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Warrington

Warrington (/ˈwɒrɪŋtən/) is an industrial town in the borough of the same name in Cheshire, England. The town sits on the banks of the River Mersey and until 1974, was part of Lancashire. It is 19 miles (31 km) east of Liverpool, and 19 miles (31 km) west of Manchester.

Warrington
Town and Unparished area

The town hall, Transporter Bridge, parish church, Skittles on Market Gate square, Crown Street and Bridge Street
Warrington
Location within Cheshire
Area44.89 km2 (17.33 sq mi)
Population172,330 (2020 estimate)
• Density3,839/km2 (9,940/sq mi)
Civil parish
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townWarrington
Postcode districtWA1–5 & 55
Dialling code01925
Websitewww.warrington.gov.uk
List of places
UK
England
Cheshire
53°23′N 2°35′W / 53.39°N 2.59°W / 53.39; -2.59Coordinates: 53°23′N 2°35′W / 53.39°N 2.59°W / 53.39; -2.59

The population in 2019 was estimated at 165,456 for the town's urban area, and 210,014 for the wider borough,[1] the latter being more than double that of 1968 when it became a new town. Warrington is the largest town in the ceremonial county of Cheshire. In 2011 the unparished area had a population of 58,871.[2]

Warrington was founded by the Romans at an important crossing place on the River Mersey. A new settlement was established by the Saxon Wærings.[3] By the Middle Ages, Warrington had emerged as a market town at the lowest bridging point of the river. A local tradition of textile and tool production dates from this time.[4]

The expansion and urbanisation of Warrington coincided with the Industrial Revolution, particularly after the Mersey was made navigable in the 18th century. The West Coast Main Line runs north to south through the town, and the Liverpool to Manchester railway (the Cheshire Lines route) west to east. The Manchester Ship Canal cuts through the south of the borough (west to east). The M6, M56 and M62 motorways form a partial box around the town and are all accessible through Warrington.

The modern Borough of Warrington was formed in 1974 with the amalgamation of the former County Borough of Warrington, part of the Golborne Urban District, the Lymm Urban District, part of the Runcorn Rural District, the Warrington Rural District and part of the Whiston Rural District.

Toponymy

The earliest known appearance of the name is ‘’Weringtun’', when before the Norman Conquest it was the head of a hundred.[5] An entry in the Domesday Book in AD 1086 named it as ‘’Wallintun‘’.[6] The root is likely the Old English word waru – meaning "those that care for, watch, guard, protect, or defend.” The suffix -ing is a cognate of inge, an ethnonym for the Ingaevones said variously to mean "of Yngvi,"[7] "family, people or followers of"[8] or a genitive plural form of an inhabitant appellation.[9] The suffix "ton" is from the Old English word tun meaning "fenced area" or "enclosure."

History

Early history

Warrington has been a major crossing point on the River Mersey since ancient times and there was a Roman settlement at Wilderspool.[10] Local archaeological evidence indicates that there were also Bronze Age settlements.[citation needed] In medieval times Warrington's importance was as a market town and bridging point of the River Mersey. The first reference to a bridge at Warrington is found in 1285.[11] The origin of the modern town was located in the area around St Elphin's Church, now included in the Church Street Conservation Area,[12] established whilst the main river crossing was via a ford approximately 1 km upriver of Warrington Bridge.[13] Warrington was the first paved town in Lancashire, which took place in 1321.[14]

English Civil War

Warrington was a fulcrum in the English Civil War. The armies of Oliver Cromwell and the Earl of Derby both stayed near the old town centre (the parish church area). Popular legend has it that Cromwell lodged near the building which survives on Church Street as the Cottage Restaurant. The Marquis of Granby public house bears a plaque stating that the Earl of Derby 'had his quarters near this site'. Dents in the walls of the parish church are rumoured to have been caused by the cannons from the time of the civil war. On 13 August 1651 Warrington was the scene of the last Royalist victory of the civil war when Scots troops under Charles II and David Leslie, Lord Newark, fought Parliamentarians under John Lambert at the Battle of Warrington Bridge.

Industrial history

The expansion and urbanisation of Warrington largely coincided with the Industrial Revolution, particularly after the Mersey was made navigable in the 18th century. As Britain became industrialised, Warrington embraced the Industrial Revolution becoming a manufacturing town and a centre of steel (particularly wire), textiles, brewing, tanning and chemical industries. The navigational properties of the River Mersey were improved, canals were built, and the town grew yet more prosperous and popular. When the age of steam came, Warrington naturally welcomed it, both as a means of transport and as a source of power for its mills.

Second World War

Warrington was the location of the Burtonwood RAF base and Risley Ordnance Factory. During World War II, RAF Burtonwood served as the largest US Army Air Force airfield outside the United States, and was visited by major American celebrities including Humphrey Bogart and Bob Hope who entertained the GIs. The RAF station continued to be used by the USAAF and subsequently USAF as a staging post for men and material until its closure in 1993.

Post-war expansion

Warrington was designated a new town in 1968 and consequently the population grew in size, with many of the town's new residents moving from Liverpool or Manchester, with the Birchwood area being developed on the former ROF Risley site. New council housing was built for families rehousing from slum clearances in Liverpool or Manchester, while Warrington's new private housing estates also became popular with homeowners.[15]

Heavy industry declined in the 1970s and 1980s but the growth of the new town led to a great increase in employment in light industry, retail, distribution and technology.

IRA bombing

On 20 March 1993, the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) detonated two bombs in Warrington town centre. The blasts killed two children: three-year-old Johnathan Ball died instantly, and twelve-year-old Tim Parry, from the Great Sankey area, died five days later in hospital. Around 56 other people were injured, four seriously. Their deaths provoked widespread condemnation of the organisation responsible. The blast followed a bomb attack a few weeks earlier on a gas-storage plant in Warrington.

Tim Parry's father, Colin Parry, founded The Tim Parry Johnathan Ball Foundation for Peace (known as the Peace Centre) as part of a campaign to reconcile communities in conflict. The centre opened on the seventh anniversary of the bombing, 20 March 2000. He and his family still live in the town.

Other history

In 1981, Warrington was the first place to field a candidate for the new Social Democratic Party: former Home Secretary Roy Jenkins stood for Parliament but lost to Labour Party candidate Doug Hoyle by a small number of votes.

There was a RAF training camp at Padgate, a Royal Naval air base at Appleton Thorn (RNAS Stretton) and an army base at the Peninsula Barracks in O'Leary Street.[16] The Territorial Army was based at the Bath Street drill hall until they moved to Peninsula Barracks.[17]

In October 1987, Swedish home products retailer IKEA opened its first British store in the Burtonwood area of the town, bringing more than 200 retail jobs to the area.[18]

Governance

History

County District Town From Until
Name Type Name Type Name Type
Cheshire Domesday "Inter Ripam et Mersam" Unknown Warrington ("Walingtune") Hundred Unknown 1186
Lancashire Historic West Derbyshire Hundred Warrington ancient parish 1186 1889
Administrative N/a Municipal borough Municipal borough of Warrington 1889 1900
County borough County borough of Warrington 1900 1974
Cheshire Non-metropolitan Shire district Borough of Warrington N/a 1974 1998
Ceremonial Unitary authority 1998 Current

Within the boundaries of the historic county of Lancashire, the town of Warrington was incorporated as a municipal borough in 1847 under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835. The town had its own police force from 1847 to 1969.[19] Warrington acquired county borough status upon reaching a population of 50,000 in 1900 and until 1974 was known as the County Borough of Warrington. As part of proposed local government reforms of England, in 1969 the Redcliffe-Maud Report suggested merging Warrington with either Merseyside or Greater Manchester metropolitan counties. Lobbying by the borough council averted this. But, since these county boundary changes were to make Warrington non-contiguous with Lancashire, under the local government reforms of 1974, Warrington, incorporating Lymm Urban District and part of Runcorn Rural District from Cheshire, and part of Warrington Rural District, was made a borough within Cheshire County Council.

On 1 April 1998, Warrington became an independent unitary authority, though it is still served by Cheshire Police and Cheshire Fire and Rescue Service, and forms part of Cheshire for ceremonial purposes, such as the Lord Lieutenancy. Warrington has applied unsuccessfully for city status, the most recent attempt being after the opening of the Peace Centre as a "City for Peace".

Warrington Borough Council

The current borders of Warrington Borough cover the former County Borough of Warrington, Lymm Urban District, Warrington Rural District and part of Golborne Urban District, part of Runcorn Rural District and part of Whiston Rural District.

After the May 2021 election the political makeup of the borough council was as follows: 36 Labour councillors, 11 Conservatives 8 Liberal Democrats, 3 Independents.[20] A Conservative councillor switched to Labour in 2022.

Parish councils

The Borough of Warrington contains 18 parish councils as well as a central unparished area (see list of civil parishes below).

National representation

At Westminster, Warrington is represented by two MPs: Charlotte Nichols (Labour) represents Warrington North, and Andy Carter (Conservative) represents Warrington South.

Geography

The Borough of Warrington is bordered by Halton, Cheshire West and Chester, and Cheshire East boroughs in the ceremonial county of Cheshire and by the metropolitan boroughs of Trafford, Salford and Wigan in Greater Manchester and St. Helens in Merseyside.

Subdivisions, suburbs and civil parishes of Warrington

The Borough of Warrington has 18 civil parishes. The town centre and the area around it are an unparished area.

Civil parishes

Appleton, Birchwood, Burtonwood and Westbrook, Croft, Cuerdley, Culcheth and Glazebury, Grappenhall and Thelwall, Great Sankey, Hatton, Lymm, Penketh, Poulton-with-Fearnhead (includes Padgate), Rixton-with-Glazebrook, Stockton Heath, Stretton, Walton, Winwick, Woolston (includes Martinscroft and Paddington)

Other areas, including localities within civil parishes

Appleton Thorn, Bewsey, Blackbrook, Bruche, Callands, Chapelford, Cinnamon Brow, Cobbs, Dallam, Fairfield, Gemini, Gorse Covert, Grange, Hermitage Green, Hollins Green, Hood Manor, Howley, Hulme, Kenyon, Latchford, Locking Stumps, Old Hall, Omega, Longford, Orford, Risley, Sankey Bridges, Westbrook, Westy, Whitecross, Wilderspool, Wright's Green

Climate

Warrington has a temperate maritime climate with warm summers and cool winters. Rain is spread across the year, with thunderstorms only usually occurring in the summer months. Summer heat waves are rare but can cause temperatures to exceed 30 °C. Summers are usually snow free and rarely experience high winds. Winters are generally cold, with most days around 0 °C . Moreover, during occasional lengthy cold snaps, night-time temperatures have been known to fall to −12 °C with lying snow lasting for weeks. Ground frost regularly occurs from late October until late March. High winds are common in winter, although rarely above gale force 7.

Climate data for Warrington, United Kingdom (1981–2010)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 6.9
(44.4)
7.2
(45.0)
9.7
(49.5)
12.3
(54.1)
15.9
(60.6)
18.4
(65.1)
20.2
(68.4)
20.1
(68.2)
17.4
(63.3)
13.5
(56.3)
9.6
(49.3)
7.1
(44.8)
13.2
(55.7)
Average low °C (°F) 0.8
(33.4)
1.0
(33.8)
2.4
(36.3)
3.6
(38.5)
6.7
(44.1)
9.0
(48.2)
11.7
(53.1)
11.3
(52.3)
9.2
(48.6)
6.7
(44.1)
3.0
(37.4)
0.6
(33.1)
5.5
(41.9)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 81.5
(3.21)
51.5
(2.03)
58.6
(2.31)
61.4
(2.42)
54.8
(2.16)
64.5
(2.54)
67.3
(2.65)
79.4
(3.13)
79.6
(3.13)
98.8
(3.89)
79.9
(3.15)
89.8
(3.54)
867.1
(34.16)
Mean monthly sunshine hours 43.8 69.8 97.7 137.1 185.9 163.7 171.7 161.6 133.3 89.7 63.7 54.6 1,372.6
Source: [21]

Green belt

Warrington is within a green belt region that extends into the wider surrounding counties, and is in place to reduce urban sprawl, prevent the towns in the nearby Manchester and Merseyside conurbations from further convergence, protect the identity of outlying communities, encourage brownfield reuse, and preserve nearby countryside. This is achieved by restricting inappropriate development within the designated areas, and imposing stricter conditions on permitted building.[22]

The main urban area and larger villages of the borough are exempt from the green belt area, but surrounding smaller villages, hamlets and rural areas such as Rixton, Glazebrook, Higher Walton, Kenyon, Stretton, Hatton, Broomedge are 'washed over' with the designation. The green belt was first drawn up in 1977 under Cheshire County Council,[22] and the size in the borough in 2017 amounted to 11,500 hectares (115 km2; 44 sq mi).[23]

A subsidiary aim of the green belt is to encourage recreation and leisure interests,[22] with rural landscape features and facilities including Walton Hall gardens with zoo and bicycle museum, St Oswald's Church and well, the River Mersey with valley and trail, River Bollin, Manchester Ship Canal, Bridgewater Canal, Appleton Reservoir, numerous playing fields, parks and golf clubs, Cuerdley and Norton marshes, the Trans Pennine Trail, the Mersey Forest project, and Sow Brook.

Demography

Based on ONS statistics

Population and ethnicity

 
Warrington unparished area in Warrington district

At the 2011 census, Warrington had a total population of 202,200, of which 49.6% are male and 50.4% are female.[24] The average age of the population is 38.06 years, which is slightly below the regional and national averages. In 2018 it was estimated that the current population of Warrington is 209,500.

In addition to English, a further 36 languages were recorded spoken by more than 0.01% of Warrington's population aged 3 and over in the 2011 census. Those spoken by more than 0.1% were Polish (0.88%), Slovak (0.21%), Urdu (0.14%), Latvian (0.12%) Non Mandarin or Cantonese Chinese (0.12%) and Tagalog/Filipino (0.11%).

There are around 100 churches or other Christian communities, two mosques, and a Sikh temple Guru Nanak Gurdwara which is the only Sikh place of worship in Cheshire.[25]

The most multicultural parts of Warrington are in the town centre, as well as the western and north western suburbs, such as Bewsey and Westbrook. In 2011, the town was 92.9% White British, 2.3% other White, 2.4% Asian and 0.3% Black.

Housing and social situation

At the 2011 census, the borough of Warrington had 85,100 households. From 2001 data (80,593 households), 76% were owner occupied, 17.6% were rented from the council, 4.8% were rented from other sources and 1.6% of houses had residents who lived rent free. Warrington has a population density of 10.7 residents per hectare, and 31.9% of residents describe the borough as a comfortably well-off area. 4.3% of households are deemed overcrowded. Of the total population, 5.8% of residents are on some form of benefits.

Employment and education

At 2005, the borough of Warrington had 63.6% employment, with only 2.9% of all economically active people unemployed – although a substantial rise began in 2008 due to the recession. 2.3% of the population are students in full-time higher education. 31.1% of the total population are economically inactive (due to retirement, ill health, or full-time carer status). According to borough statistics, of the population (in the Borough of Warrington in 2005). 26.9% are unqualified (either due to leaving school early or failing the end of school examinations). 46.4% have level 1 or 2 qualifications (level 1 being 1+ GCSE (A*-G) or "O" Level or equivalent, level 2 being 5+ GCSEs (grades A-C), 1+'A' levels/ AS levels (A-E) or equivalent). 19.7% have received level 3+ qualifications (meaning 2+ A-levels (A-E), 4+ AS-levels (A-E) or equivalent minimum).

Economy

 
Bridge Street, one of the main shopping streets in Warrington

This is a chart of trend of regional gross value added of Halton and Warrington at current basic prices.[26]

Year Regional gross value added[note 1] Agriculture[note 2] Industry[note 3] Services[note 4]
1995 3,636 14 1,361 2,261
2000 4,768 10 1,433 3,324
2003 5,774 18 1,399 4,356

There is a large Unilever factory in Warrington where powder detergents are made. In January 2020, Unilever put the plant under review owing to a fall in demand for washing powder compared with other forms of detergent.[27]

Warrington Council and Warrington & Halton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust are major employers in the borough.

ESR Technology's main operations are located at Warrington.

Retail

 
The Skittles

In spite of its proximity to significant retail areas in Manchester, Liverpool, Chester and the out-of-town Trafford Centre, Warrington continues to have one of the larger shopping centres in North West England. Despite the competition, Warrington has seen an increase in its customer trade, due in part to the modernisation of the town centre. It has a shopping centre (Golden Square) first opened in 1974,[28] which has been extended to include a Primark store, and a new bus station.[29]

The old Cockhedge Textile Mill was demolished and replaced by another shopping mall. The main shopping streets are Buttermarket Street, Horsemarket Street, Sankey Street and Bridge Street. Where these four streets intersect at Market Gate, there is a redevelopment with a large fountain and "guardians" (known locally as "the skittles") designed by Howard Ben Tré. Musical instrument retailer Dawsons Music originates in the town, and was located on Sankey Street from 1898 until 2019.[30] The town also has a large indoor market which was redeveloped as part of the Time Square development which brought the return of a cinema in the town centre along with office space, restaurants, bars and retail opportunities.[31]

The town also has several other small shopping malls located in the town centre and throughout the town such as Hatters Row and Birchwood Mall.[32] IKEA chose Warrington as the location for their first store when they came to the UK; the store is located in the large out-of-town shopping area of Gemini, which is home to one of the largest Marks and Spencer stores in the UK. Nearby to this, there is also an ODEON Luxe cinema, which was refurbished in 2019.[citation needed]

Leisure

There is ten-pin bowling located in the town centre and at Winwick Quay, and indoor paintball. An indoor karting centre is located near to Bank Quay. Pitch and putt and crazy golf are available at Walton Hall and Gardens. A Laser Quest arena and a snooker club can also be found in Warrington, both located close to the town centre. Gulliver's World theme park is located in Old Hall, Apple Jack's Farm theme park is situated in Stretton.

Developments

The Omega Development Site close to the M62 on the northern edge of Warrington, on part of the site of the Burtonwood Airbase, was intended to be a major business park but has instead been developed as mainly warehousing with a large residential area.

Other planned developments in Warrington were delayed by the economic climate, but redevelopment of the Time Square area, including a new Market, multi-story car park with around 1,200 spaces, cinema, retail outlets and council offices was completed in 2020 with an estimated cost of £142 million.

Warrington is developing a new Local Plan but plans to build 24,000 new homes were scaled back as government guidance changed. Included in the plans would be a new "Garden City Suburb" in the south of Warrington. The four main areas of growth as outlined in the planning were the waterfront around the River Mersey, the town centre, the Garden City Suburb and south west urban extension.[33]

Transport

 
Warrington after the coming of the railway, 1851

The town has two main railway stations: Bank Quay is on the West Coast Main Line between London Euston and Glasgow Central and the Manchester Piccadilly to North Wales via Chester line, while Central is on the Liverpool to Manchester line (via Widnes and Warrington) with through services to Sheffield then to East Anglia or Cleethorpes. Bank Quay is much altered, but Central (built 1873) is of some architectural merit, featuring polychromatic brickwork. Both have undergone some refurbishment including new entrances. There are also railway stations in the suburbs at Padgate, Sankey, Glazebrook and Birchwood. A new railway station, Warrington West in Chapelford, near Great Sankey, opened in December 2019.[34]

The town lies close to the M62, M6 and M56 motorways and midway between Liverpool and Manchester airports. It also has five primary A roads, the A49, A50, A56, A57 and A580 (East Lancashire Road), which forms part of the northern boundary of the borough.

Warrington's Own Buses, one of the few municipal bus companies to survive in public ownership, runs most bus services within the town. Go North West and Arriva North West provide bus links to surrounding destinations such as Manchester, the Trafford Centre, Liverpool, St Helens, Runcorn, Widnes and Chester. A real-time passenger information system is installed at some bus stops. A new bus station known as Warrington Interchange opened in 2006 at the Golden Square Shopping Centre.

The River Mersey runs through the heart of the town dividing it in two. There are only two main thoroughfares crossing the Mersey in Warrington: at Warrington Bridge at Bridge Foot and at the Kingsway Bridge. Before the M6 was built, these routes were very busy with through traffic.

The Manchester Ship Canal runs through the south of the town; three swing bridges and a high-level cantilever bridge provide crossing points. Although shipping movements on the ship canal are far less frequent than in years past, they can cause severe delay to local road traffic. The Bridgewater Canal runs through the borough from the village of Lymm to Walton Hall and Gardens, a local park/leisure area. The course of the Sankey Canal runs through the west of the town, although the only navigable section is at the lock to the River Mersey estuary at Fiddlers Ferry.

Warrington Bus Interchange

 
Warrington Bus Interchange in October 2009

The interchange consists of 19 departure stands, numbered from 1 to 19, all of which employ a drive-in reverse-out layout. Each stand has a computerised information screen which also ties into the real-time information system. All stands are served from the main concourse building, which contains toilets, a newsagent, cafe, and a combined travel and tourist information office. There is access to the Golden Square shopping centre via escalators and lifts. The exits on the eastern side of the building lead onto Winwick Street, on which can be found a taxi rank and Warrington Central railway station within around 100 metres.

The bus station is the terminus for all local bus services within Warrington. Regional services operate to neighbouring cities Liverpool, Manchester and Chester, as well as to Wigan, Leigh, the Trafford Centre, Altrincham, Northwich, Runcorn, Widnes and St Helens. The majority of bus services are operated by Warrington's Own Buses. Other services are provided by Arriva North West and Go North West.

History

Warrington Bus Interchange (also known as Warrington Interchange) opened on 21 August 2006,[35] next to the site of a temporary terminus that had been in use for the past thirteen months. The new interchange was built in conjunction with the extension and upgrade of the adjoining Golden Square shopping centre, and replaced the previous bus station which dated from 1979.[36]

In 2021, a 3.5 metre artwork was painted on glass at the bus station.[37]

Culture

In March 2017 Warrington Borough Council made an unsuccessful bid to become the UK City of Culture in 2021.[38] However, various aspects of the town's cultural heritage gained prominence as a result of the bid such as the Grade II-listed Warrington Transporter Bridge, the last railway transporter bridge in the world, and the Warrington Academy which once earned the town the nickname of the Athens of the North.[39]

Warrington has a concert hall (the Parr Hall), an arts centre (the Pyramid), three museums, and various public libraries throughout the borough. Warrington Central Library was the first rate-supported library in the UK.[citation needed]

There is a cinema at Westbrook, and another opened in 2019 as part of a town centre redevelopment. There are several parks in Warrington and designated nature reserves at Woolston Eyes, Risley Moss, Rixton Claypits and Paddington Meadows.

Museums

Warrington Museum & Art Gallery is situated in Warrington's Cultural Quarter on the first floor of a building it currently shares with Warrington Central Library. The town is also home to the Museum of Policing in Cheshire,[40] located in part of the working police station, and the Warrington Museum of Freemasonry.[41]

A heritage centre for the village of Lymm was given planning permission in February 2016.[42]

Events

A number of festivals, carnivals and walking days are held annually in the Warrington area. Warrington Walking Day – originally a Sunday school festival – is held on the closest Friday to the last day of June, and the town centre is closed to traffic as churches walk together through the streets.[43]

Other festivals, besides the many walking days, include:

Music

A regular series of free classical music concerts take place in Bold Street Methodist Church, organised by WACIDOM.[44] This charity is also responsible for the biennial Warrington Competition for Young Musicians, held at Arley Hall. Regular classical recitals also take place at Walton Hall and St Wilfrid's Church, Grappenhall. Warrington also has many musical groups, including Warrington Male Voice Choir, Gemini Musical Theatre Company (formerly Warrington Light Opera), Warrington Youth Orchestra, North Cheshire Wind Orchestra, Centenary Theatre Company and ladies a cappella choir, the Cheshire Chord Company.

Warrington has a purpose-built concert hall, the Parr Hall, which houses a large and internationally famous concert pipe-organ made by the nineteenth-century French organ-builder Aristide Cavaillé-Coll.

A number of rock and pop musicians are associated with Warrington. Madchester pioneers The Stone Roses are closely associated with the town, particularly the native lead singer Ian Brown. Other artists include Spike Dawbarn from 1990s music act band 911, Kerry Katona of Atomic Kitten, Ben Byrne and James Stelfox from Starsailor and Tim Bowness of No-Man. The band Viola Beach (whose single "Swings & Waterslides" posthumously entered the UK Singles Chart at number 11) were formed in Warrington.

The Hit Man and Her TV show featuring producer Pete Waterman (of Stock Aitken Waterman) and Michaela Strachan debuted and regularly returned to the Mr Smiths nightclub in Warrington.[citation needed]

Warrington is home to the Neighbourhood Weekender music festival[45] which takes place on Victoria Park during the May bank holiday weekend. The event was first launched in 2018, over 50,000 attending the event over the two days. The event was repeated in 2019 and was scheduled to return in 2020. The event was also held in 2021.

Open spaces

Warrington has an array of open spaces, including parks, trails, nature reserves and gardens rich in history and visual beauty. Many of these attractions are dog friendly, and free of charge to enter, usually with man-made paths created to ensure safety. The attractions include:

  • Culcheth Linear park- open 24hrs, with public toilets, parking, and staff based around the park
  •  
    Lymm Dam pictured at sunset
    Lymm dam - open 24hrs, water features, wildlife and woodland walks. Also has angling opportunities and links to the Trans Pennine trail.
  • New Cut heritage and ecology trail- ongoing project including linear footpaths, Paddington meadows nature reserve, and links to several other parks in the area (listed below)
  • Risley Moss local nature reserve - works with schools and partakes in regular subjects to help aid the life of local wildlife. Includes car parking and toilets
  • Sankey valley park - open 24hrs, includes picnic benches, car parking, angling opportunities and play areas.
  • Trans Pennine Trail - open 24hrs, suitable for cycling, walking and running. Links to many other paths in the area.
  • Victoria park - includes sports facilities, changing facilities, training pitches, ASICS Stadium, play area and home to the annual Neighbourhood Weekender music festival
  • Walton gardens - includes gardens, Walton hall, petting zoo, play areas, mini golf and footpaths accessible to all.

Warrington is also home to other small parks and open spaces such Woolston park, Birchwood forest park and Bank park. Most open areas are dog friendly and only require unfriendly dogs to be kept under proper control by owners.

Heritage

The historic core of Warrington contains many significant listed buildings, including Warrington Town Hall, St Elphin's Church and Warrington Museum, situated within Conservation Areas.

Education

Higher education

The University of Chester has a campus at Padgate that was formerly part of Warrington Collegiate.

Colleges

Warrington is home to three colleges: Priestley Sixth Form and Community College, Warrington and Vale Royal College and University Technical College Warrington.[46][47] Most of the high schools have their own post-16 provision (sixth-form).

Schools

There are 14 high schools throughout the borough:

Region School name Type of school Headteacher/principal Pupils
Birchwood Birchwood Community High School Academy Converter Emma Mills 1,124
Culcheth Culcheth High School Community Chris Hunt 1,132
Appleton Bridgewater High School Academy Converter Kieron Powell 1,650
Latchford Sir Thomas Boteler Church of England High School Church of England (Aided) Beverley Scott-Herron 752
Latchford Cardinal Newman Catholic High School (Warrington) Roman Catholic (Aided) David Lewis 780
Great Sankey Great Sankey High School Academy Converter John Shannon c. 2000
Lymm Lymm High School Academy Converter Gwyn Williams 1,877
Padgate Padgate Academy Academy Converter Neil Harrison 455
Penketh Penketh High School Academy Converter John Carlin 1,137
Westbrook St Gregory's Catholic High School Roman Catholic (Aided) Edward McGlinchey 988
Orford Beamont Collegiate Academy Academy Converter Gareth Harris 750
Padgate King's Leadership Academy Warrington Free School Katie Sharp 650
Lymm Bright Futures School Private Ruth Clifford 30
Thelwall Chaigeley School Private Paul Lambert 35

Woolston High School closed in 2012.

There are also 69 primary schools in the borough.

The Manchester Japanese School (マンチェスター日本人補習授業校 Manchesutā Nihonjin Hoshū Jugyō Kō), a weekend Japanese educational programme, is held at the Language Centre at Lymm High School.[48]

Sport

Rugby league is the town's premier sport in the form of Warrington Wolves, who were historically nicknamed "The Wire"[49] because of Warrington's history of wire making. In 2003 the club left Wilderspool Stadium, its home for over a century, and moved to the Halliwell Jones Stadium. Warrington RLFC are the only team to have played every season in the top flight of rugby league. They established themselves as one of the leading rugby clubs in the country by taking home the Challenge Cup for two years running in 2009 and 2010 and a further win in 2012. This was won by them for the first time since 1974.[50]

The club also reached the cup finals in 2016 and 2018, where they lost to Hull FC & Catalans Dragons respectively. In 2019, Warrington triumphed over St Helens in the Challenge Cup Final, 18-4, to lift the trophy for the 7th time. In 2011 the Wolves gained the Super League Leaders Shield for the first time (winning again in 2016), and in 2012 they appeared in the Super League Grand Final for the first time versus Leeds Rhinos with the chance to become only the third team to win the Challenge Cup/Grand Final double – however, they lost. They also reached the Grand Final again in 2013, 2016 and 2018, losing to Wigan Warriors on all occasions, Warrington's last domestic title came in 1955, when they beat Oldham at Manchester City's Maine Road. Warrington is represented in the British Amateur Rugby League Association leagues by:

  • Bank Quay Bulls ARLFC
  • Burtonwood Bulldogs ARLFC
  • Crosfields ARLFC
  • Culcheth Eagles ARLFC
  • Latchford Albion ARLFC
  • Rylands ARFLC
  • Woolston Rovers ARLFC

Football is represented by Warrington Town at Cantilever Park, next to the Manchester Ship Canal. The club has several nicknames including Town, Yellows and The Wire. Warrington Town are currently in the Northern Premier League Premier Division following promotion in 2016. Warrington's biggest success was in the 2014 FA Cup where they reached the first round proper for the first time, whilst in the eighth tier. Warrington drew Exeter City of the fourth tier, who were at the time of the game 100 places above the Yellows. The match was shown live on BBC One and sold out Cantilever Park. Warrington famously won the game 1–0, but lost to 5th-tier Gateshead in the second round. The town also has another non-league team, Rylands F.C. who currently play in the Northern Premier League Premier Division.[51]

Rowing in Warrington may well have been taking place for nearly 200 years. It is known that Warrington Regatta is well over 150 years old, often attracting large crowds on the riverbank. The modern Warrington rowing club started in the mid-1980s and is based near Kingsway Bridge. Warrington is home to both recreational and competitive rowers.[citation needed]

Warrington Athletic Club is based at Victoria Park, where a new eight-lane synthetic track was built in 1998, after the original track was destroyed in a fire the previous year.

Speedway racing, formerly known as dirt track racing, was staged in Warrington in its pioneering era between 1928 and 1930. The track entered a team in the 1929 English Dirt Track League and the 1930 Northern League. Efforts to revive the venue in 1947 failed to materialise.

Warrington Wolves Basketball team was set up in 2009 and competes in the English Basketball League Division Four.[citation needed]

Warrington has four predominant rugby union teams: Warrington RUFC, Lymm RFC, Gentlemen of Moore RUFC and Eagle RUFC, who are based at Thornton Road.[citation needed]

Media

Warrington's longest established newspaper is the Warrington Guardian. Published weekly and costing £1, it is currently owned by Newsquest and has sales of just over 17,000.[52] Bridge Foot based Orbit News Ltd produce a monthly free news magazine, Warrington Worldwide, as well as three community magazines, Warrington Worldwide, Lymm Life (first published April 1999) and Culcheth Life (First published April 2003) and the daily news website. The free monthly newspaper Cheshire Times is also distributed in the southern half of the borough.

Community radio station Radio Warrington broadcasts from a studio in Warrington Retail Market.[53] They hold an AM licence and have received planning permission for a transmitter, though their broadcasts are currently only available online. Independent Local Radio station Greatest Hits Radio Liverpool & The North West (formerly Wire FM), now based in Orrell, also serves the Warrington area.

Landmarks

See also Listed buildings in Warrington
 
The park gates at Warrington Town Hall

Churches and other religious buildings

Civic amenities

Industrial and commercial structures

Other

Notable residents

Up to 1700

1700 to 1800

1800 to 1900

1900 to 1950

1950 to date

Music

Sport

  • Alan Hughes (born 1971 in Warrington), prominent crown green bowler

Twin towns

Warrington is twinned with:[124]

The villages of Lymm and Culcheth, within the borough, are twinned respectively with these French communes:[125][126]

Freedom of the Borough

The following people and military units have received the Freedom of the Borough of Warrington.

Individuals

Military units

[127]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Includes hunting and forestry.
  2. ^ Includes energy and construction.
  3. ^ Includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured.
  4. ^ Components may not sum to totals due to rounding.

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Further reading

  • Kendrick, James (1853). Profiles of Warrington Worthies. Longman, Brown, Green & Longman., illustrated with silhouette likenesses ("James Kendrick". Profiles of the Past: 250 years of British portrait silhouette history.)
  • Beamont, William (1872). Annals of the Lords of Warrington for the first five centuries after the conquest. Vol. 1. Manchester: The Chetham Society..
  • Beamont, William (1872). Annals of the Lords of Warrington for the first five centuries after the conquest. Vol. 2. Manchester: The Chetham Society..

External links

warrington, this, article, about, town, england, other, uses, disambiguation, industrial, town, borough, same, name, cheshire, england, town, sits, banks, river, mersey, until, 1974, part, lancashire, miles, east, liverpool, miles, west, manchester, town, unpa. This article is about the town in England For other uses see Warrington disambiguation Warrington ˈ w ɒr ɪ ŋ t en is an industrial town in the borough of the same name in Cheshire England The town sits on the banks of the River Mersey and until 1974 was part of Lancashire It is 19 miles 31 km east of Liverpool and 19 miles 31 km west of Manchester WarringtonTown and Unparished areaThe town hall Transporter Bridge parish church Skittles on Market Gate square Crown Street and Bridge StreetWarringtonLocation within CheshireArea44 89 km2 17 33 sq mi Population172 330 2020 estimate Density3 839 km2 9 940 sq mi Civil parishUnparished areaUnitary authorityWarringtonCeremonial countyCheshireRegionNorth WestCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townWarringtonPostcode districtWA1 5 amp 55Dialling code01925Websitewww wbr warrington wbr gov wbr ukList of places UK England Cheshire 53 23 N 2 35 W 53 39 N 2 59 W 53 39 2 59 Coordinates 53 23 N 2 35 W 53 39 N 2 59 W 53 39 2 59The population in 2019 was estimated at 165 456 for the town s urban area and 210 014 for the wider borough 1 the latter being more than double that of 1968 when it became a new town Warrington is the largest town in the ceremonial county of Cheshire In 2011 the unparished area had a population of 58 871 2 Warrington was founded by the Romans at an important crossing place on the River Mersey A new settlement was established by the Saxon Waerings 3 By the Middle Ages Warrington had emerged as a market town at the lowest bridging point of the river A local tradition of textile and tool production dates from this time 4 The expansion and urbanisation of Warrington coincided with the Industrial Revolution particularly after the Mersey was made navigable in the 18th century The West Coast Main Line runs north to south through the town and the Liverpool to Manchester railway the Cheshire Lines route west to east The Manchester Ship Canal cuts through the south of the borough west to east The M6 M56 and M62 motorways form a partial box around the town and are all accessible through Warrington The modern Borough of Warrington was formed in 1974 with the amalgamation of the former County Borough of Warrington part of the Golborne Urban District the Lymm Urban District part of the Runcorn Rural District the Warrington Rural District and part of the Whiston Rural District Contents 1 Toponymy 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 English Civil War 2 3 Industrial history 2 4 Second World War 2 5 Post war expansion 2 6 IRA bombing 2 7 Other history 3 Governance 3 1 History 3 2 Warrington Borough Council 3 3 Parish councils 3 4 National representation 4 Geography 4 1 Subdivisions suburbs and civil parishes of Warrington 4 1 1 Civil parishes 4 1 2 Other areas including localities within civil parishes 4 2 Climate 4 3 Green belt 5 Demography 5 1 Population and ethnicity 5 2 Housing and social situation 5 3 Employment and education 6 Economy 6 1 Retail 6 2 Leisure 6 3 Developments 7 Transport 7 1 Warrington Bus Interchange 7 1 1 History 8 Culture 8 1 Museums 8 2 Events 8 3 Music 8 4 Open spaces 8 5 Heritage 9 Education 9 1 Higher education 9 2 Colleges 9 3 Schools 10 Sport 11 Media 12 Landmarks 12 1 Churches and other religious buildings 12 2 Civic amenities 12 3 Industrial and commercial structures 12 4 Other 13 Notable residents 13 1 Up to 1700 13 2 1700 to 1800 13 3 1800 to 1900 13 4 1900 to 1950 13 5 1950 to date 13 6 Music 13 7 Sport 14 Twin towns 15 Freedom of the Borough 15 1 Individuals 15 2 Military units 16 See also 17 Notes 18 References 19 Further reading 20 External linksToponymy EditThe earliest known appearance of the name is Weringtun when before the Norman Conquest it was the head of a hundred 5 An entry in the Domesday Book in AD 1086 named it as Wallintun 6 The root is likely the Old English word waru meaning those that care for watch guard protect or defend The suffix ing is a cognate of inge an ethnonym for the Ingaevones said variously to mean of Yngvi 7 family people or followers of 8 or a genitive plural form of an inhabitant appellation 9 The suffix ton is from the Old English word tun meaning fenced area or enclosure History EditMain article History of Warrington Early history Edit Warrington has been a major crossing point on the River Mersey since ancient times and there was a Roman settlement at Wilderspool 10 Local archaeological evidence indicates that there were also Bronze Age settlements citation needed In medieval times Warrington s importance was as a market town and bridging point of the River Mersey The first reference to a bridge at Warrington is found in 1285 11 The origin of the modern town was located in the area around St Elphin s Church now included in the Church Street Conservation Area 12 established whilst the main river crossing was via a ford approximately 1 km upriver of Warrington Bridge 13 Warrington was the first paved town in Lancashire which took place in 1321 14 English Civil War Edit Warrington was a fulcrum in the English Civil War The armies of Oliver Cromwell and the Earl of Derby both stayed near the old town centre the parish church area Popular legend has it that Cromwell lodged near the building which survives on Church Street as the Cottage Restaurant The Marquis of Granby public house bears a plaque stating that the Earl of Derby had his quarters near this site Dents in the walls of the parish church are rumoured to have been caused by the cannons from the time of the civil war On 13 August 1651 Warrington was the scene of the last Royalist victory of the civil war when Scots troops under Charles II and David Leslie Lord Newark fought Parliamentarians under John Lambert at the Battle of Warrington Bridge Industrial history Edit The expansion and urbanisation of Warrington largely coincided with the Industrial Revolution particularly after the Mersey was made navigable in the 18th century As Britain became industrialised Warrington embraced the Industrial Revolution becoming a manufacturing town and a centre of steel particularly wire textiles brewing tanning and chemical industries The navigational properties of the River Mersey were improved canals were built and the town grew yet more prosperous and popular When the age of steam came Warrington naturally welcomed it both as a means of transport and as a source of power for its mills Second World War Edit Warrington was the location of the Burtonwood RAF base and Risley Ordnance Factory During World War II RAF Burtonwood served as the largest US Army Air Force airfield outside the United States and was visited by major American celebrities including Humphrey Bogart and Bob Hope who entertained the GIs The RAF station continued to be used by the USAAF and subsequently USAF as a staging post for men and material until its closure in 1993 Post war expansion Edit Warrington was designated a new town in 1968 and consequently the population grew in size with many of the town s new residents moving from Liverpool or Manchester with the Birchwood area being developed on the former ROF Risley site New council housing was built for families rehousing from slum clearances in Liverpool or Manchester while Warrington s new private housing estates also became popular with homeowners 15 Heavy industry declined in the 1970s and 1980s but the growth of the new town led to a great increase in employment in light industry retail distribution and technology IRA bombing Edit Main article Warrington bomb attacks On 20 March 1993 the Provisional Irish Republican Army IRA detonated two bombs in Warrington town centre The blasts killed two children three year old Johnathan Ball died instantly and twelve year old Tim Parry from the Great Sankey area died five days later in hospital Around 56 other people were injured four seriously Their deaths provoked widespread condemnation of the organisation responsible The blast followed a bomb attack a few weeks earlier on a gas storage plant in Warrington Tim Parry s father Colin Parry founded The Tim Parry Johnathan Ball Foundation for Peace known as the Peace Centre as part of a campaign to reconcile communities in conflict The centre opened on the seventh anniversary of the bombing 20 March 2000 He and his family still live in the town Other history Edit In 1981 Warrington was the first place to field a candidate for the new Social Democratic Party former Home Secretary Roy Jenkins stood for Parliament but lost to Labour Party candidate Doug Hoyle by a small number of votes There was a RAF training camp at Padgate a Royal Naval air base at Appleton Thorn RNAS Stretton and an army base at the Peninsula Barracks in O Leary Street 16 The Territorial Army was based at the Bath Street drill hall until they moved to Peninsula Barracks 17 In October 1987 Swedish home products retailer IKEA opened its first British store in the Burtonwood area of the town bringing more than 200 retail jobs to the area 18 Governance EditHistory Edit County District Town From UntilName Type Name Type Name TypeCheshire Domesday Inter Ripam et Mersam Unknown Warrington Walingtune Hundred Unknown 1186Lancashire Historic West Derbyshire Hundred Warrington ancient parish 1186 1889Administrative N a Municipal borough Municipal borough of Warrington 1889 1900County borough County borough of Warrington 1900 1974Cheshire Non metropolitan Shire district Borough of Warrington N a 1974 1998Ceremonial Unitary authority 1998 CurrentWithin the boundaries of the historic county of Lancashire the town of Warrington was incorporated as a municipal borough in 1847 under the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 The town had its own police force from 1847 to 1969 19 Warrington acquired county borough status upon reaching a population of 50 000 in 1900 and until 1974 was known as the County Borough of Warrington As part of proposed local government reforms of England in 1969 the Redcliffe Maud Report suggested merging Warrington with either Merseyside or Greater Manchester metropolitan counties Lobbying by the borough council averted this But since these county boundary changes were to make Warrington non contiguous with Lancashire under the local government reforms of 1974 Warrington incorporating Lymm Urban District and part of Runcorn Rural District from Cheshire and part of Warrington Rural District was made a borough within Cheshire County Council On 1 April 1998 Warrington became an independent unitary authority though it is still served by Cheshire Police and Cheshire Fire and Rescue Service and forms part of Cheshire for ceremonial purposes such as the Lord Lieutenancy Warrington has applied unsuccessfully for city status the most recent attempt being after the opening of the Peace Centre as a City for Peace Warrington Borough Council Edit The current borders of Warrington Borough cover the former County Borough of Warrington Lymm Urban District Warrington Rural District and part of Golborne Urban District part of Runcorn Rural District and part of Whiston Rural District After the May 2021 election the political makeup of the borough council was as follows 36 Labour councillors 11 Conservatives 8 Liberal Democrats 3 Independents 20 A Conservative councillor switched to Labour in 2022 3 Liberal Democrat wards Grappenhall Lymm North and Thelwall Stockton Heath 12 Labour wards Bewsey amp Whitecross Burtonwood amp Winwick Fairfield amp Howley Great Sankey North Great Sankey South Latchford East Latchford West Orford Poplars amp Hulme Poulton North Poulton South and Westbrook 2 Conservative wards Appleton Culcheth Glazebury amp Croft 4 split wards Birchwood 2 Labour 1 Conservative Chapelford amp Old Hall 2 Labour 1 Conservative Lymm South 1 Conservative 1 Liberal Democrat Rixton amp Woolston 2 Labour 1 Conservative 1 independent ward Penketh amp CuerdleyParish councils Edit The Borough of Warrington contains 18 parish councils as well as a central unparished area see list of civil parishes below National representation Edit At Westminster Warrington is represented by two MPs Charlotte Nichols Labour represents Warrington North and Andy Carter Conservative represents Warrington South Geography EditThe Borough of Warrington is bordered by Halton Cheshire West and Chester and Cheshire East boroughs in the ceremonial county of Cheshire and by the metropolitan boroughs of Trafford Salford and Wigan in Greater Manchester and St Helens in Merseyside Subdivisions suburbs and civil parishes of Warrington Edit The Borough of Warrington has 18 civil parishes The town centre and the area around it are an unparished area Civil parishes Edit Appleton Birchwood Burtonwood and Westbrook Croft Cuerdley Culcheth and Glazebury Grappenhall and Thelwall Great Sankey Hatton Lymm Penketh Poulton with Fearnhead includes Padgate Rixton with Glazebrook Stockton Heath Stretton Walton Winwick Woolston includes Martinscroft and Paddington Other areas including localities within civil parishes Edit Appleton Thorn Bewsey Blackbrook Bruche Callands Chapelford Cinnamon Brow Cobbs Dallam Fairfield Gemini Gorse Covert Grange Hermitage Green Hollins Green Hood Manor Howley Hulme Kenyon Latchford Locking Stumps Old Hall Omega Longford Orford Risley Sankey Bridges Westbrook Westy Whitecross Wilderspool Wright s Green Climate Edit Warrington has a temperate maritime climate with warm summers and cool winters Rain is spread across the year with thunderstorms only usually occurring in the summer months Summer heat waves are rare but can cause temperatures to exceed 30 C Summers are usually snow free and rarely experience high winds Winters are generally cold with most days around 0 C Moreover during occasional lengthy cold snaps night time temperatures have been known to fall to 12 C with lying snow lasting for weeks Ground frost regularly occurs from late October until late March High winds are common in winter although rarely above gale force 7 Climate data for Warrington United Kingdom 1981 2010 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 6 9 44 4 7 2 45 0 9 7 49 5 12 3 54 1 15 9 60 6 18 4 65 1 20 2 68 4 20 1 68 2 17 4 63 3 13 5 56 3 9 6 49 3 7 1 44 8 13 2 55 7 Average low C F 0 8 33 4 1 0 33 8 2 4 36 3 3 6 38 5 6 7 44 1 9 0 48 2 11 7 53 1 11 3 52 3 9 2 48 6 6 7 44 1 3 0 37 4 0 6 33 1 5 5 41 9 Average rainfall mm inches 81 5 3 21 51 5 2 03 58 6 2 31 61 4 2 42 54 8 2 16 64 5 2 54 67 3 2 65 79 4 3 13 79 6 3 13 98 8 3 89 79 9 3 15 89 8 3 54 867 1 34 16 Mean monthly sunshine hours 43 8 69 8 97 7 137 1 185 9 163 7 171 7 161 6 133 3 89 7 63 7 54 6 1 372 6Source 21 Green belt Edit Further information North West Green Belt Warrington is within a green belt region that extends into the wider surrounding counties and is in place to reduce urban sprawl prevent the towns in the nearby Manchester and Merseyside conurbations from further convergence protect the identity of outlying communities encourage brownfield reuse and preserve nearby countryside This is achieved by restricting inappropriate development within the designated areas and imposing stricter conditions on permitted building 22 The main urban area and larger villages of the borough are exempt from the green belt area but surrounding smaller villages hamlets and rural areas such as Rixton Glazebrook Higher Walton Kenyon Stretton Hatton Broomedge are washed over with the designation The green belt was first drawn up in 1977 under Cheshire County Council 22 and the size in the borough in 2017 amounted to 11 500 hectares 115 km2 44 sq mi 23 A subsidiary aim of the green belt is to encourage recreation and leisure interests 22 with rural landscape features and facilities including Walton Hall gardens with zoo and bicycle museum St Oswald s Church and well the River Mersey with valley and trail River Bollin Manchester Ship Canal Bridgewater Canal Appleton Reservoir numerous playing fields parks and golf clubs Cuerdley and Norton marshes the Trans Pennine Trail the Mersey Forest project and Sow Brook Demography EditBased on ONS statistics Population and ethnicity Edit Warrington unparished area in Warrington district At the 2011 census Warrington had a total population of 202 200 of which 49 6 are male and 50 4 are female 24 The average age of the population is 38 06 years which is slightly below the regional and national averages In 2018 it was estimated that the current population of Warrington is 209 500 In addition to English a further 36 languages were recorded spoken by more than 0 01 of Warrington s population aged 3 and over in the 2011 census Those spoken by more than 0 1 were Polish 0 88 Slovak 0 21 Urdu 0 14 Latvian 0 12 Non Mandarin or Cantonese Chinese 0 12 and Tagalog Filipino 0 11 There are around 100 churches or other Christian communities two mosques and a Sikh temple Guru Nanak Gurdwara which is the only Sikh place of worship in Cheshire 25 The most multicultural parts of Warrington are in the town centre as well as the western and north western suburbs such as Bewsey and Westbrook In 2011 the town was 92 9 White British 2 3 other White 2 4 Asian and 0 3 Black Housing and social situation Edit At the 2011 census the borough of Warrington had 85 100 households From 2001 data 80 593 households 76 were owner occupied 17 6 were rented from the council 4 8 were rented from other sources and 1 6 of houses had residents who lived rent free Warrington has a population density of 10 7 residents per hectare and 31 9 of residents describe the borough as a comfortably well off area 4 3 of households are deemed overcrowded Of the total population 5 8 of residents are on some form of benefits Employment and education Edit At 2005 the borough of Warrington had 63 6 employment with only 2 9 of all economically active people unemployed although a substantial rise began in 2008 due to the recession 2 3 of the population are students in full time higher education 31 1 of the total population are economically inactive due to retirement ill health or full time carer status According to borough statistics of the population in the Borough of Warrington in 2005 26 9 are unqualified either due to leaving school early or failing the end of school examinations 46 4 have level 1 or 2 qualifications level 1 being 1 GCSE A G or O Level or equivalent level 2 being 5 GCSEs grades A C 1 A levels AS levels A E or equivalent 19 7 have received level 3 qualifications meaning 2 A levels A E 4 AS levels A E or equivalent minimum Economy Edit Bridge Street one of the main shopping streets in Warrington This is a chart of trend of regional gross value added of Halton and Warrington at current basic prices 26 Year Regional gross value added note 1 Agriculture note 2 Industry note 3 Services note 4 1995 3 636 14 1 361 2 2612000 4 768 10 1 433 3 3242003 5 774 18 1 399 4 356There is a large Unilever factory in Warrington where powder detergents are made In January 2020 Unilever put the plant under review owing to a fall in demand for washing powder compared with other forms of detergent 27 Warrington Council and Warrington amp Halton Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust are major employers in the borough ESR Technology s main operations are located at Warrington Retail Edit The Skittles In spite of its proximity to significant retail areas in Manchester Liverpool Chester and the out of town Trafford Centre Warrington continues to have one of the larger shopping centres in North West England Despite the competition Warrington has seen an increase in its customer trade due in part to the modernisation of the town centre It has a shopping centre Golden Square first opened in 1974 28 which has been extended to include a Primark store and a new bus station 29 The old Cockhedge Textile Mill was demolished and replaced by another shopping mall The main shopping streets are Buttermarket Street Horsemarket Street Sankey Street and Bridge Street Where these four streets intersect at Market Gate there is a redevelopment with a large fountain and guardians known locally as the skittles designed by Howard Ben Tre Musical instrument retailer Dawsons Music originates in the town and was located on Sankey Street from 1898 until 2019 30 The town also has a large indoor market which was redeveloped as part of the Time Square development which brought the return of a cinema in the town centre along with office space restaurants bars and retail opportunities 31 The town also has several other small shopping malls located in the town centre and throughout the town such as Hatters Row and Birchwood Mall 32 IKEA chose Warrington as the location for their first store when they came to the UK the store is located in the large out of town shopping area of Gemini which is home to one of the largest Marks and Spencer stores in the UK Nearby to this there is also an ODEON Luxe cinema which was refurbished in 2019 citation needed Leisure Edit There is ten pin bowling located in the town centre and at Winwick Quay and indoor paintball An indoor karting centre is located near to Bank Quay Pitch and putt and crazy golf are available at Walton Hall and Gardens A Laser Quest arena and a snooker club can also be found in Warrington both located close to the town centre Gulliver s World theme park is located in Old Hall Apple Jack s Farm theme park is situated in Stretton Developments Edit The Omega Development Site close to the M62 on the northern edge of Warrington on part of the site of the Burtonwood Airbase was intended to be a major business park but has instead been developed as mainly warehousing with a large residential area Other planned developments in Warrington were delayed by the economic climate but redevelopment of the Time Square area including a new Market multi story car park with around 1 200 spaces cinema retail outlets and council offices was completed in 2020 with an estimated cost of 142 million Warrington is developing a new Local Plan but plans to build 24 000 new homes were scaled back as government guidance changed Included in the plans would be a new Garden City Suburb in the south of Warrington The four main areas of growth as outlined in the planning were the waterfront around the River Mersey the town centre the Garden City Suburb and south west urban extension 33 Transport Edit Warrington after the coming of the railway 1851 Main article Transport in Warrington The town has two main railway stations Bank Quay is on the West Coast Main Line between London Euston and Glasgow Central and the Manchester Piccadilly to North Wales via Chester line while Central is on the Liverpool to Manchester line via Widnes and Warrington with through services to Sheffield then to East Anglia or Cleethorpes Bank Quay is much altered but Central built 1873 is of some architectural merit featuring polychromatic brickwork Both have undergone some refurbishment including new entrances There are also railway stations in the suburbs at Padgate Sankey Glazebrook and Birchwood A new railway station Warrington West in Chapelford near Great Sankey opened in December 2019 34 The town lies close to the M62 M6 and M56 motorways and midway between Liverpool and Manchester airports It also has five primary A roads the A49 A50 A56 A57 and A580 East Lancashire Road which forms part of the northern boundary of the borough Warrington s Own Buses one of the few municipal bus companies to survive in public ownership runs most bus services within the town Go North West and Arriva North West provide bus links to surrounding destinations such as Manchester the Trafford Centre Liverpool St Helens Runcorn Widnes and Chester A real time passenger information system is installed at some bus stops A new bus station known as Warrington Interchange opened in 2006 at the Golden Square Shopping Centre The River Mersey runs through the heart of the town dividing it in two There are only two main thoroughfares crossing the Mersey in Warrington at Warrington Bridge at Bridge Foot and at the Kingsway Bridge Before the M6 was built these routes were very busy with through traffic The Manchester Ship Canal runs through the south of the town three swing bridges and a high level cantilever bridge provide crossing points Although shipping movements on the ship canal are far less frequent than in years past they can cause severe delay to local road traffic The Bridgewater Canal runs through the borough from the village of Lymm to Walton Hall and Gardens a local park leisure area The course of the Sankey Canal runs through the west of the town although the only navigable section is at the lock to the River Mersey estuary at Fiddlers Ferry Warrington Bus Interchange Edit Warrington Bus Interchange in October 2009 The interchange consists of 19 departure stands numbered from 1 to 19 all of which employ a drive in reverse out layout Each stand has a computerised information screen which also ties into the real time information system All stands are served from the main concourse building which contains toilets a newsagent cafe and a combined travel and tourist information office There is access to the Golden Square shopping centre via escalators and lifts The exits on the eastern side of the building lead onto Winwick Street on which can be found a taxi rank and Warrington Central railway station within around 100 metres The bus station is the terminus for all local bus services within Warrington Regional services operate to neighbouring cities Liverpool Manchester and Chester as well as to Wigan Leigh the Trafford Centre Altrincham Northwich Runcorn Widnes and St Helens The majority of bus services are operated by Warrington s Own Buses Other services are provided by Arriva North West and Go North West History Edit Warrington Bus Interchange also known as Warrington Interchange opened on 21 August 2006 35 next to the site of a temporary terminus that had been in use for the past thirteen months The new interchange was built in conjunction with the extension and upgrade of the adjoining Golden Square shopping centre and replaced the previous bus station which dated from 1979 36 In 2021 a 3 5 metre artwork was painted on glass at the bus station 37 Culture Edit Warrington Museum amp Art Gallery opened 1858In March 2017 Warrington Borough Council made an unsuccessful bid to become the UK City of Culture in 2021 38 However various aspects of the town s cultural heritage gained prominence as a result of the bid such as the Grade II listed Warrington Transporter Bridge the last railway transporter bridge in the world and the Warrington Academy which once earned the town the nickname of the Athens of the North 39 Warrington has a concert hall the Parr Hall an arts centre the Pyramid three museums and various public libraries throughout the borough Warrington Central Library was the first rate supported library in the UK citation needed There is a cinema at Westbrook and another opened in 2019 as part of a town centre redevelopment There are several parks in Warrington and designated nature reserves at Woolston Eyes Risley Moss Rixton Claypits and Paddington Meadows Museums Edit Warrington Museum amp Art Gallery is situated in Warrington s Cultural Quarter on the first floor of a building it currently shares with Warrington Central Library The town is also home to the Museum of Policing in Cheshire 40 located in part of the working police station and the Warrington Museum of Freemasonry 41 A heritage centre for the village of Lymm was given planning permission in February 2016 42 Events Edit A number of festivals carnivals and walking days are held annually in the Warrington area Warrington Walking Day originally a Sunday school festival is held on the closest Friday to the last day of June and the town centre is closed to traffic as churches walk together through the streets 43 Other festivals besides the many walking days include Appleton Thorn Bawming of the Thorn Birchwood Carnival and Safari Day Croft Carnival Culcheth Community Day Glazebury Gala Howley Carnival Lymm May Queen Lymm Dickensian Festival Lymm Rushbearing Penketh Carnival Stockton Heath Arts Festival Thelwall Rose Queen Warrington Music Festival Winwick Carnival Westy Carnival Music Edit A regular series of free classical music concerts take place in Bold Street Methodist Church organised by WACIDOM 44 This charity is also responsible for the biennial Warrington Competition for Young Musicians held at Arley Hall Regular classical recitals also take place at Walton Hall and St Wilfrid s Church Grappenhall Warrington also has many musical groups including Warrington Male Voice Choir Gemini Musical Theatre Company formerly Warrington Light Opera Warrington Youth Orchestra North Cheshire Wind Orchestra Centenary Theatre Company and ladies a cappella choir the Cheshire Chord Company Warrington has a purpose built concert hall the Parr Hall which houses a large and internationally famous concert pipe organ made by the nineteenth century French organ builder Aristide Cavaille Coll A number of rock and pop musicians are associated with Warrington Madchester pioneers The Stone Roses are closely associated with the town particularly the native lead singer Ian Brown Other artists include Spike Dawbarn from 1990s music act band 911 Kerry Katona of Atomic Kitten Ben Byrne and James Stelfox from Starsailor and Tim Bowness of No Man The band Viola Beach whose single Swings amp Waterslides posthumously entered the UK Singles Chart at number 11 were formed in Warrington The Hit Man and Her TV show featuring producer Pete Waterman of Stock Aitken Waterman and Michaela Strachan debuted and regularly returned to the Mr Smiths nightclub in Warrington citation needed Warrington is home to the Neighbourhood Weekender music festival 45 which takes place on Victoria Park during the May bank holiday weekend The event was first launched in 2018 over 50 000 attending the event over the two days The event was repeated in 2019 and was scheduled to return in 2020 The event was also held in 2021 Open spaces Edit Warrington has an array of open spaces including parks trails nature reserves and gardens rich in history and visual beauty Many of these attractions are dog friendly and free of charge to enter usually with man made paths created to ensure safety The attractions include Culcheth Linear park open 24hrs with public toilets parking and staff based around the park Lymm Dam pictured at sunsetLymm dam open 24hrs water features wildlife and woodland walks Also has angling opportunities and links to the Trans Pennine trail New Cut heritage and ecology trail ongoing project including linear footpaths Paddington meadows nature reserve and links to several other parks in the area listed below Risley Moss local nature reserve works with schools and partakes in regular subjects to help aid the life of local wildlife Includes car parking and toilets Sankey valley park open 24hrs includes picnic benches car parking angling opportunities and play areas Trans Pennine Trail open 24hrs suitable for cycling walking and running Links to many other paths in the area Victoria park includes sports facilities changing facilities training pitches ASICS Stadium play area and home to the annual Neighbourhood Weekender music festival Walton gardens includes gardens Walton hall petting zoo play areas mini golf and footpaths accessible to all Warrington is also home to other small parks and open spaces such Woolston park Birchwood forest park and Bank park Most open areas are dog friendly and only require unfriendly dogs to be kept under proper control by owners Heritage Edit See also Listed buildings in Warrington unparished area Grade I and II listed buildings in Warrington and List of Conservation Areas in Warrington The historic core of Warrington contains many significant listed buildings including Warrington Town Hall St Elphin s Church and Warrington Museum situated within Conservation Areas Education EditHigher education Edit The University of Chester has a campus at Padgate that was formerly part of Warrington Collegiate Colleges Edit Warrington is home to three colleges Priestley Sixth Form and Community College Warrington and Vale Royal College and University Technical College Warrington 46 47 Most of the high schools have their own post 16 provision sixth form Schools Edit See also List of schools in Warrington There are 14 high schools throughout the borough Region School name Type of school Headteacher principal PupilsBirchwood Birchwood Community High School Academy Converter Emma Mills 1 124Culcheth Culcheth High School Community Chris Hunt 1 132Appleton Bridgewater High School Academy Converter Kieron Powell 1 650Latchford Sir Thomas Boteler Church of England High School Church of England Aided Beverley Scott Herron 752Latchford Cardinal Newman Catholic High School Warrington Roman Catholic Aided David Lewis 780Great Sankey Great Sankey High School Academy Converter John Shannon c 2000Lymm Lymm High School Academy Converter Gwyn Williams 1 877Padgate Padgate Academy Academy Converter Neil Harrison 455Penketh Penketh High School Academy Converter John Carlin 1 137Westbrook St Gregory s Catholic High School Roman Catholic Aided Edward McGlinchey 988Orford Beamont Collegiate Academy Academy Converter Gareth Harris 750Padgate King s Leadership Academy Warrington Free School Katie Sharp 650Lymm Bright Futures School Private Ruth Clifford 30Thelwall Chaigeley School Private Paul Lambert 35Woolston High School closed in 2012 There are also 69 primary schools in the borough The Manchester Japanese School マンチェスター日本人補習授業校 Manchesuta Nihonjin Hoshu Jugyō Kō a weekend Japanese educational programme is held at the Language Centre at Lymm High School 48 Sport Edit Halliwell Jones Stadium home to Warrington Wolves Rugby league is the town s premier sport in the form of Warrington Wolves who were historically nicknamed The Wire 49 because of Warrington s history of wire making In 2003 the club left Wilderspool Stadium its home for over a century and moved to the Halliwell Jones Stadium Warrington RLFC are the only team to have played every season in the top flight of rugby league They established themselves as one of the leading rugby clubs in the country by taking home the Challenge Cup for two years running in 2009 and 2010 and a further win in 2012 This was won by them for the first time since 1974 50 The club also reached the cup finals in 2016 and 2018 where they lost to Hull FC amp Catalans Dragons respectively In 2019 Warrington triumphed over St Helens in the Challenge Cup Final 18 4 to lift the trophy for the 7th time In 2011 the Wolves gained the Super League Leaders Shield for the first time winning again in 2016 and in 2012 they appeared in the Super League Grand Final for the first time versus Leeds Rhinos with the chance to become only the third team to win the Challenge Cup Grand Final double however they lost They also reached the Grand Final again in 2013 2016 and 2018 losing to Wigan Warriors on all occasions Warrington s last domestic title came in 1955 when they beat Oldham at Manchester City s Maine Road Warrington is represented in the British Amateur Rugby League Association leagues by Bank Quay Bulls ARLFC Burtonwood Bulldogs ARLFC Crosfields ARLFC Culcheth Eagles ARLFC Latchford Albion ARLFC Rylands ARFLC Woolston Rovers ARLFCFootball is represented by Warrington Town at Cantilever Park next to the Manchester Ship Canal The club has several nicknames including Town Yellows and The Wire Warrington Town are currently in the Northern Premier League Premier Division following promotion in 2016 Warrington s biggest success was in the 2014 FA Cup where they reached the first round proper for the first time whilst in the eighth tier Warrington drew Exeter City of the fourth tier who were at the time of the game 100 places above the Yellows The match was shown live on BBC One and sold out Cantilever Park Warrington famously won the game 1 0 but lost to 5th tier Gateshead in the second round The town also has another non league team Rylands F C who currently play in the Northern Premier League Premier Division 51 Rowing in Warrington may well have been taking place for nearly 200 years It is known that Warrington Regatta is well over 150 years old often attracting large crowds on the riverbank The modern Warrington rowing club started in the mid 1980s and is based near Kingsway Bridge Warrington is home to both recreational and competitive rowers citation needed Warrington Athletic Club is based at Victoria Park where a new eight lane synthetic track was built in 1998 after the original track was destroyed in a fire the previous year Speedway racing formerly known as dirt track racing was staged in Warrington in its pioneering era between 1928 and 1930 The track entered a team in the 1929 English Dirt Track League and the 1930 Northern League Efforts to revive the venue in 1947 failed to materialise Warrington Wolves Basketball team was set up in 2009 and competes in the English Basketball League Division Four citation needed Warrington has four predominant rugby union teams Warrington RUFC Lymm RFC Gentlemen of Moore RUFC and Eagle RUFC who are based at Thornton Road citation needed Media EditWarrington s longest established newspaper is the Warrington Guardian Published weekly and costing 1 it is currently owned by Newsquest and has sales of just over 17 000 52 Bridge Foot based Orbit News Ltd produce a monthly free news magazine Warrington Worldwide as well as three community magazines Warrington Worldwide Lymm Life first published April 1999 and Culcheth Life First published April 2003 and the daily news website The free monthly newspaper Cheshire Times is also distributed in the southern half of the borough Community radio station Radio Warrington broadcasts from a studio in Warrington Retail Market 53 They hold an AM licence and have received planning permission for a transmitter though their broadcasts are currently only available online Independent Local Radio station Greatest Hits Radio Liverpool amp The North West formerly Wire FM now based in Orrell also serves the Warrington area Landmarks EditSee also Listed buildings in Warrington The park gates at Warrington Town Hall Churches and other religious buildings Edit St Wilfrid s Church Grappenhall Grade I listed medieval church St Oswald s Church Winwick Grade I listed medieval church The 14th century Parish Church of St Elphin largely a Victorian rebuild with a 281 foot 86 m spire the sixth tallest in the UK Holy Trinity Church 1758 Grade II listed Georgian church at Market Gate St Mary s Church Grade II church designed by E W Pugin and Peter Paul Pugin in Buttermarket StreetCivic amenities Edit Warrington Museum amp Art Gallery Grade II listed building and one of the oldest municipal museums in the UK Warrington Town Hall and its golden gates formerly Bank Hall built 1750 the home of the Philips family and their scion the artist Nathaniel George Philips 54 Halliwell Jones Stadium home of Warrington Wolves Parr Hall Concert Hall home to a rare concert pipe organ made by the great French organ builder Aristide Cavaille Coll Pyramid Arts Centre on Palmyra SquareIndustrial and commercial structures Edit Warrington Transporter Bridge a Grade II listed building and a Scheduled Ancient Monument 55 The Barley Mow established in 1561 the oldest pub in Warrington The Cheshire Lines railway warehouse now redeveloped as apartments The row of late Victorian terracotta clad shops on Bridge Street Fiddlers Ferry Power Station now being decommissioned The industrial modernist Unilever Soapworks IKEA store near the Gemini retail park the first of the IKEA chain to be built in the UK 56 The former Woolworth s Building in Sankey Street originally Garnett s furniture showroom and currently Poundland Musical instrument retailer Dawsons Music has been based on Sankey Street since 1898 where its headquarters remain to this day Other Edit Grappenhall Heys Walled Garden The Warrington Academy a dissenters institute where Joseph Priestley once taught After the academy moved the building housed the offices of the local newspaper the Warrington Guardian until June 2016 A Grade II listed statue of Oliver Cromwell stands in front of the Academy 57 Cromwell s Cottage 17th century which Oliver Cromwell is said to have visited 58 59 Notable residents EditUp to 1700 Edit James Bell 1524 1584 Catholic priest and martyr 60 born in Warrington Thomas Dallam c1570 1614 organ builder 61 and Elizabethan trade envoy to Constantinople His family came from Dallam Edward Barlow 1639 in Warrington 1719 priest 62 and mechanician John Harrison 1693 1776 inventor 63 64 of the marine chronometer which established longitude long time inhabitant of Warrington Susanna Wright 1697 in Warrington 1784 colonial American poet 65 and pundit botanist business owner and legal scholar Hamlet Winstanley 1698 1756 painter and engraver 66 designer of Stanley Street in Warrington town centre Born in Warrington and lived there in his later years before dying there 1700 to 1800 Edit John Macgowan 1726 1780 non conformist preacher 67 and satirist resident of Warrington Anna Blackburne 1726 1793 naturalist 68 and correspondent of Carl Linnaeus lived and died in Warrington Edward Evanson 1731 in Warrington 1805 controversial 69 clergyman Joseph Priestley FRS 1733 1804 non conformist clergyman 70 philosopher and scientist discoverer of oxygen lived in Warrington and taught at the Warrington Academy between 1761 and 1767 Thomas Percival FRS FRSE FSA 1740 in Warrington 1804 physician and author crafted the first modern code of medical ethics Anna Laetitia Barbauld 1743 1825 poet 71 and literary critic lived in Warrington 1758 1774 Peter Litherland 1756 1805 watchmaker and inventor of the lever watch born in Warrington Elizabeth Whitlock 1761 in Warrington 1836 actress 72 a member of the Kemble family of actors Colonel John Drinkwater Bethune 1762 in Latchford 1844 army officer 73 administrator and military historian documented the Great Siege of Gibraltar John Cragg 1767 in Warrington 1854 English ironmaster 74 who ran a foundry in Liverpool Arthur Aikin FLS FGS 1773 in Warrington 1854 chemist mineralogist and scientific writer 75 and was a founding member of the Chemical Society Charles Rochemont Aikin 1775 in Warrington 1847 doctor 76 and chemist Edmund Aikin 1780 in Warrington 1820 architect 77 and writer on architecture Lucy Aikin 1781 in Warrington 1864 historical writer 78 also published under the pseudonym Mary Godolphin 79 Maria Hill 1791 in Winwick 1881 Canadian heroine of the War of 1812 Joseph Crosfield 1792 1844 businessman established a soap and chemical manufacturing business in Warrington called Joseph Crosfield and Sons William Beamont 1797 1889 Victorian solicitor and local philanthropist founded several churches and the municipal library 80 William Wilson 1799 in Warrington 1871 botanist known for his focus on bryology1800 to 1900 Edit William John Beamont 1828 in Warrington 1868 clergyman and author Philip Pearsall Carpenter Presbyterian minister between 1846 and 1862 James Charles 1851 in Warrington 1906 impressionist artist 81 Reginald Essenhigh 1890 in Warrington 1955 MP for Newton from 1931 to 1935 and then a judge Sir Luke Fildes 1843 1927 artist 82 studied at Warrington School of Art Sir Gilbert Greenall 1st Baronet DL 1806 1894 businessman and Conservative MP 83 for Warrington 1847 1868 1874 1880 and 1885 1892 William Kirtley 1840 in Warrington 1919 Locomotive Superintendent of the London Chatham and Dover Railway Joseph Leicester 1825 in Warrington 1903 glass blower 84 and Liberal politician MP for West Ham South from 1885 to 1886 Jeannie Mole 1841 in Warrington 1912 socialist feminist and trade union organiser William Norman VC 1832 1896 local war hero born in Warrington 85 William Owen 1846 in Latchford 1910 architect who practised in Warrington collaborated with William Lever in the creation of Port Sunlight B H Roberts 1857 in Warrington 1933 Mormon leader 86 historian politician and polygamist Peter Rylands 1820 in Warrington 1887 wire manufacturer 87 and Liberal politician who was an MP in two periods between 1868 and 1887 Captain Guy Wareing DFC 1899 in Latchford 1918 World War I flying ace John Webster 1845 in Warrington 1914 civil engineer who specialised in designing bridges Jack Wilson 1894 in Warrington 1970 partner in Wilson Keppel and Betty a popular British music hall and vaudeville act Henry Woods RA 1846 in Warrington 1921 painter and illustrator an artist of the Neo Venetian school1900 to 1950 Edit George Formby 1904 1961 entertainer lived for many years in Warrington and is buried in Warrington Cemetery with his father George Formby Sr also an entertainer 88 Ernest Whitty 1907 1985 footballer who played Association football for Burnley Darwen and Chorley in the 1930s 89 George Cardell Briggs 1910 in Warrington 2004 the first Bishop of The Seychelles Petty Officer Alfred Edward Sephton VC 1911 in Warrington 1941 recipient of the Victoria Cross Reginald Waywell 1924 2019 artist lived in Warrington 90 Burt Kwouk OBE 1930 2016 actor The Pink Panther films born in Warrington Eric Tucker 1932 2018 artist Geoffrey Hewitt 1934 2019 FREng FRS British chemical engineer notable for contributions to heat transfer and multiphase flow in 2007 recipient of Global Energy Prize Dave Cook 1941 in Warrington 1993 British communist activist also known as a rock climber Ossie Clark 1942 1996 fashion designer raised in Warrington attended William Beamont Secondary Technical School 91 Sue Johnston born 1943 actress Brookside and The Royle Family 92 Ann Pilling born 1944 in Warrington author and poet best known for young adult fiction Pete Postlethwaite 1946 2011 actor born in Warrington a studio in the Pyramid Arts Centre has been named after him 92 Peter Brimelow born 1947 in Warrington American writer Paleoconservative Paul Lewis born 1948 in Warrington freelance financial journalist and broadcaster presenter of Money Box on BBC Radio 4 David Banks born 1948 in Warrington former British newspaper editor1950 to date Edit Pete McCarthy 1951 2004 actor born in Warrington honoured in a plaque on the wall of the Pyramid Arts Centre Steve Parker born 1952 in Warrington writer of children s and adult s science books Martin Sixsmith born 1954 in Warrington author and radio television presenter primarily working for the BBC Joan Ryan born 1955 in Warrington politician MP for Enfield North 1997 2010 and 2015 2019 Philippa Perry born 1957 in Warrington psychotherapist supporter of the Women s Equality Party and married to artist and cross dresser Grayson Perry George Davey Smith born 1959 in Warrington epidemiologist Garry Newlove 1959 2007 victim of high profile murder in August 2007 attacked outside his house in Fearnhead 93 Antony Green AO 94 95 born 1960 in Warrington Australian psephologist and commentator Helen Newlove Baroness Newlove born 1961 Warrington based community reform campaigner 96 appointed Victims Commissioner in 2012 Gary Slater born 1961 in Warrington sports journalist 97 currently working for the Daily Telegraph Martin Roberts born 1963 presenter of BBC 1 s Homes Under the Hammer Robin Jarvis born 1963 brought up in Warrington young adult fiction and children s novelist writes dark fantasy suspense and supernatural thrillers Andy Bird CBE born c 1964 in Warrington film producer and executive chairman of Walt Disney International Tim Firth born 1964 in Warrington dramatist screenwriter and songwriter Gavin Patterson born 1967 brought up in Warrington chief executive of BT Group plc since 2013 Rebekah Brooks born 1968 journalist newspaper editor and former chief executive of News International attended Appleton Hall County Grammar School in Warrington 98 Chris Matheson born 1968 in Warrington Labour Party politician MP for the City of Chester since 2015 Liam Byrne born 1970 in Warrington Labour Party politician 99 MP for Birmingham Hodge Hill since 2004 Curtis Jobling born 1972 author illustrator animator and production designer of Bob the Builder lives in Warrington Helen Wilson born 1973 in Warrington mathematician at University College London 100 focuses on theoretical and numerical modelling Steven Arnold born 1974 actor known for his role as Ashley Peacock in Coronation Street born in Warrington Helen Walsh born 1977 writer and film director Warren Brown born 1978 regular BBC actor born and lives in Warrington Nathan Head born 1980 in Warrington actor known for his work in the British horror genre Darren Jeffries born 1982 actor best known for his role as OB in Hollyoaks George Sampson born 1993 dancer and winner of Britain s Got Talent in 2008 101 Music Edit Edwin Ted Astley 1922 1998 composer most notably the themes to The Saint and Danger Man Edna Savage 1936 in Warrington 2000 traditional pop singer Tim Curry born 1946 actor singer and composer born in Warrington and lived in Grappenhall Pete Waterman OBE born 1947 record producer lives in Warrington in the village of Winwick 102 John Maines born 1948 in Warrington musician trombone player and active figure in the British brass band movement as a performer conductor tutor compere and concert presenter Gareth Jones born 1954 in Warrington music producer and engineer notable for working with Depeche Mode Miles Tredinnick also known as Riff Regan born Warrington 1955 rock musician songwriter and a stage and screenwriter Phil Kelsall MBE born 1956 in Warrington principal organist at the Blackpool Tower Ballroom since 1977 Stephen Hough born 1961 international concert pianist 103 and classical composer raised in Warrington Tim Bowness born 1963 singer songwriter singer in the band No Man born and brought up in Stockton Heath Ian Brown born 1963 lead singer of The Stone Roses 104 born in Warrington lived in Forster Street now lives in Lymm 92 Chris Evans born 1966 DJ and TV presenter born and grew up in Warrington 105 Anthony Whittaker born 1968 composer and pianist born in Warrington Jan Linton born c 1968 singer songwriter born in Warrington but re located to Japan 106 Chris Braide born 1973 songwriter and record producer born and lived in Padgate Dave Vitty Comedy Dave born 1974 DJ and Dancing on Ice contestant came from Hong Kong brought up in Warrington citation needed Kerry Katona born 1980 singer actress born and grew up in Warrington 92 Bill Ryder Jones born 1983 former guitarist of The Coral born in Warrington Viola Beach formed in 2013 band from Warrington James Smith born 1990 lead singer of Yard Act brought up in Lymm 107 Sport Edit Steve Donoghue 1884 1945 jockey ten times British flat racing Champion Jockey born in Warrington 108 George Duckworth 1901 1966 first class cricketer who played Test cricket for England was born in Warrington He played first class cricket for Lancashire between 1923 and 1947 109 Fred Worrall 1910 in Warrington 1979 footballer made 425 professional appearances Harold Moggy Palin 1916 in Warrington 1990 professional rugby league footballer Roger Hunt born 1938 footballer 110 for Liverpool F C member of England s 1966 World Cup squad born in Glazebury lives in Warrington made a Freeman of the Borough on 5 December 2016 Neil McGrath born 1942 former racing driver Bob Fulton 1947 2021 Australian Rugby League player and selector born in Stockton Heath 111 Keith Elwell born 1950 in Warrington professional rugby league footballer played 591 games for Widnes Wade Dooley born 1957 former England rugby union international played lock forward played for his country 55 times Gary Bannister born 1960 in Warrington former professional footballer 112 who made 539 pro appearances Hugh de Prez 1951 2008 cricketer 113 Neil Fairbrother born 1963 first class cricketer played Test cricket for England born in Warrington 114 Tony Ward born 1970 former professional footballer 115 Alan Hughes born 1971 in Warrington prominent crown green bowlerTony Bullock born 1972 former professional footballer 116 who played as a goalkeeper 358 pro appearances Stephen Foster born 1980 defender 117 and captain of Barnsley F C born in the town David Wright born 1980 in Warrington former professional footballer 118 with 488 pro appearances Ian Sharps born 1980 in Warrington former footballer 119 with 565 pro appearances now First Team Coach at Walsall F C Paul Hanagan born in 1980 twice British champion flat jockey born in Warrington Matt Doughty born 1981 in Warrington former professional footballer 120 over 400 pro appearances Jonathan Akinyemi born 1988 Olympic Canoe Slalom athlete for team Nigeria born and lives in Warrington James Chester born 1989 footballer 121 currently playing for Hull City A F C born in Warrington Jesse Lingard born 1992 footballer 122 for Manchester United F C born in Warrington Jack Robinson born 1993 in Warrington professional footballer 123 plays for Queens Park Rangers F C Twin towns EditWarrington is twinned with 124 Hilden Germany Nachod Czech RepublicThe villages of Lymm and Culcheth within the borough are twinned respectively with these French communes 125 126 Meung sur Loire France Saint Leu la Foret FranceFreedom of the Borough EditThe following people and military units have received the Freedom of the Borough of Warrington This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items May 2019 Individuals Edit Lord Hoyle November 2005 Roger Hunt December 2016Military units Edit The South Lancashire Regiment September 1947 The Queen s Lancashire Regiment March 1970 The Duke of Lancaster s Regiment 2006 75 Engineer Regiment 2013 127 See also Edit Cheshire portalWarrington Dock Walton Lea Walled Garden Warrington power stationNotes Edit Includes hunting and forestry Includes energy and construction Includes financial intermediation services indirectly measured Components may not sum to totals due to rounding References Edit Facts and figures for Warrington Warrington Borough Council Retrieved 17 December 2019 Warrington City Population Retrieved 2 August 2022 Allen Grant 1910 Anglo Saxon Britain The Library of Congress New York E S Gorham Your guide to Warrington bus services and attractions from Arriva Arrivabus co uk Retrieved 5 July 2018 Farrer William 1911 A History of the County of Lancaster Volume 5 Victoria County History Clatton John 1876 Archaeologia Aeliana Or Miscellaneous Tracts Relating to Antiquity Volume 8 William Dodd Seibricke Wilfried 1996 Historisches Duteches Vornamenbuch in German de Gruyter p 712 ISBN 3 11 014445 X Briggs Robert J S 11 June 2016 Godalming and Old English ingas name formations Surrey Archaeological Society Medieval Studies Forum Godalming Retrieved 1 June 2022 Settlement names in inge Names in Denmark Department of Nordic Research 28 December 2011 Retrieved 17 May 2020 Hinchcliffe J Williams J H 1992 Roman Warrington Excavations at Wilderspool 1966 9 amp 1976 Brigantia Monograph No 2 Manchester University Evans Sian Famous firsts figures and important dates www warrington gov uk Archived from the original on 2 March 2016 Retrieved 20 February 2016 Council Warrington Borough Planning policy documents Warrington Borough Council www warrington gov uk Archived from the original on 23 February 2016 Retrieved 20 February 2016 Council Warrington Borough Planning policy documents Warrington Borough Council www warrington gov uk Archived from the original on 2 March 2016 Retrieved 20 February 2016 Evans Sian Famous firsts figures and important dates Warrington gov uk Archived from the original on 6 July 2018 Retrieved 5 July 2018 ROF Risley Townships Warrington A History of the County of Lancaster Volume 3 1907 pp 316 324 Retrieved 10 August 2014 5th 8th Battalion The King s Regiment Regiments org Archived from the original on 16 August 2007 Retrieved 8 September 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Home is the most important place in the world PDF IKEA Archived from the original PDF on 28 September 2011 page 160 The history of Her Majesty s Inspectorate of Constabulary 1856 2006 2006 ISBN 18472600505 OCLC 234295855 Just before the First World War Warrington County Borough Police had 82 police officers The Police Encyclopedia Vol 2 by Hargrave L Adam London Waverley Book Company no date but published circa 1910 Warrington Local Election Results Warrington Local Election Results 2021 PDF Warrington climate metoffice gov uk Retrieved 6 May 2016 a b c Warrington Borough Council Green Belt Assessment Final Report PDF Warrington gov uk Archived from the original PDF on 16 February 2018 Retrieved 22 February 2018 Green belt statistics GOV UK Gov uk Harbidge Jess Census www warrington gov uk Retrieved 21 February 2016 Gurudwaras in United Kingdom Gateway to Sikhism Archived from the original on 28 September 2011 Retrieved 28 June 2008 Regional Gross Value PDF Archived from the original PDF on 25 May 2006 Retrieved 10 March 2022 Call to save Warrington s Unilever washing powder factory BBC 30 January 2020 Retrieved 30 January 2020 Evans Sian History of Warrington Market Warrington gov uk Retrieved 2 July 2018 Centre Map Golden Square Warrington Gswarrington com Retrieved 2 July 2018 Dawsons to close Warrington HQ after 121 year presence in the town Warrington Worldwide 8 March 2019 Retrieved 24 November 2020 The Scheme Time Square Timessquarewarrington co uk 12 April 2016 Homepage Birchwoodshoppingcentre co uk Retrieved 10 March 2022 Local plan review supporting documents Local plan review supporting documents Warrington Borough Council Archived from the original on 4 March 2019 Retrieved 22 July 2017 Warrington West Town s new 20 5m railway station opens BBC 16 December 2019 Retrieved 17 December 2019 New bus station is built to last Warrington Guardian 16 August 2007 Retrieved 17 February 2009 New bus station makes history Warrington Guardian 1 August 2005 Archived from the original on 13 July 2007 Retrieved 17 February 2009 Morgan David 14 July 2021 This is why 48 portraits have been painted onto a window at Warrington bus station Warrington Guardian Retrieved 29 July 2021 Warrington bids to become UK City of Culture ITV News Retrieved 29 March 2017 Warrington may not have a castle or a cathedral but it was once dubbed the Athens of the North Warrington Guardian 17 July 2017 Retrieved 16 January 2023 The Museum of Policing in Cheshire www museumofpolicingincheshire org uk Retrieved 20 February 2016 Warrington Museum of Freemasonry Warrington Retrieved 20 February 2016 Green light for Lymm Heritage Centre plans Warrington Worldwide 13 February 2016 Retrieved 20 February 2016 Forrest David Warrington Walking Day A Brief History WACIDOM Musicinwarrington org uk Retrieved 29 March 2017 Home page Neighbourhood Weekedner Retrieved 7 June 2019 Place North West Warrington UTC set to go on site Place North West 13 March 2015 Retrieved 20 February 2016 UTC Warrington event is a huge success Warrington and Co Warrington and Co Retrieved 20 February 2016 Contact Us Manchester Japanese School Retrieved 15 February 2015 Oughtrington Lane Lymm Cheshire WA13 0RB UK Language Centre at Lymm High School The History of Warrington Wolves h2g2 16 October 2007 Retrieved 2 December 2015 Warrington Wolves mywarrington Retrieved 2 December 2015 Rylands gear up for North West Counties Premier Division Warrington Guardian accessdate 11 February 2020 Newsquest plans to cut 12 more jobs in North West including web editor and social media editor Press Gazette www pressgazette co uk Retrieved 20 February 2016 Radio Warrington now broadcasting from Warrington Market Warrington Worldwide 23 May 2015 Retrieved 20 February 2016 An Historic Guide to Warrington Town Hall Warrington Borough Council 2007 Archived from the original on 12 July 2007 Retrieved 23 May 2007 English Heritage Ikea The History The Guardian London 17 June 2004 Archived from the original on 28 January 2007 Retrieved 23 May 2007 Historic England Statue of Oliver Cromwell Bridge Street 1139417 National Heritage List for England retrieved 18 February 2016 File Cromwell s Cottage geograph org uk 522801 jpg wikimedia org 22 July 2007 Retrieved 6 May 2016 Miles Tina 24 November 2011 Cromwell s Cottage still makes the Grade Taste Test Indian meal for Tina Miles sees her follow in Oliver s footsteps Liverpool Echo via The Free Library Retrieved 2 December 2015 Stephen Leslie ed 1885 Bell James 1524 1584 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 4 London Smith Elder amp Co p 163 Encyclopaedia Britannica retrieved December 2017 Stephen Leslie ed 1885 Barlow Edward 1639 1719 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 3 London Smith Elder amp Co p 219 Stephen Leslie Lee Sidney eds 1891 Harrison John 1693 1776 Dictionary of National Biography Vol 25 London Smith Elder amp Co verification needed Royal Museums Greenwich Longitude found Rmg co uk retrieved December 2017 History of American Women Quaker Poet on the Pennsylvania Frontier Womenhistoryblog com retrieved December 2017 Seccombe Thomas 1900 Winstanley Hamlet In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 62 London Smith Elder amp Co p 207 Smith Charlotte Fell 1893 Macgowan John In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 35 London Smith Elder amp Co p 92 Bettany Thomas 1886 Blackburne Anna In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 5 London Smith Elder amp Co p 121 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Evanson Edward Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 3 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Priestley Joseph Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 22 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 322 A Celebration of Women Writers Anna Laetitia Aikin Barbauld 1743 1825 retrieved December 2017 Knight John Joseph 1900 Whitlock Elizabeth In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 61 London Smith Elder amp Co p 140 OCLC WorldCat Drinkwater John 1762 1844 retrieved December 2017 Historic England CHURCH OF ST MICHAEL ST MICHAEL S CHURCH ROAD Liverpool 1209945 National Heritage List for England Retrieved 13 December 2017 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Aikin Arthur Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 437 Stephen Leslie ed 1885 Aikin Charles Rochemont Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 London Smith Elder amp Co p 185 Radford Ernest 1885 Aikin Edmund In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 London Smith Elder amp Co p 185 Brodribb Arthur Aikin 1885 Aikin Lucy In Stephen Leslie ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 London Smith Elder amp Co p 186 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Aikin John Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 1 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 737 see para 2 His daughter Lucy Aikin 1781 1864 born at Warrington Oxford Dictionary of National Biography William Beamont diaries in Warrington Library History of the Mayor Warrington Borough Council Archived from the original on 11 November 2007 Charles James Dictionary of National Biography 2nd supplement London Smith Elder amp Co 1912 p 353 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Fildes Sir Luke Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 10 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 339 HANSARD 1803 2005 People G retrieved December 2017 Hansard 1803 2005 Mr Joseph Leicester retrieved 30 January 2018 Grave location for holders of the Victoria Cross in the city of Manchester homeusers prestel co uk Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 7 May 2008 American National Biography Roberts Brigham Henry retrieved December 2017 Rae William Fraser 1897 Rylands Peter In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 50 London Smith Elder amp Co p 60 Monument Restored The George Formby Society Retrieved 2 December 2015 Joyce Michael 2004 Football League Players Records 1888 1939 Soccer Data ISBN 978 1899468676 Reginald Waywell Retrieved 18 January 2023 Frankel Susannah 3 November 1999 Fashion Labelled with love Warrington salutes you Ossie Clark The Independent London Retrieved 13 January 2009 a b c d VOTE Our top 10 favourite Warringtonians Warrington Guardian 28 February 2014 Retrieved 28 February 2014 Malkin Bonnie 11 February 2008 Teenagers jailed for life for Garry Newlove murder The Daily Telegraph London Retrieved 2 December 2015 Antony Green s Election Blog A Few Thanks 28 July 2017 Archived from the original on 28 July 2017 Retrieved 12 April 2022 Pitt Helen 1 July 2016 Antony Green gracing our election night TV screens for 25 years The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 12 April 2022 BBC News 21 December 2012 retrieved December 2017 Warrington Guardian 28 April 2012 retrieved December 2017 Irvine Ian 5 November 2005 Rebekah Wade The feisty first lady of Wapping The Independent Newspaper The Independent Online Archived from the original on 26 April 2010 Retrieved 21 April 2011 The Guardian Wednesday 12 October 2016 retrieved December 2017 UCL archive PROFESSOR HELEN J WILSON retrieved December 2017 Breakdancer wins TV talent contest The Press Association Archived from the original on 2 June 2008 Retrieved 31 May 2008 Adonis Andrew Minister Rail 17 April 2009 Birmingham New Street my lowest point The Times London Retrieved 27 May 2010 BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs Stephen Hough BBC Retrieved 10 March 2022 FourFourTwo Published 1 November 2005 retrieved December 2017 Chris Evans Life Story The Independent London 14 April 2001 Archived from the original on 16 December 2008 Retrieved 8 October 2008 Sawyer Joel 5 January 2001 Jan is big in Japan Warrington Guardian Retrieved 2 September 2010 Elton John listening to us blows my mind Yard Act on humour despair and celebrity fans The Guardian 4 January 2022 Retrieved 17 January 2021 Mortimer Roger Onslow Richard Willett Peter 1978 Biographical Encyclopedia of British Flat Racing Macdonald and Jane s ISBN 0 354 08536 0 George Duckworth player profile Cricinfo com Retrieved 16 October 2007 Liverpool career stats for Roger Hunt LFChistory Stats galore for Liverpool FC Lfchistory net Retrieved 10 March 2022 Hadfield Dave 23 October 1992 Rugby League Fulton plays honorary consul Dave Hadfield on the man from mining stock in Warrington who became a leader Down Under The Independent Retrieved 6 June 2011 Gary Bannister Football Stats No Club Age 61 1978 1995 Soccerbase com Retrieved 10 March 2022 The Home of CricketArchive Cricketarchive com Retrieved 10 March 2022 Neil Fairbrother player profile Cricinfo com Retrieved 16 October 2007 Tony Ward doncasterrovers co uk Archived from the original on 20 March 2017 Retrieved 20 March 2017 Tony Bullock Football Stats No Club Age 50 1996 2019 Soccerbase com Retrieved 10 March 2022 Stephen Foster Football Stats No Club Age 41 1997 2014 Soccerbase com Retrieved 10 March 2022 David Wright Football Stats No Club Age 41 1997 2015 Soccerbase com Retrieved 10 March 2022 Ian Sharps Football Stats No Club Age 41 1998 2017 Soccerbase com Retrieved 10 March 2022 Matt Doughty Football Stats Warrington Town Age 40 Soccerbase com Retrieved 10 March 2022 James Chester Football Stats Stoke City Age 33 Soccerbase com Retrieved 10 March 2022 Jesse Lingard Football Stats Manchester United Age 29 Soccerbase com Retrieved 10 March 2022 Jack Robinson Football Stats Sheffield United Age 28 Soccerbase com Retrieved 10 March 2022 Council Warrington Borough Twin towns Warrington Borough Council www warrington gov uk Archived from the original on 2 March 2016 Retrieved 20 February 2016 Lymm Twin Town Society Lymm Twin Town Society Retrieved 20 February 2016 Culcheth culcheth org uk Retrieved 20 February 2016 The Mayor s role and history Freedom of the Borough Warrington Borough Council Retrieved 8 June 2019 Further reading EditKendrick James 1853 Profiles of Warrington Worthies Longman Brown Green amp Longman illustrated with silhouette likenesses James Kendrick Profiles of the Past 250 years of British portrait silhouette history Beamont William 1872 Annals of the Lords of Warrington for the first five centuries after the conquest Vol 1 Manchester The Chetham Society Beamont William 1872 Annals of the Lords of Warrington for the first five centuries after the conquest Vol 2 Manchester The Chetham Society External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Warrington Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Warrington Warrington Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 28 11th ed 1911 p 332 Warrington Borough Council Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Warrington amp oldid 1145575159, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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