure" (PDF). Retrieved 2 June 2018..
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  91. ^ . altrincham-athletics.co.uk. Archived from the original on 26 January 2012. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  92. ^ "History of Seamons CC". Seamons Cycling Club. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
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  96. ^ Bayliss (1992), p. 74.
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Bibliography

  • Awdry, Christopher (1990). Encyclopedia of British Railway Companies. Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN 1-85260-049-7.
  • Bamford, Frank (1991). The Making of Altrincham, 1850–1991: from market to megastore?. Altrincham: Frank Bamford. ISBN 0-9517225-1-4.
  • Bamford, Frank (1995). Broadheath 1885–1985: a century of industry. Altrincham: Frank Bamford. ISBN 0-9517225-2-2.
  • Bayliss, Don (1992). Altrincham: a history. Altrincham: Willow Publishing. ISBN 0-946361-33-9.
  • De Quincey, Thomas (1994) [1821]. Confessions of an English Opium-Eater. Wordsworth Editions. ISBN 978-1-85326-096-4.
  • Dixon, Frank (1994). The Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway. The Oakwood Press. ISBN 0-85361-454-7.
  • Dore, R N (1972). A History of Hale, Cheshire: From Domesday to Dormitory. Altrincham: John Sherratt and Son Ltd. ISBN 0-85427-030-2.
  • Frangopulo, N J (1977). Tradition in Action: The Historical Evolution of the Greater Manchester County. Wakefield: EP Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7158-1203-7.
  • McNeil, R; Mike Nevell (2000). A Guide to the Industrial Archaeology of Greater Manchester. Association for Industrial Archaeology. ISBN 0-9528930-3-7.
  • Nevell, Mike (1997). The Archaeology of Trafford. Trafford Metropolitan Borough with University of Manchester Archaeological Unit. ISBN 1-870695-25-9.
  • Nickson, Chas (1935). Bygone Altrincham. Didsbury: E.J. Morten. ISBN 0-901598-30-5.
  • Taylor, B J; R H Price; Frederick Murray Trotter (1963). Geology of the Country around Stockport and Knutsford. Memoirs of the Geological Survey of Great Britain.

External links

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altrincham, this, article, about, town, other, uses, disambiguation, listen, tring, locally, market, town, trafford, greater, manchester, england, south, river, mersey, miles, southwest, manchester, city, centre, miles, southwest, sale, miles, east, warrington. This article is about the town For other uses see Altrincham disambiguation Altrincham ˈ ɒ l t r ɪ ŋ em listen OL tring em locally ˈ ɒ l t r ɪ ŋ ɡ em 1 is a market town in Trafford Greater Manchester England south of the River Mersey It is 8 miles 13 km southwest of Manchester city centre 3 miles 5 km southwest of Sale and 10 miles 16 km east of Warrington At the 2011 Census it had a population of 52 419 2 AltrinchamClock Tower at Altrincham InterchangeAltrinchamLocation within Greater ManchesterPopulation52 419 2011 Density10 272 sq mi 3 966 km2 OS grid referenceSJ765875 London161 mi 259 km SEMetropolitan boroughTraffordMetropolitan countyGreater ManchesterRegionNorth WestCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townALTRINCHAMPostcode districtWA14 WA15Dialling code0161PoliceGreater ManchesterFireGreater ManchesterAmbulanceNorth WestUK ParliamentAltrincham and Sale WestList of places UK England Greater Manchester 53 23 02 N 2 21 17 W 53 3838 N 2 3547 W 53 3838 2 3547 Coordinates 53 23 02 N 2 21 17 W 53 3838 N 2 3547 W 53 3838 2 3547Within the boundaries of the historic county of Cheshire Altrincham was established as a market town in 1290 a time when the economy of most communities was based on agriculture rather than trade and there is still a market in the town Further socioeconomic development came with the extension of the Bridgewater Canal to Altrincham in 1765 and the arrival of the railway in 1849 stimulating industrial activity in the town Outlying villages were absorbed by Altrincham s subsequent growth along with the grounds of Dunham Massey Hall formerly the home of the Earl of Stamford and now a tourist attraction with three Grade I Listed Buildings and a deer park Altrincham has good transport links to Manchester Sale Stretford Warrington and Stockport among other destinations The town has a strong middle class presence there has been a steady increase in Altrincham s middle classes since the 19th century It is also home to Altrincham F C and three ice hockey clubs Manchester Storm Altrincham Aces and Trafford Tornados Contents 1 History 2 Governance 3 Geography 4 Demography 4 1 Population change 5 Economy 6 Culture 6 1 Landmarks and attractions 6 2 Events and venues 6 3 Sport 7 Education 8 Religion 9 Transport 10 Notable people 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksHistory EditLocal evidence of prehistoric human activity exists in the form of two Neolithic arrowheads found in Altrincham and further afield a concentration of artefacts around Dunham 3 The remains of a Roman road part of one of the major Roman roads in North West England connecting the legionary fortresses of Chester Deva Victrix and York Eboracum run through the Broadheath area As it shows signs of having been repaired the road was in use for a considerable period of time 4 The name Altrincham first appears as Aldringeham probably meaning homestead of Aldhere s people 5 As recently as the 19th century it was spelt both Altrincham and Altringham 6 A milestone along the Barton Bridge and Moses Gate turnpike road near Eccles showing the spelling of Altringham Until the Normans invaded England the manors surrounding Altrincham were owned by the Saxon thegn Alweard after the invasion they became the property of Hamon de Massey 5 7 though Altrincham is not mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086 The earliest documented reference to the town is from 1290 8 when it was granted its charter as a Free Borough by Baron Hamon de Massey V 9 The charter which exists and is held by Trafford MBC allowed a weekly market to be held and it is possible that de Massey established the town to generate income through taxes on trade and tolls This suggests that Altrincham may have been a planned market town unusual during the Middle Ages when most communities were agricultural 10 Altrincham was probably chosen as the site of the planned town rather than Dunham which would have been protected by Dunham Castle because its good access to roads was important for trade 11 Altrincham Fair became St James s Fair or Samjam in 1319 and continued until 1895 Fair days had their own court of Pye Powder a corruption of the French for dusty feet presided over by the mayor and held to settle disputes arising from the day s dealings 12 By 1348 the town had 120 burgage plots ownership of land used as a measure of status and importance in an area putting it on a par with the Cheshire town of Macclesfield and above Stockport and Knutsford 13 The earliest known residence in Altrincham was the Knoll on Stamford Street near the centre of the medieval town A 1983 excavation on the demolished building made by South Trafford Archaeological Group discovered evidence that the house dated from the 13th or 14th century and that it may have contained a drying kiln or malting floor 14 During the English Civil War men from Altrincham fought for the Parliamentarian Sir George Booth During the war armies camped on nearby Bowdon Downs on several occasions 12 In 1754 a stretch of road south of Altrincham along the Manchester to Chester route was turnpiked Turnpikes were toll roads which taxed passengers for the maintenance of the road Further sections were turnpiked in 1765 from Timperley to Sale and 1821 from Altrincham to Stockport The maintenance of roads passed to local authorities in 1888 although by then most turnpike trusts had already declined 15 The connection of the Bridgewater Canal to Altrincham in 1765 stimulated the development of market gardening and for many years Altrincham was noted for its vegetables 16 By 1767 warehouses had been built alongside the canal at Broadheath the first step in the development of Broadheath as an industrial area and the beginning of Altrincham s industrialisation The canal was connected in 1776 to the River Mersey providing the town not only with a water route to Manchester but also to the Irish Sea 17 Postcard of Altrincham railway station Moves to connect the town to the UK s railway network gained pace in 1845 when the Act of Parliament for the construction of the Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway MSJAR was passed The first train left Altrincham early on 20 July 1849 carrying 65 passengers The MSJAR had two stations in the town Altrincham on Stockport Road and Bowdon though not actually in Bowdon on Lloyd Street Railway Street Both were replaced in 1881 by Altrincham amp Bowdon railway station on Stamford New Road 18 The London and North Western Railway s station at Broadheath on the town s northern edge was opened in 1854 while a further connection was created on 12 May 1862 by the Cheshire Midland Railway later the Cheshire Lines Committee who opened their line from Altrincham to Knutsford 19 With its new railway links Altrincham and the surrounding areas became desirable places for the middle classes and commuters to live 18 20 Professionals and industrialists moved to the town commuting into Manchester While some travelled daily by coach the less well to do commuted by express or flyer barges from Broadheath 21 Between 1851 and 1881 the population increased from 4 488 to 11 250 22 Broadheath s industrial area covering about 250 acres 1 0 km2 was founded in 1885 by Harry Grey 8th Earl of Stamford to attract businesses By 1900 Broadheath had its own docks warehouses and electricity generating station The site s proximity to rail canal and road links proved attractive to companies making machine tools cameras and grinding machines The presence of companies like Tilghmans Sand Blast and the Linotype and Machinery Company established Broadheath as an industrial area of national standing By 1914 14 companies operated in Broadheath employing thousands of workers One of those was the Budenberg Gauge Company Linotype also created 172 workers homes near its factory helping cater for the population boom created by Broadheath s industrialisation Between 1891 and 1901 the population of Altrincham increased by 35 per cent from 12 440 to 16 831 23 From the turn of the 20th century to the start of the Second World War there were few changes in Altrincham Although the town was witness to some of the Luftwaffe s raids on the Manchester area in the latter war it emerged from the war relatively unscathed having lost only 23 civilian residents through enemy action 24 and as with the rest of Britain experienced an economic boom This manifested itself in the construction of new housing and the 1960s rebuilding of the town centre However during the 1970s employment at Broadheath declined by nearly 40 per cent 25 Governance Edit Arms of the former Altrincham Municipal Borough Council Altrincham Town Hall Altrincham became a free borough and a self governing township when it was granted its charter in June 1290 by the Lord of the Manor Hamon de Massey V The charter allowed for the creation of a merchants guild run by the town s burgesses to tax people passing through the borough 26 Burgesses were free men who lived in the town 27 The borough was ruled by a Court Leet and elected a mayor since at least 1452 Amongst the court s responsibilities were keeping the public peace and regulating the markets and fairs 28 The borough was not one of those reformed by the Municipal Corporations Act of 1835 and continued to exist under the control of the Lord of the Manor and the Court Leet until its final abolition in 1886 29 The Public Health Act of 1848 led to the creation of Altrincham s Local Board of Health in 1851 to address the unsanitary conditions created by the town s growing population the first such board in Trafford 30 The local board was reconstituted as an urban district council in the administrative county of Cheshire under the Local Government Act 1894 Altrincham Urban District was expanded in 1920 when parts of Carrington and Dunham Massey Civil Parishes were added Altrincham Town Hall was designed by Charles Albert Hindle and completed in November 1901 31 A further expansion took place in 1936 Timperley Civil Parish was abolished and most of its area incorporated into Altrincham UD At the same time there was a minor exchange of areas with Hale Urban District a minor addition from Bowdon Urban District and a further substantial portion of Dunham Massey Civil Parish was added 32 In 1937 the urban district was granted a charter of incorporation and became a municipal borough 33 The new borough was granted armorial bearings which featured heraldic references to the Masseys and Earls of Stamford 34 With the passage of the Local Government Act 1972 the administrative counties and municipal boroughs were abolished and Altrincham became part of the Metropolitan Borough of Trafford in Greater Manchester on 1 April 1974 12 Trafford Council is responsible for the administration of local services such as education social services town planning waste collection and council housing The area is divided into seven electoral wards Altrincham Bowdon Broadheath Hale Barns Hale Central Timperley and Village These wards have 21 out of the 63 seats on the Trafford Council as of the 2014 local elections fifteen of these seats were held by the Conservative Party three by the Labour Party and three by the Liberal Democrats 35 Altrincham was in the eponymous parliamentary constituency which was created in 1885 This lasted until 1945 when it was replaced by Altrincham and Sale In 1997 this in turn became part of the newly created constituency of Altrincham and Sale West Since its formation Altrincham and Sale West has been represented in the House of Commons by the Conservative MP Graham Brady 36 This is one of only four Conservative seats in Greater Manchester citation needed Geography EditFurther information Geography of Greater Manchester The Metropolitan Borough of Trafford highlighting the Altrincham area in red At 53 23 2 N 2 21 17 W 53 38389 N 2 35472 W 53 38389 2 35472 53 3838 2 3547 Altrincham is on the southwestern edge of the Greater Manchester Urban Area immediately south of the town of Sale and 8 miles 13 km southwest of Manchester city centre It lies in the northwest corner of the Cheshire Plain just south of the River Mersey The Bridgewater Canal passes through the Broadheath area of the town Altrincham s drinking water is supplied by United Utilities 37 The local bedrock consists mainly of Keuper Waterstone a type of sandstone and water retrieved from those rocks is very hard and often saline making it undrinkable 38 The town s climate is generally temperate with few extremes of temperature or weather The mean temperature is slightly above average for the United Kingdom whereas both annual rainfall and average hours of sunshine are slightly below the average for the UK 39 Along with Sale Stretford and Urmston Altrincham is one of the four major urban areas in Trafford The Altrincham area as defined by Trafford Council comprises the south of Trafford In addition to the town of Altrincham it includes the villages of Timperley Bowdon Hale and Hale Barns The Broadheath area of the town was a light industrial centre until the 1970s and is now a retail park The most densely populated part of the town is around the town centre with the less populated areas and more green space further from the centre of town in villages such as Bowdon and Hale The Oldfield Brow area lies on the outskirts of the town beside the Bridgewater Canal and close to Dunham Massey 40 41 Demography EditEthnicity Altrincham compared2011 UK Census Altrincham 42 Trafford 43 England 44 Total population 52 419 226 578 53 012 456White 91 6 85 5 85 4 Asian 4 9 7 9 7 8 Mixed 2 0 2 7 2 3 Black 0 8 2 9 3 5 Other 0 7 1 0 1 0 As of the 2011 UK census the town of Altrincham had a total population of 52 419 Of its 41 530 residents aged 16 and over 62 1 per cent were couples living together 42 The town s population density is 37 4 inhabitants per hectare with the population consisting of 49 0 males and 51 0 females 42 Of those aged 16 and over 15 2 per cent had no academic qualifications similar to the 18 6 per cent in all of Trafford 42 43 At 8 4 percent Altrincham has a low proportion of non white people Asians are the area s largest ethnic minority at 4 9 per cent of the population 42 In 1931 14 6 per cent of Altrincham s population was middle class clarification needed slightly higher than the figure for England and Wales which was 14 per cent By 1971 this gap had increased to 28 8 per cent compared to 24 per cent nationally while the town s working class population had declined from 30 3 per cent in 1931 36 per cent in England and Wales to 18 6 per cent 26 per cent nationwide The remainder comprised clerical and skilled manual workers This change in social structure was similar to that seen across the nation although biased towards the middle classes making Altrincham the middle class town it is today 20 Population change Edit According to the hearth tax returns from 1664 the township of Altrincham had a population of about 636 making it the largest of the local settlements 45 this had increased to 1 692 in 1801 In the first half of the 19th century the town s population increased by 165 per cent higher than 89 per cent across England and 98 per cent in the Trafford area The growth of the settlement was a result of the Industrial Revolution and although Altrincham was one of the fastest growing townships in the Trafford area but paled in comparison to new industrial areas such as Ashton under Lyne Hyde and Manchester In the second half of the 19th century Altrincham s population grew by 275 per cent higher than the 235 per cent for Trafford and 69 per cent nationally in the same period This was due to the late industrialisation of the area and the introduction of the Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway in 1849 46 Population growth in Altrincham since 1801YearPop 18011 692 18112 032 20 1 18212 302 13 3 18312 708 17 6 18413 399 25 5 18514 488 32 0 YearPop 18616 628 47 7 18718 478 27 9 188111 250 32 7 189112 440 10 6 190116 831 35 3 191117 813 5 8 YearPop 192120 450 14 8 193121 356 4 4 194139 940 87 0 195139 789 0 4 196141 122 3 4 197140 786 0 8 YearPop 198139 693 2 7 199140 042 0 9 200140 695 1 6 201152 419 28 8 Source A Vision of Britain through Time 22 47 48 49 Economy EditWorking age population Altrincham compared2011 UK Census Altrincham 42 Trafford 43 England 50 Population aged 16 74 37 743 162 806 38 881 374Full time employment 43 4 41 9 38 6 Part time employment 13 9 14 0 13 7 Self employed 11 5 9 7 9 8 Unemployed 3 1 3 8 4 4 Retired 13 5 13 3 13 7 George Street Altrincham The Old Market Place Historically Altrincham was a market town and the two main areas of employment were agriculture and market trade Although the town went into decline in the 15th century it recovered and the annual fairs lasted until the mid 19th century and the market still continues 51 During the Industrial Revolution Altrincham grew as an industrial town particularly the Broadheath area which was developed into an industrial estate In 1801 there were four cotton mills in Altrincham although they had closed by the 1851 census The decline of the textile industry in Altrincham mirrored the decline of the industry in the Trafford area as a result of a lack of investment and the development of more established industrial areas such as Manchester Ashton under Lyne and Oldham 16 52 During the late 19th and early 20th centuries heavier industries moved into Broadheath providing local employment The area steadily declined during the second half of the 20th century with employment at Broadheath falling from 8 000 to 5 000 between 1960 and 1970 18 25 Despite the presence of retailers such as Tesco Sainsbury s and Marks amp Spencer in the town a new Asda superstore in Broadheath and redevelopment schemes costing over 100 million 53 54 Altrincham s 15 5 per cent level of employment in retail is below the national average of 16 9 per cent Altrincham with its neighbours Bowdon and Hale is said to constitute a stockbroker belt with well appointed dwellings in an area of sylvan opulence 55 The historic market town developed as a residential area in the 19th century although it retains its retail heritage in the Old Market Place a conservation area and a new pedestrianised shopping centre The retail districts of the town have more recently fallen victim to decline due to competition from the nearby Trafford Centre and a regenerated Manchester city centre 56 In 2006 Trafford Metropolitan Borough Council unveiled plans for a 1 5 million redevelopment for the town centre 53 The renovation will create 146 000 square feet 13 600 m2 of new retail space and 203 000 square feet 18 900 m2 of refurbished space providing 349 000 square feet 32 400 m2 in total 57 Construction on Altair a 100 million development on Oakfield Road began in September 2019 58 after many years of delay The scheme includes apartments shops and eating places and will create a new public square linking it to the nearby Altrincham Interchange 59 which underwent a 19million refurbishment in 2015 A 2010 survey found that despite being in one of the country s most affluent areas nearly a third of the shops in Altrincham were vacant Trafford council attributed the high number 78 to the effects of the recession and plans to refurbish Stamford House which left most of its shops unused 60 According to the 2011 UK census the main industries of employment of residents in Altrincham were wholesale and retail trade 14 8 human health and social work activities 13 0 and professional scientific and technical activities 11 6 42 The census recorded the economic inactivity of residents aged 16 74 as 3 5 per cent looking after home or family 2 8 per cent long term sick or disabled 4 1 per cent students and 1 5 per cent economically inactive for other reasons 42 The 3 1 per cent unemployment rate of Altrincham was low compared with the national rate of 4 4 per cent 42 43 Culture EditLandmarks and attractions Edit Dunham Massey Hall The Old Market Place is thought to stand on the site of the original town settlement Now a registered conservation area it consists of a series of part timber framed buildings echoing the wattle and daube constructions of the original houses and burgage plots The cobblestone paving was replaced in 1896 The Buttermarket which stood in the area near the Old Market Place from the 17th century until the late 19th century was also the site for dispensing early local justice A courtroom stocks and whipping post saw public floggings take place there until the early 19th century The whipping post and stocks were restored as a tourist attraction by local traders in the 1990s However the Buttermarket area was also a site of religious importance since prospective brides and grooms are thought to have declared their intentions here 61 In 1814 Thomas de Quincey described the Old Market Place in his Confessions of an English Opium Eater while travelling from Manchester to Chester He noted how little the place had changed since his visit 14 years earlier at the age of three and that fruits such as can be had in July and flowers were scattered about in profusion even the stalls of the butchers from their brilliant cleanliness appeared attractive and bonny young women of Altrincham were all tripping about in caps and aprons coquettishly disposed 62 In 1974 Altrincham artist George Allen was approached by Trafford Council to paint a picture of The Old Market Place This picture was used to produce postcards which were sold to promote Altrincham and are still sold today to raise funds for a local charity citation needed Another of Altrincham s attractions is the historic market set up over 700 years ago when the town was first established 63 John Leigh Park Of the 21 conservation areas in Trafford ten are in Altrincham The Downs The Devisdale Bowdon Ashley Heath Goose Green Old Market Place Sandiway George Street the Linotype Housing Estate and Stamford New Road 64 On the town s outskirts is the 18th century Dunham Massey Hall 65 surrounded by its 250 acre 1 km2 deer park both now owned by the National Trust The hall is early Georgian in style and along with its stables and carriage house is a Grade I listed building 66 Royd House was built between 1914 and 1916 by local architect Edgar Wood as his own residence It has a flat concrete roof a concave facade and is faced in Portland red stone and Lancashire brick 67 It is regarded as one of the most advanced examples of early 20th century domestic architecture and is referenced in architectural digests It has been a Grade I listed building since 1975 one of six such buildings in Trafford 68 69 The Grade II listed clock outside the main transport interchange was built in 1880 70 The 16 acre 6 5 ha Stamford Park was designed by landscape gardener John Shaw It opened to the public in 1880 as a sports park with areas for cricket and football The land was donated by George Grey the 7th Earl of Stamford and is now owned and run by Trafford Council The park is listed as Grade II on the Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in England 71 and has won a bronze award from the Greenspace award scheme 72 John Leigh Park located in the area of Oldfield Brow was the site of Oldfield Hall until 1917 when it fell into disrepair after being purchased by the Earl of Stamford That year Mr John Leigh purchased the land from the widowed Countess of Stamford and gifted it to the local council to be used as a park for soldiers and workers The park was named John Leigh Park and opened on 22 July 1917 citation needed Events and venues Edit The George Allen Art Gallery Altrincham Altrincham has its own music festival that takes place in August The Goose Green Festival takes place over the August bank holiday weekend in the Goose Green area of Altrincham and features a number of unsigned bands local food and drink and entertainment for all the family Founded in 2015 the two day festival attracts over 6000 visitors over the two days and headline acts have included Prose The Jade Assembly The Rainband Apollo Junction and Corella citation needed Altrincham has two theatres the Altrincham Garrick Playhouse and the Club Theatre latterly known as the Altrincham Little Theatre The Altrincham Garrick group was formed in 1913 The Garrick held the world stage premier of Psycho in 1982 In 1998 it received a grant of 675 000 from the National Lottery as part of a 900 000 redevelopment of the theatre which was completed in 1999 73 The Club Theatre group began in 1896 as the St Margaret s Church Institute Amateur Dramatics Society It provides a venue for the Trafford Youth Theatre production each year and it runs the Hale One Act Festival an annual week long event started in 1972 74 The club has received awards from both the Greater Manchester Drama Federation and the Cheshire Theatre Guild 75 Altrincham also had Greater Manchester s only Michelin starred restaurant the Juniper 76 Sport Edit Altrincham F C nicknamed The Robins was founded in 1903 and play home matches at Moss Lane The club plays in the National League In the 1970s and 1980s Altrincham F C built a reputation for giant killing acts against Football League teams in FA Cup matches The club has knocked out Football League opposition on a record 16 occasions 77 including a 1986 victory against top flight Birmingham City 78 Altrincham won the forerunner of the Football Conference in its first two seasons but was denied election to the Football League on both occasions falling a single vote short in 1980 79 Altrincham have since had mixed fortunes Relegated to the Northern Premier League in 1997 the club has since earned 5 promotions and suffered 5 relegations most recently gaining promotion to the National League in the 2019 20 season 80 The club s main rivals are Macclesfield Town and Northwich Victoria citation needed Altrincham Ice Dome is the home of Manchester Storm and Altrincham Aces Altrincham is one of the few towns in north west England with an ice rink and has had an ice hockey team since 1961 when Altrincham Ice Rink was built in Broadheath 81 The Altrincham Aces later renamed the Trafford Metros played from 1961 until 2003 when Altrincham Ice Rink closed 82 The town then had a three year period without a rink or ice hockey team until construction of the 2 500 capacity Altrincham Ice Dome was completed 83 Manchester Phoenix a club having a professional presence in the English Premier Ice Hockey League and an extensive junior development aspect relocated to the Ice Dome during the 2006 07 season having withdrawn from competition two years earlier due to the high cost of playing matches at Manchester s MEN Arena 84 In 2009 the Manchester Phoenix English National Ice Hockey League team was renamed Trafford Metros bringing the old Altrincham team s name back into use 85 When not being used by Phoenix the Altrincham Ice Dome is open to the public for ice skating 86 Founded in 1897 87 Altrincham Kersal RUFC plays rugby union They have played at level 6 since being relegated from North One in 2012 Following the withdrawal of a number of Lancashire clubs from the county s union 88 they have been level transferred to play in the North Lancashire and Cumbria League for 2018 19 89 The club has produced England and Sale Sharks players Mark Cueto and Chris Jones and continues to produce players for the Sale Jets 90 Altrincham and District Athletics Club was founded in 1961 and provides training facilities for track and field road running cross country running and fell running 91 Seamons Cycling Club was formed in 1948 in the area of Altrincham known locally as Seamons Moss 92 Education EditSee also List of schools in Trafford As Altrincham was part of the Bowdon parish children from the township may have gone to the 16th century school established at Bowdon before that point the town had no formal education system A salt merchant from Dunham Woodhouses founded a school at Oldfield House intended for 40 boys aged 8 11 from the surrounding area Sunday schools were set up in the late 18th and early 19th centuries 93 Altrincham s increasing population prompted the founding of more schools during the early 19th century and by 1856 the town had 9 schools 1 college and 23 teachers 94 The introduction of compulsory education during the second half of the 19th century increased the demand for schools and by 1886 Altrincham had 12 church schools and 8 private schools 95 Responsibility for local education fell to Cheshire County Council in 1903 Loreto Convent the County High School for Girls and Altrincham County High School for Boys were founded in 1909 1910 and 1912 respectively Although still open these schools have since changed their names to Altrincham Grammar School for Girls Altrincham Grammar School for Boys and Loreto Grammar School 95 Altrincham received evacuees during the Second World War and it was in this period that St Ambrose College was founded 96 Altrincham now has eighteen primary schools one special school and eight secondary schools including five grammar schools the Trafford district maintains a selective education system assessed by entrance exams set by each school Several of Altrincham s secondary schools have specialist status Altrincham College arts 97 Altrincham Grammar School for Boys language 98 Altrincham Grammar School for Girls language 99 Blessed Thomas Holford Catholic College maths and computing 100 Loreto Grammar School science and maths 101 and St Ambrose College maths and computing 102 Altrincham College of Arts 97 Altrincham Grammar School for Boys 98 Altrincham Grammar School for Girls 99 Blessed Thomas Holford Catholic College 100 Loreto Grammar School 101 and St Ambrose College 102 were all rated as outstanding in 2011 12 Ofsted reports Brentwood Special School is a mixed school for 11 to 19 year olds who have special needs or learning difficulties 103 Altrincham is home to one of the longest established family owned nursery schools in the UK Oakfield Nursery School Oakfield was voted UK Nursery of the Year in 2014 104 and Best Individual Nursery in 2008 105 Religion EditSee also List of churches in Greater Manchester The Grade II listed St George s Church During the medieval and post medieval periods the township of Altrincham was part of Bowdon parish Low population density meant that the town did not have a church until the Anglican church established a chapel of ease in 1799 Nonconformists were also present in Altrincham Methodists set up a chapel in 1790 and Baptists built one in the 1870s 106 107 Irish immigrants in the 1830s and 1840s also returned Roman Catholicism to the area the first Roman Catholic church built in Altrincham being St Vincent s in 1860 108 Several churches in Altrincham are deemed architecturally important enough to be designated Grade II listed buildings These are Christ Church 109 the Church of St Alban 110 the Church of St George 111 the Church of St John the Evangelist 112 and Trinity United Reformed Church 113 Of the nine Grade II listed buildings in Trafford three are in Altrincham the Church of St Margaret 114 the Church of St John the Divine 115 and Hale Chapel in Hale Barns 116 As of the 2001 UK census 78 8 per cent of Altrincham s residents reported themselves as being Christian 1 1 per cent Jewish 1 1 per cent Muslim 0 4 per cent Hindu 0 2 per cent Buddhist and 0 1 per cent Sikh The census recorded 12 1 per cent as having no religion 0 2 per cent with an alternative religion while 6 1 per cent did not state a religion 117 Altrincham is in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Shrewsbury 118 and the Church of England Diocese of Chester 119 The nearest synagogue belonging to Hale and District Hebrew Congregation is on Shay Lane in Hale Barns 120 Transport Edit Altrincham station in 2010 Construction of the Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway began in 1845 The line was opened in October 1849 with services from Manchester London Road 121 via Sale to Altrincham 122 In 1931 it became one of Great Britain s first electrified railway lines with a 1 500 V DC overhead line At the same time a new Altrincham station was opened on the same line at Navigation Road serving housing developments in the area By 1937 130 train services ran daily between Manchester and Altrincham 19 The line was renovated in the early 1990s to form part of the Manchester Metrolink light rail system 123 Broadheath railway station served the northern part of Altrincham between 1853 and 1962 on the line from Manchester via Lymm to Warrington 124 Altrincham Interchange is one of the Metrolink s termini The interchange was refurbished 2015 16 and now includes a brand new footbridge with three lifts to cope with increased passenger demands a larger scale ticket office and a modern bus interchange The Interchange connects the town to several locations in Greater Manchester such as Sale and Bury the service also includes Navigation Road station Metrolink services leave around every six minutes between 07 15 and 19 30 on weekdays and less frequently at other times 125 National Rail services link the Altrincham and Navigation Road stations with Chester via Northwich and with Manchester via Stockport Altrincham Interchange next to the railway station is a hub for local bus routes Manchester Airport the largest in the UK outside London is 5 miles 8 km to the south east of the town and is connected via the Manchester Piccadilly Crewe line There are plans to create a new link between Manchester Airport and the Mid Cheshire Line which Altrincham Interchange is a station on Recently the Metrolink completed connections to this airport and opened the line 12 months early but this is not a direct connection from the Metrolink line at Altrincham Interchange 126 Notable people EditMain article List of people from Trafford The artist Helen Allingham born in 1848 lived in Altrincham and then Bowdon during her childhood years 127 Abstract artist Jeremy Moon was born in Altrincham in 1934 The composer and music teacher John Ireland was born in Bowdon in 1879 Alison Uttley wrote the Little Grey Rabbit books while living in Bowdon 127 Dramatist Ronald Gow lived there in his youth and later taught at Altrincham Grammar School for Boys 127 The town was also the birthplace of the film and television actress Angela Cartwright 128 Ian Brown and John Squire of The Stone Roses both attended Altrincham Grammar School for Boys 129 and Paul Young of Sad Cafe and Mike and the Mechanics lived in Altrincham until his death in 2000 130 Nick Estcourt mountain climber opened a climbing shop on Stamford New Road in Altrincham shortly before being swept to his death by an avalanche during an expedition to climb K2 in 1978 the shop was subsequently run for many years by his wife Carolyn Estcourt was one of the closest friends of Chris Bonington who lived for a time in Bowdon 131 Hewlett Johnson later known as the Red Dean of Canterbury was curate and later vicar of St Margaret s in the town from 1904 to 1924 132 Footballer Jack Liggins was born here in 1906 133 The Lancashire and England Test cricketer Paul Allott was born in Altrincham 134 Two Victoria Cross recipients were born at Altrincham Edward Kinder Bradbury was born 16 August 1881 in the town he was awarded the Victoria Cross for gallantry and ability in organising the defence of L Battery against heavy odds at Nery on 1 September 1914 in World War I Altrincham born Bill Speakman received the Victoria Cross for valour in 1951 in the Korean War 135 Sir Michael Pollock an officer in the Royal Navy who rose to the position of First Sea Lord was born in Altrincham 136 See also Edit Greater Manchester portalListed buildings in AltrinchamReferences EditNotes Note that neither of these pronunciations includes the sound tʃ suggested by the spelling Town population 2011 Retrieved 8 January 2016 Nevell 1997 p 15 Nevell 1997 p 18 a b Dore 1972 p 12 Nickson 1935 pp 3 4 Nevell 1997 p 27 Nevell 1997 p 32 Nevell 1997 pp 39 52 Nevell 1997 p 51 Bayliss 1992 p 18 a b c Altrincham History Altrincham History Society Archived from the original on 11 August 2007 Retrieved 24 July 2007 Nevell 1997 p 52 Faulkner P 2005 The Knoll Altrincham South Trafford Archaeological Group Archived from the original on 2 May 2007 Retrieved 11 September 2007 Nevell 1997 pp 95 97 a b McNeil amp Nevell 2000 p 61 Nevell 1997 p 92 a b c Nevell 1997 pp 15 18 39 87 95 100 126 30 a b Dixon 1994 a b Altrincham social class Vision of Britain Retrieved 20 December 2007 Bamford 1995 a b Nevell 1997 p 87 Nevell 1997 pp 126 130 Altrincham Municipal Borough with list of casualties Commonwealth War Graves Commission date accessed 21 February 2019 a b Bamford 1991 pp 78 85 Nickson 1935 p 9 Bayliss 1992 p 14 Nickson 1935 pp 11 13 Municipal Corporations Act 1883 C 18 Nevell 1997 p 95 Booklet traces the history of Altrincham Town Hall Messenger Newspapers 3 May 2016 Retrieved 9 March 2021 Relationships and changes Altrincham Ch CP Vision of Britain Retrieved 14 February 2014 A New Borough Charter Granted To Altrincham The Times 2 August 1937 p 7 Robert Young Altrincham Borough Council Civic Heraldry of England and Wales Archived from the original on 12 February 2009 Retrieved 3 January 2009 Local election results 2010 Trafford MBC 6 May 2010 Archived from the original on 8 March 2012 Retrieved 22 March 2012 Local election results 2011 Trafford MBC 5 May 2011 Archived from the original on 22 March 2012 Retrieved 22 March 2012 Local election results 2012 Trafford MBC 3 May 2008 Archived from the original on 1 August 2012 Retrieved 8 May 2012 Altrincham and Sale West Guardian Unlimited guardian co uk Retrieved 14 March 2012 Trafford United Utilities Retrieved 13 February 2012 dead link Taylor Price amp Trotter 1963 p 58 Met Office 2007 Annual UK weather averages Met Office Archived from the original on 5 July 2009 Retrieved 23 April 2007 Timperley ward population density Office for National Statistics Archived from the original on 13 February 2008 Retrieved 24 July 2007 Altrincham ward population density Office for National Statistics Archived from the original on 13 February 2008 Retrieved 24 July 2007 Bowdon ward population density Office for National Statistics Archived from the original on 13 February 2008 Retrieved 24 July 2007 Broadheath ward population density Office for National Statistics Archived from the original on 13 February 2008 Retrieved 24 July 2007 Hale ward population density Office for National Statistics Archived from the original on 13 February 2008 Retrieved 24 July 2007 Village ward population density Office for National Statistics Archived from the original on 13 February 2008 Retrieved 24 July 2007 Bowdon ward profile Trafford MBC Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 24 July 2007 Hale Central ward profile Trafford MBC Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 24 July 2007 Hale Barns ward profile Trafford MBC Archived from the original on 30 September 2007 Retrieved 24 July 2007 a b c d e f g h i UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Altrincham Built up area 1119883957 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 9 February 2018 a b c d UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Trafford Local Authority 1946157089 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 9 February 2018 UK Census 2011 Local Area Report England Country 2092957699 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 9 February 2018 Nevell 1997 p 59 Nevell 1997 pp 85 86 1981 Key Statistics for Urban Areas GB Table 1 Office for National Statistics 1981 Greater Manchester Urban Area 1991 Census National Statistics Archived from the original on 5 February 2009 Retrieved 24 July 2008 Census 2001 Key Statistics Urban area results by population size of urban area ons gov uk Office for National Statistics 22 July 2004 KS01 Usual resident population Retrieved 24 July 2008 Data Viewer Nomis Official Labour Market Statistics www nomisweb co uk Retrieved 28 January 2018 Bayliss 1992 p 141 Nevell 1997 p 86 a b Roberts Lynsey 13 November 2006 Town gets a facelift messengernewspapers co uk Retrieved 14 March 2012 Roberts Lynsey 27 November 2006 The face of Altrincham s future messengernewspapers co uk Retrieved 14 March 2012 Frangopulo 1977 p 224 Altrincham The Sale and Altrincham Pages 24 January 2007 Archived from the original on 7 August 2007 Retrieved 19 July 2007 Recipe for disaster restaurant owners slams town decline messengernewspapers co uk 20 August 1999 Retrieved 14 March 2012 40m renewal plan Manchester Evening News M E N media 29 November 2005 Archived from the original on 12 November 2012 Retrieved 14 March 2012 40m precinct takes shape Manchester Evening News M E N media 23 May 2006 Archived from the original on 12 November 2012 Retrieved 14 March 2012 At long last Work on the 70m Altair scheme is to begin on Monday 20 September 2019 Griffin Chris 16 February 2012 Trafford Council welcomes granting of the compulsory purchase order on site earmarked for Altair development messengernewspapers co uk Retrieved 17 March 2012 A third of Altrincham shops lie empty report claims BBC News 9 September 2010 Archived from the original on 11 September 2010 Retrieved 9 September 2010 Tour of Altrincham Old Market Place Altrincham History Society Archived from the original on 8 August 2007 Retrieved 3 January 2008 De Quincey 1994 pp 75 76 Welcome to Altrincham Market Trafford MBC Archived from the original on 14 February 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2012 Conservation Areas in Trafford Trafford MBC 1 May 2008 Archived from the original on 6 February 2013 Retrieved 23 March 2012 Historic England Dunham Massey Lodge 1356512 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 February 2007 Dunham Massey National Trust Archived from the original on 2 July 2007 Retrieved 11 July 2007 Miller Keith 24 March 2001 When diamonds were a man s best trend telegraph co uk Telegraph Media Group Limited Archived from the original on 18 January 2014 Retrieved 13 February 2012 Historic England Royd House 1067922 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 February 2007 Planning and building control listed buildings Trafford MBC March 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 16 July 2011 Retrieved 14 December 2007 Historic England Clock Tower on Station Forecourt 1067962 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 February 2007 Welcome to the Friends of Stamford Park website Friends of Stamford Park Retrieved 15 February 2014 History Hale Moss and Stamford Park Friends of Stamford Park Retrieved 15 February 2014 Parks pass green flag test PDF Trafford gov uk January 2008 p 4 Archived from the original PDF on 15 December 2013 Retrieved 13 February 2012 Sails Richard January 2007 History of the Altrincham Garrick Playhouse Altrincham Garrick Playhouse Archived from the original on 24 July 2012 Retrieved 10 July 2007 The history of the Hale One Act Festival The Club Theatre Archived from the original on 23 July 2007 Retrieved 10 July 2007 Theatre history The Club Theatre Retrieved 15 February 2014 Michelin star restaurants in the UK Andy Hayler s Restaurant Guide 2007 Archived from the original on 11 July 2007 Retrieved 11 July 2007 Oliver Peter 7 November 2007 Tinson prepares for FA Cup hurrah BBC Sport Retrieved 9 December 2007 Smith Martin 26 January 2006 Football diary unable Seaman telegraph co uk Telegraph Media Group Limited Archived from the original on 18 February 2008 Retrieved 9 December 2007 Division 4 1979 80 Footballsite co uk Retrieved 19 October 2014 Rundle Richard Altrincham F C history Football club history database Retrieved 1 May 2021 Ice rink closes after 42 years BBC News 30 March 2003 Retrieved 11 December 2007 Jones Richard Altrincham ice hockey a history Altrinchamaces co uk Retrieved 11 December 2007 Get your skates on in Altrincham Manchester Evening News M E N media 10 April 2007 Archived from the original on 6 July 2008 Retrieved 11 December 2007 Costigan Andy 6 April 2006 Phoenix on ice bbc co uk Retrieved 9 July 2007 Metros set to make a return Manchester Evening News M E N media 14 March 2009 Retrieved 17 March 2012 Silver Blades ice rink silver blades co uk Archived from the original on 6 March 2010 Retrieved 24 July 2007 Altrincham Kersal RUFC History pitchero com Retrieved 15 March 2012 Statement from Lancashire County RFU PDF 4 May 2018 North West League Restructure PDF Retrieved 2 June 2018 Inside Altrincham Kersal RUFC akrfc co uk 2006 Archived from the original on 6 October 2007 Retrieved 9 July 2007 Altrincham amp District Athletics Club altrincham athletics co uk Archived from the original on 26 January 2012 Retrieved 14 March 2012 History of Seamons CC Seamons Cycling Club Retrieved 14 March 2012 Bayliss 1992 p 71 Bayliss 1992 p 72 a b Bayliss 1992 p 73 Bayliss 1992 p 74 a b Altrincham College of Arts inspection report PDF ofsted gov uk 24 May 2011 Retrieved 17 March 2012 dead link a b Altrincham Grammar School for Boys inspection report PDF ofsted gov uk 13 December 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 13 October 2012 Retrieved 17 March 2012 a b Altrincham Grammar School for Girls inspection report PDF ofsted gov uk 9 October 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 17 October 2012 Retrieved 17 March 2012 a b Blessed Thomas Holford Catholic College inspection report ofsted gov uk 2 July 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 9 November 2011 Retrieved 17 March 2012 a b Loreto Grammar School inspection report Ofsted 11 November 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 9 November 2011 Retrieved 17 March 2012 a b St Ambrose College inspection report Ofsted 8 July 2009 Archived from the original PDF on 9 November 2011 Retrieved 17 March 2012 Brentwood special school Trafford gov uk Archived from the original on 6 January 2011 Retrieved 8 September 2008 Altrincham nursery named best in UK Messenger Newspapers Altrincham nursery wins top award Messenger Newspapers Bayliss 1992 p 58 Nevell 1997 pp 106 107 Nevell 1997 pp 107 108 Historic England Christ Church 1120867 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 February 2007 Historic England Church of St Alban 1107845 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 February 2007 Historic England Church of St George 1067949 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 February 2007 Historic England Church of St John the Evangelist 1067961 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 February 2007 Historic England Trinity United Reformed Church 1067924 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 February 2007 Historic England Church of St Margaret 1325200 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 February 2007 Historic England Church of St John the Divine 1261946 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 February 2007 Historic England Hale Chapel 1356500 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 4 February 2007 Census 2001 Key Statistics Urban area results by population size of urban area ons gov uk Office for National Statistics 22 July 2004 KS07 Religion Retrieved 30 December 2008 Catholic Diocese of Shrewsbury Dioceseofshrewsbury org Retrieved 7 May 2007 The Church of England Diocese of Chester Chester anglican org Retrieved 4 June 2007 New Building hale jewish community org uk Archived from the original on 1 March 2012 Retrieved 14 March 2012 Awdry 1990 pp 222 223 Nevell 1997 p 97 Nevell 1997 p 100 Station name Broadheath Altrincham Disused stations org Retrieved 22 March 2012 Tram Times Metrolink Retrieved 15 February 2014 Fact Sheet Airport Summary Manchester Airport Archived from the original on 11 March 2012 Retrieved 22 March 2012 a b c Biographies of local people Altrincham History Society Archived from the original on 16 June 2007 Retrieved 19 July 2007 The Official Angela Cartwright Website Altrincham History Society Archived from the original on 29 June 2007 Retrieved 19 July 2007 Hattenstone Simon 23 September 2005 Where did it all go right Guardian Unlimited guardian co uk Retrieved 14 March 2012 Mechanics singer Young dead BBC Online 17 July 2000 Retrieved 11 July 2007 Chris Bonington 1986 The Everest Years London Hodder and Stoughton page 16 I moved from the Lake District down to Manchester in 1968 to be more in the hub of things I had wanted to move to London Wendy Bonington s wife had wanted to stay in the Lakes and Bowdon on the outskirts of Manchester was the compromise Biographies of local people Altrincham Area History Archived from the original on 17 October 2013 Retrieved 11 June 2013 Joyce Michael 2004 Football league players records 1888 to 1939 Rev ed Nottingham A SoccerData publication from Tony Brown ISBN 1899468676 Paul Allott player profile espncricinfo com Retrieved 15 March 2012 The reluctant hero Sale and Altrincham Messenger messengernewspapers co uk 24 October 2001 Retrieved 14 March 2012 van der Vat Dan 2 October 2006 Admiral of the Fleet Sir Michael Pollock Guardian Unlimited guardian co uk Retrieved 14 March 2012 Bibliography Awdry Christopher 1990 Encyclopedia of British Railway Companies Patrick Stephens Ltd ISBN 1 85260 049 7 Bamford Frank 1991 The Making of Altrincham 1850 1991 from market to megastore Altrincham Frank Bamford ISBN 0 9517225 1 4 Bamford Frank 1995 Broadheath 1885 1985 a century of industry Altrincham Frank Bamford ISBN 0 9517225 2 2 Bayliss Don 1992 Altrincham a history Altrincham Willow Publishing ISBN 0 946361 33 9 De Quincey Thomas 1994 1821 Confessions of an English Opium Eater Wordsworth Editions ISBN 978 1 85326 096 4 Dixon Frank 1994 The Manchester South Junction and Altrincham Railway The Oakwood Press ISBN 0 85361 454 7 Dore R N 1972 A History of Hale Cheshire From Domesday to Dormitory Altrincham John Sherratt and Son Ltd ISBN 0 85427 030 2 Frangopulo N J 1977 Tradition in Action The Historical Evolution of the Greater Manchester County Wakefield EP Publishing ISBN 978 0 7158 1203 7 McNeil R Mike Nevell 2000 A Guide to the Industrial Archaeology of Greater Manchester Association for Industrial Archaeology ISBN 0 9528930 3 7 Nevell Mike 1997 The Archaeology of Trafford Trafford Metropolitan Borough with University of Manchester Archaeological Unit ISBN 1 870695 25 9 Nickson Chas 1935 Bygone Altrincham Didsbury E J Morten ISBN 0 901598 30 5 Taylor B J R H Price Frederick Murray Trotter 1963 Geology of the Country around Stockport and Knutsford Memoirs of the Geological Survey of Great Britain External links EditListen to this article 36 minutes source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 2 February 2008 2008 02 02 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles Wikimedia Commons has media related to Altrincham Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Altrincham Altrincham History Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Altrincham amp oldid 1130381757, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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