Gatley

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Gatley
Gatley (Greater Manchester)
Gatley

Gatley shown within Greater Manchester
Population approx. 9,000
Metropolitan borough Stockport
Metropolitan county Greater Manchester
Region North West
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Cheadle
Dialling code 0161
Police Greater Manchester
Fire Greater Manchester
Ambulance North West
European Parliament North West England
UK Parliament Cheadle
List of places: UKEnglandGreater Manchester

Coordinates: 53°23′40″N 2°14′49″W / 53.3945, -2.2469

Gatley is a suburb within the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport in Greater Manchester, England. The area borders onto the City of Manchester.

Contents

[edit] Geography

Gatley is approximately three miles (5 km) from Manchester Airport, and seven miles (11 km) from Manchester city centre. It is separated from its slightly larger neighbour, Cheadle, by the A34 and from Didsbury in Manchester by the River Mersey.

To the south, Gatley meets Heald Green, with Grasmere Road and Yew Tree Grove marking the southern boundary. To the west it meets the Manchester Wythenshawe district, with roads just to the west of Park Road and Styal Road (e.g. Charnville Road and Malverne Avenue) being the last in Gatley.

Gatley is 40-60 metres above sea level.

[edit] Population

The current population of Gatley is approximately 9,000.

[edit] Historical population changes

Population of Stockport Etchells[1]
Year Population
1664 238
1754 380
1801 623
1811 627
1821 749
1831 701
1841 749
1851 805
1861 860
1871 977
1881 1369
Population of Cheadle & Gatley UD[1]
Year Population
1891 8252
1901 10820
1911 9913
1921 11036
1931 18473
1951 31511
1961 45621
1971 60799

A polished stone found in Gatley suggests some human presence in the Neolithic or early Bronze Age.[1]

In 1286, Gatley was a hamlet within the manor of Stockport Etchells, contained at least six households (around 30 individuals): probably a significant growth from levels in the late 11th century [1]

An Etchells Court of Survey document, probably from the late 16th century, gives Gatley as having 16 tenants (households) including Thomas Whitelegg (the largest holding, 25 acres), Roberte Gooddyer, Arnoulde Baxter and Roger Royle [2].

Cheadle and Gatley Urban District saw the highest population growth of anywhere in Stockport in the inter-war period. In 1921 its population was a little over 11,000. By 1931 18,500 and by 1939, 27,000. Cheadle, Gatley and Cheadle Hulme all saw the increase, as did the previously rural area of Heald Green. This growth was largely due to people moving out of Manchester into the area. [1]

[edit] History

[edit] Origin of the name Gatley

In 1290, Gatley was known as Gateclyve, which in Old English means "a place where goats are kept".[3]

[edit] Administrative history

Prior to 1086, Gatley was probably unpopulated and was part of Etchells (meaning "extra cleared land"). After 1086, the area was split between two landowners and for a period Gatley Brook (the old hundred boundary) formed the boundary. The halves were, at various times, held by the Stokeports and the Ardernes, then later by the Stanleys until, in 1508, the heir John Stanley was killed by a tennis ball. With no rightful claimants, the land went to the crown and, in 1556 Etchells was sold to William Tatton. By the 1560s, the Tattons, who also owned Northenden and other local land, became full lords of the manor and held court over the area. [4]

The township of Stockport Etchells, covering Gatley and much of the area now in Heald Green (the area being based on previous ecclesiastical parishes) gained administrative responsibilities in the sixteenth century, as the old powers of the lord of the manor waned, and manoral rule became more by consent and custom. In the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries, Stockport Etchells and Northen Etchells were frequently administered together as Etchells.

The local court leets and court barons moved, for a time from the late 16th century, to a building that later became known as the Old Court House in Gatley [4] (though it was probably an inn at the time).[2]

The townships Stockport Etchells, Cheadle Moseley and Cheadle Bulkeley were merged into the Cheadle and Gatley Urban District in 1894. From 1894 until 1974, Gatley was a part of the urban district of Cheadle and Gatley, within the historic county boundaries of Cheshire.

In 1933-4, both Manchester and Stockport wanted to annex the Cheadle and Gatley Urban District. An opinion poll of nearly 10,000 residents recorded near-unanimous support for continuing independence.

In 1936 the boundaries of the Cheadle and Gatley Urban District saw minor changes due to the abolition of Handforth Urban District.

In 1974 the Urban Districts in Stockport were abolished and Cheadle and Gatley Urban District became part of the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport in Greater Manchester. Gatley is part of the Cheadle and Gatley borough ward and the Cheadle parliamentary constituency. [1]

[edit] Industry

Button making appears to have been a significant local trade in the 17th and 18th centuries. A "button man" (merchant selling buttons) is recorded in Gatley in the 1660s. This continued in the 18th century with three button men being mentioned in Gatley between 1735 and 1779. [1]

People living around Gatley Green were mostly hand loom weavers and became more dependent on textile manufacture.[2] Their cottages had cellars for storage and well-lit upper rooms for the looms[4].

About 1750, William Roscoe from Bolton built a factory near Gatley Hall. (This shouldn't be confused in scale with the cotton mills such as those at Styal: it appears to have been a place for hand weaving and was later converted into a farmhouse, so it was a very modest affair). Up to at least 1841, John Alcock was a textile manufacturer in Gatley, using the Roscoe factory for at least part of the period[2].

The spread of machinery in industrial manufacturers during the 19th century appears to have killed off industry in Gatley, before which it was a "very busy and important place, as a centre for weaving, spinning, shoemaking and fustian cutting". Handloom weaving may have survived in the area to as late as the 1880s (Melson's Directory of Cheadle, Northenden and Baguley, 1887[2]).

[edit] Farming

Until the 20th century, most Gatley residents either worked in the material trades or were farmers. An open field system existed around Gatley in the late 17th century, but the practice of common farming seems to have fallen into disuse when William Tatton allowed tenants to buy their own land. [1]

[edit] Gatley Carrs and Gatley Green

Historically, the two areas of Gatley were Gatley Carrs and Gatley Green. The Green was the higher area where people lived. The Carrs was the lower, marshy ground running down to the River Mersey.

In 1800, Mr Worthington of Sharston Hall planted 1000 poplars in Gatley Carrs[2].

[edit] Halls and Houses

In 1714, Stone Pale Hall was reconstructed in Gatley[2]).

Gatley Hall and Gatley Hill House may both have been built in the mid-eighteenth century by local cotton manufacturers. The mansion High Grove House was built for a member of a wealthy hatting family of Yorkshire and Manchester[1].

[edit] Transport

The River Mersey wasn't bridged in this area until 1745 (and then not continuously as three bridges collapsed over the years) so travelling to Didsbury meant fording the Mersey or crossing in a boat. Until the railway in 1864, the road from Didsbury to Gatley (and then onto Styal) forded the Mersey and came through Gatley Carrs. The "Gatley Ford" was near Didsbury's Millgate Lane, suggesting the river was forded somewhere near the current M60/M56 motorway junction[5].

Turnpikes opened across Stockport from 1725, with the road through Gatley being amongst the last, in 1820.

This was the main road through Cheadle, Gatley, Altrincham and Northwich. By July 1822, the fast coach along the road from Stockport to Liverpool via Warrington made it possible to spend six hours in Liverpool and return on the same day.

Gatley had no public transport until 1896, when a postmaster started a cab service. In 1898 Mr Potts began to operate a service to Stockport with a single (horse drawn) omnibus, continuing until the arrival of the electric tram in 1904

Electric trams began to run in Stockport in 1902, with the service to Gatley (terminating at the Horse and Farrier) opening in March 1904. In Gatley, trams were replaced by buses in 1931. The trams were not wholly reliable: broken rear axles were common and the trams often disengaged from the electric cable.

The LWNR station at Cheadle allowed travel via Edgeley to Manchester, but closed as early as 1917 due to competition with the electric tram between Gatley and Stockport

LWNR opened the "Styal Line" in 1909 including Gatley and Heald Green stations.

The M56 and M63 were opened in 1974, bypassing Gatley and joining with each other at Kingsway (Kingsway having been extended south across the River Mersey in 1959) [1].

[edit] Conflict

In the English Civil War (1642-51) the Tatton family, along with the local Rectors and most tenants, were Royalists. Wythenshawe Hall was kept in a state of defence from 1642, with Parliamentary forces nearbye in Handforth and Duckinfield. Wythenshawe Hall was taken by the Parliamentarian forces on 25th February 1644[2]. Three Gatley men were in the garrison defending the hall: Ralphe Savage, Robert Torkinton and John Blomiley[5].

Gatley residents joined the Luddite riots in 1818, but without any great distinction. They drilled in Gatley Carrs before marching to Stockport to take arms from the soldiers, but returned without actually attempting to do it. In the following summer, 1819, soldiers formed square in front of the Horse and Farrier pub in Gatley with the aim of arresting the Luddite ringleaders. Several ran away and hid (one, Isaac Legh, in the chimney of Stone Pale House, two others in the Carrs)[5].

[edit] Religion and churches

A nonconformist meeting house registered in Etchells in 1722 may have been a house in Gatley. In 1777, the Gatley Congregational Church was founded and an independent chapel was built in Old Hall Road, Gatley, following the spread of evangelicalism to nonconformist groups. A full time minister was employed by the nonconformists for the first time. [1] The present church is on Elm Road.

The first nonconfirmist minister was the Rev. Jeremiah Pendlebury, succeeded by his assistant, the Rev. Samuel Turner, in 1788. By 1860 the church congregation had fallen to eight people. Improvements made with help from the North Cheshire Rural Mission increased the congregation to 60.

Prior to 1875, Gatley's parish church was the Church of St. Thomas, four miles away in Stockport. The people of Gatley rarely saw their parish priest, though they still had to pay their tithes.

The new church, St. James', was built of local handmade bricks and consecrated on Tuesday 6th December 1881. The Rev. Percy M. Herford was the first Vicar of St. James' Church. In 1888 the Rev. P. M. Herford left and was replaced by the Rev. John Bruster, who remained Vicar for 40 years, retiring in 1928.

The vicarage was completed in 1894, following a donation towards it of £100 from Mr W. Heald of Parrswood in 1889.[2]

[edit] Modern tensions with Wythenshawe

Since the building of the Wythenshawe garden city in the first half of the 20th century, and the movement there of people from the Manchester inner city areas, there has always been some tension between the residents of Wythenshawe and Gatley. In one example, owner-occupiers on Styal Road complained in late 1956 that "children from the Estate invade and strip the private gardens" and called for a barrier to be erected. This led to the widely-publicised reaction of the Chairman of the Wythenshawe Community Council, Harry Lloyd, who spoke of the "snobs of Gatley"

[edit] Site of Gatley Medical Centre

The site currently occupied by Gatley Medical Centre on Old Hall Road has long been at the heart of Gatley. In the late 16th century the Etchells court was held on this site (probably in an inn). The Old Court House was subsequentally built there. It may have once been part of the village archery range. In 1777 it became the site of Gatley's first church of any kind: the Congregational Chapel, and was previously a schoolroom. The grassed area next to the modern surgery was used as a graveyard for many years. So on that one site Gatley has seen inn, court, school, church, graveyard, archery range and medical centre.

[edit] Religion

Gatley Compared: Religion[6]
UK Census 2001 Gatley and Cheadle Stockport England
Total population 14,261 284,528 49,138,831
Christian 68.02% 73.45% 71.74%
No religion 11.16% 14.18% 14.59%
Jewish 6.37% 0.58% 0.52%
Muslim 5.06% 1.75% 3.10%
Hindu 1.18% 0.47% 1.11%
Sikh 0.27% 0.07% 0.67%
Buddhist 0.25% 0.21% 0.28%
Other 0.67% 0.23% 0.29%
Not stated 7.01% 7.09% 7.69%

The religious diversity in Gatley and Cheadle is not too far from the country as a whole. Most notable is the relatively high Jewish population, over ten times higher than the English and Stockport averages. This is reflected in the existence of Gatley's orthodox synagogue, the Menorah reform synagogue in neighbouring Sharston and the North Cheshire Jewish Primary School in Heald Green.

The muslim population is higher than the average across England and similar to neighbouring Didsbury.

The data in the table refers to the Cheadle and Gatley ward. The data comes from the 2001 UK census, when the ward name was Cheadle and the ward encompassed the whole of Gatley and a large part of Cheadle village. Gatley has never been an administrative district in its own right and no data for Gatley alone exists.

[edit] Ethnicity

Gatley Compared: Place of birth[6]
UK Census 2001 Gatley and Cheadle Stockport England
Total population 14,261 284,528 49,138,831
Born in England 87.83% 91.81% 87.44%
Born elsewhere in UK 3.53% 3.17% 3.3%
Born elsewhere in EU 1.79% 1.6% 2.35%
Born outside EU 6.68% 3.22% 6.91%

The data in the table refers to the Cheadle and Gatley ward. The data comes from the 2001 UK census, when the ward name was Cheadle and the ward encompassed the whole of Gatley and a large part of Cheadle village. Gatley has never been an administrative district in its own right and no data for Gatley alone exists.

These census figures predate the recent expansion of the European Union into Eastern Europe so may have changed significantly since 2001.

[edit] Landmarks

Gatley’s war memorial is situated on Gatley Green, though the original World War I memorial is the clock tower at the junction of Altrincham Road and Church Road.

There is also what remains of the Tatton Cinema, originally built in the 1930s, but now only the front facade still stands. The cinema closed in early 2001 due to the increase in multiplex cinemas, particularly the nearby Parrs Wood Cinema complex which lies 2 miles away.

[edit] Present day

[edit] Gatley Festival

Gatley Festival is a celebration of village life and is held on the first Sunday in July each year.It is believed to have started in the early 1930's as the Gatley Rose Queen Parade. The current festival format of a large parade and then a funfair and stalls was started around 1986 and was originally in Gatley Park before moving to much larger fields behind Gatley Hill house. Gatley still has a traditional Rose Queen crowned as the center piece of Gatley festival as well as a fun filled day for the whole village on Scholes Fields.[1]

[edit] Music festival

Gatley Music Festival is a non-profit organisation bringing high quality live music to the village of Gatley, while at the same time raising money for local charities. It presents a week of live music every year during March, with something for every age and taste, including classical, jazz, brass, choral and the very best of local indie, acoustic and rock. It has its roots in "Music at St James", set up in 1989 by the Rev Brian Lee, curate of St James in Gatley, and Len Mather. The success of those concerts inspired the establishment in 2005 of a festival of music which was so well received that it is now an annual music festival for a rapidly growing regular audience.[2]

[edit] Playing fields

Gatley has its own playing fields. At the far end of the village, just before the boundary with Manchester, is Gatley Hill House which opens up into the William Scholes Playing Fields. These were part of a sport stadium and playing fields, built in the early 1960s with money from the William Scholes Foundation. Scholes was a Gatley estate agent and resident who died in 1927. The track opened on May 19, 1962 and was the first home of Cheadle and Gatley AC, before it merged with Stretford AC in 1966.

Currently, the fields are the natural home for many Gatley events – from the Gatley Festival to Sport Relief – and are used every weekend by local teams for cricket in the summer and football in the winter and every week by local running clubs.

[edit] Gatley Carrs Nature Reserve

Gatley Carrs is a small nature reserve nestling at the north west corner of the village (bounded to the north and west by the M60, M56 and Stockport-Altrincham railway line).

To visit the Carrs, turn down Old Hall Road (by the Horse and Farrier pub), turn left at the bottom of the road, then first left onto Brookside Road. The Carrs can also be accessed on foot from Lorna Grove and Longley Lane.

The Carrs is managed by the Gatley Carrs Conservation Group [3].

[edit] Transport

Rail services are provided from Gatley railway station, which sits on the Manchester to Manchester Airport and Manchester–Styal–Wilmslow lines. Gatley also has easy access to the M60 motorway and hence to the wider motorway network in the north west of England. Several bus routes also run through the village. GMPTE's journey planner is useful for anyone wanting to use public transport in Gatley [4].

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Arrowsmith, Peter "Stockport, A History", published 1997, ISBN 0 905164 99 7
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Shercliff, W.H. "Wythenshawe volume 1: to 1926", published 1974, ISBN 0 85972 008 xg
  3. ^ Gazetteer of Greater Manchester Place Names. Manchester UK. Retrieved on 2007-06-17.
  4. ^ a b c Deakin, Derick "Wythenshawe: The story of a garden city", published 1989, ISBN 0 85033 699 6
  5. ^ a b c Moss, F, "Chronicles of Cheadle". First published 1894. republished by E.J. Morton, 1970, SBN 901598-11-9
  6. ^ a b United Kingdom Census 2001 (2001). Area: Cheadle (Ward). neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk. Retrieved on 2008-06-09.

[edit] External links