Wilmslow
Wilmslow maps (2 available)
Wilmslow books (10 available)
- 28 photos on Wilmslow appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Wilmslow
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Wilmslow and Cheshire
Wilmslow memories
Bower Cotton Mill
The mill you refer to in the text was about 100 yards up the road from St. Bartholomews, on the opposite side of the road. It was owned by William Bower (not Bowen), and was the last of several Bower cotton mills in Wilmslow, closing in the late 1840's. William lived in a house next to the church, and his will was certified by, among anothers, Mr. Torkington, then owner of the George and Dragon pub (still standing).
Contributed by peter bower
The Westlyn Chapel
I remember walking past this place every day when I was at Wycliffe Avenue School for Girls. I remember the chapel so clear as it was the place that my Grandma got married in on 31st December, 1929. She described the chapel as being a very peaceful place.
It's a shame years later that they felt the need to demolish the place.
Contributed by Julie Tota
Memories of Romany and Raq.
I was evacuated to Chester during World War II and met Romany and his dog Raq on a number of occasions when he visited our school. He talked to us about the countryside, did beautiful simple charcoal drawings of the creatures he was discussing, told us what to wear to become 'Nature detectives' and even played tunes for us on the piano. He was a lovely man.
Contributed by Frances Stewart
Cheshire memories
Bower Cotton Mill
The mill you refer to in the text was about 100 yards up the road from St. Bartholomews, on the opposite side of the road. It was owned by William Bower (not Bowen), and was the last of several Bower cotton mills in Wilmslow, closing in the late 1840's. William lived in a house next to the church, and his will was certified by, among anothers, Mr. Torkington, then owner of the George and Dragon pub (still standing).
A memory of Wilmslow contributed by peter bower
Extracts From Wilmslow & Cheshire books
Technically, Wilmslow was just the parish church
and its immediate graveyard, however, the name
is now given to the whole of the community. The
original lords of the manor were the Fittons,
then the Venables inherited the land and, in the
15th century, the two Venables heiresses each
took their half of the estates to their husband’s
family, the Booths of Dunham Massey and the
Traffords of Trafford Park. Until the railway came
in 1842 it was an isolated rural community, best
known for its fustian and for its cottage industry
making silk buttons for the Macclesfield silk
industry. There was even a cotton mill in the
middle of the town in the late 18th century,
owned by the Bowen family.
However, once the trains came, Wilmslow
became a thriving commuter community; its
development hastened when the Earls of
Stamford sold their land outright in the 1850s.
This led to far fewer restrictions on building than
in the neighbouring Alderley Edge, where strict
leasehold conditions limited the development to
select up-market residences.
One of the purchasers of the Stamford lands
was J C Prescott, who bought up the
old Bowen mill with its tall chimney
and demolished it; he wanted to
develop Wilmslow`s residential
potential and forget its industrial
past. So, Wilmslow became a thriv-
ing mixed community and the
shopping centre for the whole area;
more of a town than a village.
In the last few years, with the
building of the bypass round the
town and its attendant retail devel-
opment in Handforth, Wilmslow`s
shops have suffered, and the full
extent of the impact of these
changes has yet to be worked out.
An extract from from"Wilmslow and Alderley Edge Photographic Memories".
This photograph was
taken before the
clerestory was added to
the chancel by Bodley in
1898. He was a well
known Liverpool
architect, responsible for
building Sunlight Village
on the other side of the
county in the Arts and
Crafts style, although the
Morris and Co windows
in the church, dating
from 1920, are too late to
be his responsibility.
An extract from from"Wilmslow and Alderley Edge Photographic Memories".
The original lower height of the chancel roof can easily be seen, but otherwise, the interior is very similar to today`s church.
The chancel screen incorporates some 15th-century work, and the side chapels, as one might expect for a church at the
centre of a large parish, used to belong to the prominent gentry families in the area, such as the Traffords and the Booths,
both of whom married Venables heiresses in the 15th century and thus acquired large parts of Wilmslow. There is also a
memorial to J C Prescott, one of Wilmslow`s most important 19th-century developers.
An extract from from"Wilmslow and Alderley Edge Photographic Memories".
Wilmslow`s main shopping
street would contain all the
shops needed by the
community, including their
links with the outside world,
as the newspaper shop
demonstrates in its adverts.
The road dates from the
18th century; it is in fact the
turnpike road. It only
replaced Church Street as
Wilmslow`s main shopping
street in the 1880s, when
most of the shops in the
photograph were built.
An extract from from"Wilmslow and Alderley Edge Photographic Memories".
Lime Walk is part of the
development of the Carrs,
the old open pasture land
that is still a great asset for
the town. Many of the
lines of old trees in the
Carrs are the remnants of
old field boundaries, but
these trees were planted
for their amenity value.
An extract from from"Wilmslow and Alderley Edge Photographic Memories".






