Northenden

Northenden is a suburb of Manchester, England, with a population of 14,771 at the 2011 census.[1] It lies on the south side of the River Mersey, 4.2 miles (6.8 km) west of Stockport and 5.2 miles (8.4 km) south of Manchester city centre, it is bounded by Didsbury to the north, Gatley to the east, and Wythenshawe to the south and west.

Northenden

Church Road / Palatine Road junction, in central Northenden
Northenden
Location within Greater Manchester
Population15,200 (2011)
OS grid referenceSJ828901
 London159 mi (256 km) SE
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townMANCHESTER
Postcode districtM22
Dialling code0161
PoliceGreater Manchester
FireGreater Manchester
AmbulanceNorth West
UK Parliament
Councillors
  • Sarah Russell (Labour)
  • Sam Lynch (Labour)
  • Mary Monaghan (Labour)

Historically a rural township and parish within the hundred of Bucklow in Cheshire, despite unplanned urbanisation and population growth in its neighbours in the 19th century, Northenden remained a comparatively rural and unpopulated area which spanned the hamlets of Lawton Moor, Northern Moor, Rose Hill and a part of what is now Wythenshawe. By 1866 Northenden had coalesced and became a civil parish. The industrialisation of neighbouring Manchester resulted in overpopulation in the early 20th century.

In popular culture, The Doves wrote a song about Northenden, called Northenden. The lyrics include

The kids are deranged

They love guns and kidnap Thats just the way we do things here The day dies down Not a moment too soon

Under the northenden afternoon

Manchester City Council used the Local Government Act 1929 to extend its boundaries to encompass Northenden in 1931 and throughout the mid-20th century it was redeveloped as an overspill estate.[2]

History

Northenden was mentioned as Norwordine in the Domesday Book of 1086; its name came from Anglo-Saxon Norþ-worþign = "north enclosure".[3] It was then a small farming community with a manor house and woodland. In later times Northenden was sometimes called Northen.

There was a weir on the Mersey in the 14th century (where Mill Lane is now), and a mill was set up there to grind corn. It is recorded in the 16th century as belonging to the Tatton family of Wythenshawe Hall, who had the right to make all their tenants use the mill on payment of a fee. The weir and mill were demolished in the early 1960s.[4]

As Northenden is on a major (and very old) crossing place of the Mersey on the salt road from Cheshire to Manchester, it prospered in medieval times. The ford was an important way into and out of and into Manchester (now Ford Lane), as there was no bridge over the Mersey between Sale and Stockport, until in 1745 Bonnie Prince Charlie's army built a troop-bridge out of big poplar tree trunks where the B5095 (Manchester Road, Didsbury) now crosses the Mersey, south of Didsbury, in his abortive attempt to seize the crown of England. The Northenden ford was unusual because its northern and southern ends were not opposite each other, but people using the ford had to wade about 500 feet along the riverbed. The Simon's Bridge was built at the ford in 1901 to help access to Poor's Field, and the rent from this field was used by the church to buy blankets and clothes for the needy.

Distance from Manchester enabled Northenden to avoid the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century. The nearest it came to industrialisation was a cottage industry in flax spinning. In the 1980s the area became part of the Mersey Valley Park, and the banks of the river form part of the Mersey Valley Trail.

Northenden began to develop as an attractive riverside township for Manchester's more affluent managers, clerks and tradesmen, and the Victorian and Edwardian development gives the village much of its present character. In the wake of Manchester's acquisition of Wythenshawe for a new garden city, Northenden became a district of Manchester in 1931.

Northenden is often referred to as a village by the locals, but was engulfed in suburban housing as the very large Wythenshawe housing estate was built during the first half of the 20th century. Northenden, whose centre was formerly Church Road, rapidly developed a new shopping centre along Palatine Road (a new road built to connect with Manchester) to service the new neighbourhood with shops, schools, a cinema (closed 1974), hotels, churches, small businesses and service industries. Eventually, a larger shopping centre and various amenities were built in the centre of Wythenshawe in the late 1960s, though Northenden still is busy.

Northenden railway station, between Sharston Road and Longley Lane in Sharston, served the area between 1866 and 1964. Passenger trains from Stockport Tiviot Dale to Warrington and Liverpool stopped here.

Simon's Bridge, Northenden

Governance

Northenden electoral ward within Manchester City Council.

Northenden was one of the eight ancient parishes of the Macclesfield Hundred of Cheshire and included the township of Northen Etchells. Under the Poor Law Amendment Act 1886 the parish was split in two as Northen Etchells became a civil parish in its own right. In 1931, both parishes were incorporated into the civil parish and city of Manchester, along with the civil parish of Baguley, which was part of the Bucklow Hundred of Cheshire.

Northenden is part of the Wythenshawe and Sale East constituency, represented by the Labour Party MP Mike Kane.[5]

Councillors

Northenden is a ward within the local authority of Manchester City Council. The ward is represented by three Labour Councillors: Sarah Russell (Lab),[6] Sam Lynch (Lab),[7] and Mary Monaghan (Lab).[8]

ElectionCouncillorCouncillorCouncillor
2004 Richard Cowell (Lab) Ian Wilmott (Lab) Michael Kane (Lab)
2006 Richard Cowell (Lab) Ian Wilmott (Lab) Michael Kane (Lab)
2007 Richard Cowell (Lab) Sandra Bracegirdle (Lab) Michael Kane (Lab)
2008 Richard Cowell (Lab) Sandra Bracegirdle (Lab) Martin Eakins (Lib Dems)
2010 Mary Di Mauro (Lib Dems) Sandra Bracegirdle (Lab) Martin Eakins (Lib Dems)
2011 Mary Di Mauro (Lib Dems) Richard Cowell (Lab) Martin Eakins (Lib Dems)
2012 Mary Di Mauro (Lib Dems) Richard Cowell (Lab) Fran Shone (Lab)
2014 Sarah Russell (Lab) Richard Cowell (Lab) Fran Shone (Lab)
2015 Sarah Russell (Lab) Chris Webb (Lab) Fran Shone (Lab)
2016 Sarah Russell (Lab) Chris Webb (Lab) Mary Monaghan (Lab)
2018 Sarah Russell (Lab) Sam Lynch (Lab) Mary Monaghan (Lab)
2019 Sarah Russell (Lab) Sam Lynch (Lab) Mary Monaghan (Lab)

  indicates seat up for re-election.

Geography

Northenden is located in the southern end of the city of Manchester, 5.2 miles (8.4 km) from the city centre, and begins on the south bank of the River Mersey.

Present-day Northenden sits in a triangle formed by two motorways (the M56 and M60) and a main dual carriageway (Princess Parkway). Manchester Airport is approximately 4 miles (6.4 km) to the south by road.

Northenden is one of the many areas within Wythenshawe. It has the same postal code, is part of the Parliamentary constituency (Wythenshawe and Sale East), and is one of the five electoral wards of the Wythenshawe area.[9] In 2003, following a review by the Boundary Committee for England, the Wythenshawe ward of Benchill was disestablished after it was named the most deprived ward in England in the Index of Multiple Deprivation (the Index is a governmental measure of local employment, income, health, education, housing, child poverty, and availability of local services). The area was then divided between the neighbouring wards of Sharston, Woodhouse Park, and Northenden. However, in 2006, after Manchester City Council erected a road sign that said "Welcome to Northenden, Wythenshawe", many Northenden residents objected to the inclusion of the word "Wythenshawe". The residents were accused by one local councillor of snobbish behaviour and attempting to distance themselves from the Wythenshawe area (which is primarily social housing) for the sake of house prices as well as wanting to be seen more as an extension of the affluent neighbouring Didsbury area. The city council agreed to remove the word "Wythenshawe" from the sign,[10] though Northenden is still officially part of the Wythenshawe area.[11]

Places of interest

The Church of St Wilfrid, Northenden is a Grade II* listed building. Most of the church's structure dates from the 19th century, apart from the tower which was built in the 15th century. The 19th-century remodelling was done in red sandstone and is an example of Perpendicular Gothic architecture.[12] St Wilfrid's contains a memorial to 19th-century railway chairman Sir Edward Watkin, founder of the Channel Tunnel Company, who is buried in the church grounds.[13]

The church of St Michael and All Angels, Northenden, designed by N. F. Cachemaille-Day (1935-7) is a Grade II* listed building.

Northenden has the largest Jehovah's Witness Kingdom Hall in the area, a former cinema dating from the 1930s called the Forum.

The area also has places of worship for Methodists, Anglicans, Roman Catholics, Mormons and Quakers.

Northenden Social Club's first premises was a converted First World War army hut, originally used by the medical officer at Heaton Park. Buying it cost £114 and the club had to raise another £412 for it to be transported to their site and established as a social club. In front of the club is the Northenden War Memorial next to Palatine Road. It was a favourite Friday night haunt for Polish paratroopers and other allied soldiers they largely trained during the Second World War at what was Ringway Airport later to become Manchester Airport. It has fairly extensive grounds for parking, bowls and tennis.

A section of the River Mersey is in the town of Northenden and one of its more popular parts is the weir, which now has a fish ladder enabling migrating salmon and sea trout to get upstream. The weir is flat with tiles and has only a thin sheet of water running down the weir as it is fairly wide. Fishing can be very good here as this stretch contains trout, roach, dace, eels, pike, salmon (mid autumn-mid-spring and this goes for sea trout), chub, barbel, and some grayling have been caught.

Law enforcement

Northenden is covered by the South Manchester Division of Greater Manchester Police.

Notable people

Absalom Watkin (1787–1861) was born in London and became a Manchester businessman and Liberal reformer. He purchased Rose Hill, a Grade II* listed Victorian villa off Longley Lane (now on Bronington Close), in 1832 as a home for himself and his family.[14] His son, Sir Edward Watkin (1819–1901), was a Victorian railway magnate and also lived at Rose Hill.[15]

See also

References

  1. "City of Manchester ward population 2011". Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  2. "Greater Manchester Gazetteer". Greater Manchester County Record Office. Places names – M to N. Archived from the original on 18 July 2011. Retrieved 17 October 2008.
  3. "Key to English Place-names". kepn.nottingham.ac.uk.
  4. Deakin (1983), p. 5.
  5. "Mike Kane MP". parliament.uk. UK Parliament. Retrieved 6 January 2018.
  6. "Councillor Sarah Russell". manchester.gov.uk. Manchester City Council. Retrieved 6 January 2018.
  7. "Councillor Sam Lynch". manchester.gov.uk. Manchester City Council. Retrieved 24 May 2018.
  8. "Councillor Mary Monaghan". manchester.gov.uk. Manchester City Council. Retrieved 6 January 2018.
  9. "Manchester City Council – Wythenshawe Strategic Regeneration Framework".
  10. Towle, Nick (9 February 2006). "Road sign would've hit house prices". South Manchester Reporter. M.E.N. Media.
  11. Crawshaw, Julie. "MyWard". secure.manchester.gov.uk.
  12. "Church Of St Wilfrid, Manchester". Heritage Gateway Website. Heritage Gateway (English Heritage, Institute of Historic Building Conservation and ALGAO:England). 2006. Retrieved 22 November 2010.
  13. Elleray, Kirsty (4 December 2002). "The nearly man of Northenden". South Manchester Reporter. M.E.N. Media. Retrieved 22 November 2010.
  14. "Rose Hill House". Friends of Rose Hill. Retrieved 23 November 2017.
  15. Cooper (2007), p. 131.

Bibliography

  • Cooper, Glynis (2007). The Illustrated History of Manchester's Suburbs. Breedon Books. ISBN 978-1-85983-592-0.
  • Deakin, Derick (1983). Looking Back at Northenden. Willow Publishing. ISBN 0-946361-03-7.
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