Stockton Heath

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Coordinates: 53°22′24″N 2°34′46″W / 53.3732°N 2.5794°W / 53.3732; -2.5794
Stockton Heath
Stockton Heath

 Stockton Heath shown within Cheshire
Population 6,396 (2001)
OS grid reference SJ614864
Civil parish Stockton Heath
Unitary authority Warrington
Ceremonial county Cheshire
Region North West
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town WARRINGTON
Postcode district WA4
Dialling code 01925
Police Cheshire
Fire Cheshire
Ambulance North West
EU Parliament North West England
UK Parliament Warrington South
List of places
UK
England
Cheshire

Stockton Heath is a civil parish and suburb of Warrington, Cheshire, England. It is located to the north of the Bridgewater Canal and to the south of the Manchester Ship Canal, which divides Stockton Heath from Latchford and north Warrington. It has a total resident population of 6,396.[1]

Victoria Square is at the centre of Stockton Heath and is on the crossroads of the A49 and A56. Until the 1970s, the Victoria Hotel stood on this square but its location has been redeveloped. North of the square is the main shopping area which includes the Forge Shopping Centre, developed on the site of the old forge (Caldwell's). Stockton Heath is home to a number of modern bars and restaurants, as well as traditional public houses. The Red Lion Inn dates back to the early 19th century and the Mulberry Tree on Victoria Square, opened in its present building (replacing earlier premises dating from 1725) in March 1907 .

Since 1988, much of the centre of Stockton Heath has been designated a conservation area to preserve its character – see http://www.warrington.gov.uk/Images/11_St_Heath_tcm31-3129.pdf – but at the same time, there has been redevelopment work with several new bars and restaurants moving into the centre of Stockton Heath.

Victoria Square, London Road

History

A Roman road ran through Stockton Heath, along the route now known (appropriately) as Roman Road. There have been some excavations; more information is available at Warrington Museum.

Excavations of the large Roman industrial settlement in the suburbs of modern day Wilderspool and Stockton Heath have unearthed a Roman mask,[2] one of only a handful found in Europe, and the first evidence of this settlement was unearthed during the early excavation of the Bridgewater Canal in Stockton Heath in 1770.[3] Primary evidence points to a probable temple to Minerva[4] on the site, a strong focus on pottery and glass bead paste making industries, and a trapezoidal building of unidentified purpose.[5] that one author suggests may have been an auxiliary fort.

Although the name Stockton Heath appears to have been conferred on the village at a later date (indeed the area itself has been described rather as "a hamlet of little consequence and no development until the 19th century"[6]), many secondary references state that a family bearing the name Stockton lived in the area from the end of the 13th century until at least the end of the 15th.[7]

In 1643, parliamentarian forces under the command of Sir William Brereton advanced from Northwich to launch an attack on Warrington, the Lancashire headquarters of the royalist James Stanley, 7th Earl of Derby. Sir William's troops were routed at the "Battle of Stockton Heath".[8] Unverified local legend has it that many of the parliamentarian soldiers were buried at Hill Cliffe and Budworth. The battle is referred to in the 1859 novel Hollywood Hall by James Grant:

"A priory, situated in a wooded hollow, ruined and battered as the Royalists had left it in 1643, next caught my eye, when, riding rapidly on, I approached a wide waste common called Stockton Heath, past which the Mersey rolled amid swamps and morasses filled with rushes and willows.[9]"

The same novel frequently refers to Stockton Heath as a "waste" and makes numerous references to swamps nearby. This description contrasts sharply with the variants of "fashionable shopping village" frequently encountered in the literature of estate agents today.

Early maps refer to a hamlet by the name of Stoken[10] (or Stocken[11]) where the present village of Stockton Heath now stands. However, more detailed old maps of the area of Acton Grange show a sparsely populated hamlet and refers only to the old buildings and bridges recognisable today in street names in the area, such as Whitefield Cottage.

The Bridgewater Canal, one of two canals that pass through the village, reached Stockton Heath in 1772, the year of the death of its designer, James Brindley[12]

In the 1900s George Formby Senior moved his young family to Stockton Heath and it was from here that George Formby Junior began his entertainment career. Their house, Hillcrest, is a listed building.[13] George Formby Senior died in Stockton Heath in 1921.

In 1974, Stockton Heath, historically part of Cheshire, became incorporated into the borough of Warrington under the Local Government Act 1972. Warrington, historically part of Lancashire, became a Cheshire borough under the act.

2008 saw the first ever Stockton Heath Festival, which is now going into its fifth year. It is situated on Mill Lane Field in Stockton Heath, although it takes place over many venues throughout Grappenhall, Appleton and Stockton Heath. In 2011, the Stockton Heath Festival attracted 12,000 visitors.

Schools

The original LEA primary school of 1910 was demolished in October 2008, despite a strong campaign to retain it, after a new school had been built adjacent. There is also St Thomas C of E Primary School now located next to Alexandra Park. This was opened in 1974 and moved from its original site opposite St Thomas' Church. The original St Thomas' school was opened in 1833 and the building was eventually demolished (along with a late Victorian extension) in the late 1970s. On its site now stands a modern health centre.

Fishing

Ackers Pit and the Bridgewater Canal are the main options.

Geography and administration

On the south side of the Manchester Ship Canal, Stockton Heath adjoins Appleton, Grappenhall and Walton.

It typically takes between seven and ten minutes on the bus[14] and about twenty-five to thirty-five minutes on foot to reach Warrington town centre.

Political representation

Stockton Heath forms part of the Warrington South parliamentary constituency which is represented in the House of Commons by David Mowat MP (con).

Stockton Heath is a multi-member ward within Warrington borough. It is served by two councillors, currently Celia Jordan and Sue Dodd, both of whom are representatives of the Liberal Democrat Party. At the most recent borough elections, Councillor Jordan was re-elected, with 48% of the votes cast.

Stockton Heath is also served by a parish council, comprising seventeen members, including two borough councillors. Part of its responsibility is to facilitate dialogue with Warrington Borough Council.

Demographics

Data is based on that of Stockton Heath Ward[15]

Population

  • Total population: 6,420 residents
  • Male:Female ratio: 48.9%:51.1%
  • Average age of population: 39.9 years

Ethnicity breakdown

  • 99.1% White
  • 0.5% Mixed
  • 0.1% Black
  • 0.3% Asian
  • 0.1% Other

Housing and social situation

Housing situation

  • Households: 2,700
    • 84.9% are owner occupied houses
    • 6.9% are rented council houses
    • 6.7% are privately rented houses
    • 1.4% are rent free houses

Social situation

  • Population density: 45.2 residents per hectare
  • 46.4% of residents say this ward is a "comfortably well-off" area (based on ACORN index)
  • 2.9% of residents are on some form of benefits.
  • 3.0% of households are classed as overcrowded.

Employment and education

Employment

  • 67.9% are employed.
  • 2.2% are unemployed.
  • 1.7% are students.
  • 28.2% are classed as "economically inactive".

Education

  • 16.9% have no qualifications whatsoever.
  • 42.9% have only level 1 or 2 qualifications.
  • 33.0% have level 3 qualifications or higher.

See also

References

  1. United Kingdom Census 2001. "Stockton Heath CP (Parish)". neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk. Retrieved 14 June 2007. 
  2. http://www.bbc.co.uk/ahistoryoftheworld/objects/ei9beezjR9qeyQaQ6igjQQ
  3. Thompson, F H, 1965 Roman Cheshire
  4. May, T, 1904 Warrington's Roman Remains
  5. http://www.cheshirewestandchester.gov.uk/visiting/heritage/archaeology/archaeology_planning_advisory/historic_towns_survey/historic_towns_survey_reports/idoc.ashx?docid=cf62df66-19e3-48c7-a7ee-3bfd953b36e9&version=-1
  6. http://cheshire.ivisitorguide.com/market-towns/stockton-heath
  7. http://www.warringtonguardian.co.uk/archive/2006/06/12/History+%28History%29/791605.What_s_in_a_name_/
  8. "'An account of the Warrington Siege', by James Kendrick M.D., A new edition by H. Wells" Published 1996 with an appendix containing Beamont's account of the Battle of Stockton Heath, updating James Kendrick's original paper (first published 1852) ISBN 1-901208-25-7
  9. from: Hollywood Hall by James Grant, Published 1859, Routledge, Warnes & Routledge, Farringdon Street, London
  10. THE COUNTY PALATINE OF CHESTER By H. Moll, 1724.
  11. A Map of Cheshire, Thomas Badeslade & W.H. Toms, 1742
  12. Page 12, "Walks in West Cheshire and the Wirral" by Jen Darling, Updated Edition 2007, Northern Eye Books, Tattenhall, Cheshire. First Published 1988 by Sigma Leisure, Wilmslow, Cheshire. ISBN 0-9553557-2-9
  13. http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/news/s/1033395_fight_to_save_stars_home_
  14. "Bus times from Stockton Heath". 

External links

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