Hockley
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Hockley memories
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Cheshire memories
Nostalgia
Our family lived at Jackson Brow in Pott Shrigley. We were living in No. 2 when the war was declared in 1939 and we listened to this on an old Lissen radio which required two dry batteries and one wet accumulator to run. A year later we moved to No. 1 which was the house at the front. (It has been modernized from our days when it was a 2up/2down with no running water, no electricity and the 'petty', a good old northern word, was at the end of the garden.) My Dad at that time worked down the pit at Hammond's brick works. In 1940 I won a scholarship to go to Kings School, Macclesfield where this village lad mixed ...read more here
A memory of Pott Shrigley contributed by Wilfred Jackson
School Dinners
The primary school, on the hill at the far end of the street, had no kitchen facilites when I was there. School meals were prepared and served in St Mary's church hall, out of the photograph to the right. Every day we would be marched along the street in a long crocodile to have a our school dinner, and then marched back again, rain or shine. Meals were eaten on trestle tables with long rows of benches down each side. The only choice was take it or leave it, but if you took it you had eat it!
A memory of Disley contributed by Peter Dale
15 Brereton Road, Handforth
The Greyhound on Wimslow Road was one of my favorite places as a child of 6-7 years of age. In 1939, I would often be lucky and as I came over the Railway Bridge from 15 Brereton Road, and after having an ice cream cone in the newsagents, to find the gypsy caravan was stopped in front of the Greyhound Inn. The men were inside having a drink; the women and children outside with the caravan. I loved visitng with the children. My mother (Ardwick, Manchester) and my father (Galway and Dublin) married in St. Aloysius Church, Ardwick, in 1924 and travelled to Seattle, Washinton. My mother and I made a few trips to England as ...read more here
A memory of Handforth contributed by Eleanor Gilmore
CLAY LANE, HANDFORTH
Does anyone remember Grange FARM (next to The Grange) on Clay Lane in the 1940s or 1950s please? jeanjames@telus.net
A memory of Handforth contributed by Jean James
Extracts From Hockley & Cheshire books
One casualty of the increasing
maturity of the population can be seen
in Wilmslow Opera’s recent problems.
It is extremely difficult for them to
raise a young enough chorus line to
undertake such shows as ‘The Mikado’.
Make-up is not enough to convince an
audience of the youthful innocence of
three little maids when they are played by
a trio of stalwart grandmothers.
An extract from from"Wilmslow & Alderley Edge - A History & Celebration".
St Mary’s Church is an interesting mixture.
The oldest existing part is the 14th century
nave. However, this shows signs of expansion
later, in alterations in the windows in the
clerestory. The south porch is 15th-century,
but there is evidence of it being moved to its
present position when the tower was built
in the early 16th century. This was almost
certainly built by Richard Plat, the mason
who was responsible for Mobberley church
tower, erected at the same time. The chancel
was rebuilt by the Stanleys in the 1850s to
house the tomb of the 1st Lord Stanley, but
it may have replaced an even older 13th-
century structure.
An extract from from"Wilmslow & Alderley Edge - A History & Celebration".
In 1645 old Thomas Wright was ejected
from the living, presumably because of his
known Royalist sympathies and his refusal to
give up using the Anglican Book of Common
Prayer. A Puritan preacher, John Brereton,
probably a relation of the Parliamentary
commander, was put in his place. Apparently
the Puritans demolished the organ, sold the
silver and presented Mr Brereton with a pewter
basin to baptise the congregation. He in his turn
was expelled in 1660, and Thomas Wright came
back, just for one year, as he died in 1661.
An extract from from"Wilmslow & Alderley Edge - A History & Celebration".
While Chorley Old Hall is still recognisable
for what it was, and lies, still with its moat,
on the outskirts of Alderley Edge village,
Hawthorn Hall, originally part of the hamlet
of Morley, is embedded in Wilmslow’s
residential development.
An extract from from"Wilmslow & Alderley Edge - A History & Celebration".
The auction, which was held in Macclesfield
in October 1938, was a spectacular failure,
so much so that less than a tenth of the lots
were sold. Inspection of the sale catalogues
belonging to the people who were at the auction
shows bids creeping up and then the lot being
withdrawn as it had not reached the reserve
price. The developers had created building
plots of an acre each all over the Edge, but
the farmers were not ready to pay developers’
prices for their land, and the general gloom
at the sale seems to have affected many other
potential bidders. Anyway, October 1938, the
time of the Munich crisis, was not a good time
for people to go in for speculation.
The failure of the sale did have one good
result, as the Edge was saved from residential
ribbon development. Dorothy and Margaret
Pilkington, who lived at Firwood in Alderley
Edge village, managed to get the Wizard
Woods protected. They bought some of the
land themselves and persuaded the County
Council to buy more. After the Second World
War had finished, the land was handed over to
the National Trust so that they could preserve
this open space for everyone to enjoy. Thanks
to the Trust, the Edge is now better cared for
and understood than ever before and they
have proved worthy successor custodians to
the Stanleys.
Alderley Park itself, where the house
itself had largely burned down in 1932, was
bought by ICI after the war. They set up their
An extract from from"Wilmslow & Alderley Edge - A History & Celebration".







