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Stockport




  latitude 534083
  longitude -21494
  official Name Stockport
  population 136,082 ( 2001 Census )
  metropolitan Borough Stockport
  metropolitan County Greater Manchester
  region North West England
  constituency Westminster Stockport
  post Town STOCKPORT
  postcode District SK1, SK2, SK3, SK6,SK7,SK8
  postcode Area SK
  dial Code 0161
  os Grid Reference SJ895900


Stockport is a large town in Greater Manchester , England . Situated south east of the city of Manchester , it is the largest settlement of the Metropolitan Borough Of Stockport , and has a population of 136,083 ( 2001 Census ), with the borough as a whole having 281,000. This makes the borough 23rd most populous district in England. There have been several bids by the council for City Status .

The River Mersey begins in Stockport, at the confluence of the Rivers Goyt and Tame .


HISTORY


Toponymy

Stockport is first recorded as "Stokeport" in 1170.12 The currently accepted etymology is OE ''stoc'', a market place, with ''port'', a hamlet (but more accurately a minor settlement within an estate); hence, a market place at a hamlet.

Older derivations include ''stock'', a stockaded place or castle, with ''port'', a wood, hence a castle in a wood.3 Other derivations have been formed, based on early variants of the name such as Stopford and Stockford. There is evidence that a ford across the Mersey existed at the foot of the town centre street now known as Market Street Brow. Stopford retains a use in the adjectival form, Stopfordian, used for Stockport-related items, and pupils at Stockport Grammar School style themselves as Stopfordians.4


Early history

There is sufficient evidence that a fortified stronghold existed in the vicinity in ancient British times, and that Agricola in AD 79 recognised its strategical advantages and fortified Stockport to guard the passage of the Mersey .

After the Norman Conquest , it became ruled by a hereditary Baron of Stockport.

Stockport has never been a sea or river port. The River Mersey , which starts in Stockport at the confluence of the Rivers Goyt and Tame , is not navigable to anything much above canoe size, and in the centre of Stockport has been Culvert ed and the main shopping street Merseyway built above it. The town was connected to the national Canal network by the 5 miles of the Stockport Branch of the Ashton Canal opened in 1797 which continued in use until the 1930s. Much of it is now filled in, but there is an active campaign to re-open it.
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From the seventeenth century Stockport became a centre for the Hatting industry and later the Silk industry. Due to its proximity to Manchester , Stockport rapidly expanded during the Industrial Revolution , helped particularly by the growth of the cotton manufacturing industries. However, economic growth took its toll, and 19th century philosopher Friedrich Engels wrote in 1844 that Stockport was "renowned as one of the duskiest, smokiest holes in the whole of the industrial area".5


Recent history

In 1967 the Stockport Air Disaster occurred, when a British Midland Airways Argonaut crashed in the Hopes Carr area of the town, resulting in the deaths of 72 passengers.

In recent years, Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council has embarked on an ambitious regeneration scheme, known as Future Stockport . The plan is to bring over 3,000 residents into the centre of the town, and revitalise its residential property and retail markets, in a similar fashion to the nearby major city of Manchester . Many ex-industrial areas around the town's core will be brought back into productive use as Mixed-use residential and commercial developments.


GOVERNANCE

Most of the town is within the Historic County Boundaries of Cheshire , although Reddish and the Four Heatons lay within the Historic County Boundaries of Lancashire .


Civic history

The 1835 Municipal Corporations Act made Stockport a Municipal Borough divided into seven wards. In 1888, its status was raised to County Borough , becoming the County Borough Of Stockport . In 1974, under the Local Government Act 1972 Stockport amalgamated with neighbouring districts to form the Metropolitan Borough Of Stockport in the Metropolitan County of Greater Manchester .


Parliamentary representation

There are four parliamentary constituencies in the Stockport Metropolitan Borough: Stockport , Cheadle , Hazel Grove , and Denton And Reddish .

Stockport has been represented by Labour MP Ann Coffey since 1992 .

The Liberal Democrat Patsy Calton was elected in Cheadle in 2001 over long-standing Conservative member Stephen Day by the smallest margin of any constituency in the country. She died in 2005, a month after increasing her majority to over 4,000 in the 2005 Election ; in the following By-election the Liberal Democrat Mark Hunter defeated Stephen Day. This is despite the huge campaign launched by the Conservative Party, which involved much 'American style' politics.

Andrew Stunell has been the Liberal Democrat MP for Hazel Grove since 1997 .

The constituency of Denton and Reddish bridges Stockport and Tameside ; the current member is Andrew Gwynne who holds the seat for Labour with a 14,000 majority.


DEMOGRAPHY


The town had a population of 136,082 according to the 2001 Census, with the wider borough having a population of 284,528.
Although suburbs such as '' (however, given that its fellows on this list were places such as Oxford , Winchester , Liverpool (European Capital of Culture), and tiny London commuter belt villages, the relevance of the list is disputed).


ECONOMY

Stockport's principal commercial district is located in the town centre, with branches of most high-street stores to be found in the Merseyway Shopping Centre . The Grand Central Leisure Park complex boasts an Olympic sized swimming pool, a Ten-screen Cinema , bars, a Bowling alley, health complex, and several restaurants. Stockport is located six miles (10 km) from Manchester City Centre , making it convenient for commuters and shoppers.


PLACES OF INTEREST


Stockport is home to the following:

  • Bramall Hall is a superb example of a 'Cheshire Black and White' timber framed manor house, with origins dating back to Medieval England. The property is lovingly cared for and presents the visitor with a marvellous historic record spanning six centuries.

  • Stockports last working hat factory is now " Hat Works " hat museum.

  • Western Europe's biggest brick structure, the 111 feet (33.85 metres) high, four-track railway viaduct on the line to Manchester which represents a major feat of Victorian engineering. Eleven million bricks were used in its construction, opening in 1842.

  • Staircase House is a Grade II listed medieval town house in the Market Place. Tree ring dating suggests that the earliest timbers were felled around 1460, and it is assumed that the building was erected shortly afterwards. The building has been modified several times, but is probably the oldest secular building in Stockport.6 The building, including the eponymous 17th century staircase, was damaged by fires in 1989 and 1995. The building was in poor condition and deteriorated further as the Gardner family tried to raise funds from many Heritage sources to preserve the building and give it an up to date use. It was eventually compulsorily purchased by Stockport Council. It has been restored and is currently used as a tourist information centre, gift shop, and cafe.

  • Stockport Story Museum , detailing over 10,000 years of Stockport's history. This museum has free admission and is housed within Staircase House.

  • Stockport Town Hall , with its ballroom, described by Poet Laureate , John Betjeman as 'magnificent' containing the largest Wurlitzer theatre organ in Britain designed by Sir Alfred Brumwell Thomas .

  • Stockport College with sites in the town centre and Heaton Moor

  • Underbank Hall in the centre of Stockport is a late 16th century timber framed building, built as the town house of the Arderne family from nearby Bredbury. It remained in the family until 1823, and since 1824 has been used as a bank. The current main banking hall lies behind the 16th century part and dates from 1915. The building is listed Grade II---.

  • Stockport Air Raid Shelters is a museum based around the underground tunnels dug during World War II to protect local inhabitants during air raids

  • Vernon Park . This is the main municipal park, located a short distance to the east towards Bredbury .

  • St. Elisabeth's Church , Reddish , and Model Village . Mill community designed in the main by Alfred Waterhouse for the factory workers from Houldsworth Mill , at the time the largest Cotton Mill in the world.



TRANSPORT

The M60 Motorway and A6 Road cross over at Stockport. Stockport Railway Station is a mainline station on the Manchester spur of the West Coast Main Line . Manchester Airport , the busiest in the UK outside London, is located five miles (8 km) southwest of the town.


SPORTS



TWIN CITIES


The town of Stockport is twinned with the following towns:



NOTABLE PEOPLE

See Also: List of notable residents of Stockport


As one of the larger towns in the UK, Stockport and its surrounding villages have had many notable residents throughout their history including some as diverse as novelist Christopher Isherwood , engineer Sir Joseph Whitworth , tennis player Fred Perry , Judge John Bradshaw and architect Norman Foster . Distinguished First-class Cricket ers Fred Ridgway and Maurice Tremlett were born in Stockport and played Test Cricket for England. Ridgway played first class cricket for Kent between 1946 and 1961;7 Tremlett played first class cricket for Somerset between 1947 and 1960 and in 1956 became the club’s first professional captain.8


SEE ALSO



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