Cheshire History

Cheshire History is the journal of new work relating to the history and archaeology of the ancient and modern county of Cheshire.  It is published by the Cheshire Local History Association and appears as a single annual edition.  Number 47 (for 2007-8), a substantial issue of 132 pages with four colour plates, is now available .

To obtain your copy, please complete and return the tear off form below.  Back issues are available. Its contents are:

George Twigg  Saltmaking at Higher and Lower Dirtwich.
This article traces the history of a neglected salt-field on the Welsh border, from the earliest records through to the twentieth century.

Clare Johnson The Travels and Trials of a sixteenth-century Wirral recusant.
William Hough was heir to the Lord of the manors of Thornton Hough and Leighton in Wirral, but being a Catholic, was obliged to spend much of his time abroad and much of his energies protecting his lands and interests. The article gives a vivid portrait of the difficulties he faced.

John P Hess Backford’s Memorial Boards: were they painted by a Randle Holme? Although it is thought that Dugdale destroyed all the memorial boards that Randle Holme painted without authority, there are grounds for believing that some survived.  Four in question are reproduced in full colour.

David Hayns Hidden behind an oaken door? The last years of an ejected minister: George Mainwaring of Malpas.
Unlike Hough, Mainwaring was not a Catholic but suffered for his beliefs in an age that required conformity.

James Sutton An eighteenth-century Cheshire Carrier: Twiss of Alsager.
This article details the life and business of a family of carriers in the days before the development of the stage coaches.

Tony Bostock Mapping the Past. Tithes and their value in detecting the past.
The recent tithe map project mounted by the Cheshire Record Office makes access to these fascinating but sometimes difficult documents much easier and this article shows how much can be learned from them.

Ronald Durdey John Tollemache and his castle.
Mr Durdey explores the building and planning of John Tollemache’s famous mock-medieval castle at Peckforton.

Derek Brumhead The railways of Newtown, New Mills.
Dr Brumhead traces the development of the early railway system at New Mills, the rivalry between the companies and the subsequent history of the lines.

Anthony Annakin-Smith The Neston Collieries – birthplace of the Industrial Revolution in Wirral and West Cheshire  1750-1850
Not many people appreciate that there was an English coalfield on the Welsh side of the Dee estuary let alone that it stretched out under the river.  Two rival families fought a bitter war of  sabotage and dirty tricks to gain control of the scant resources.

W. Mark Lloyd ‘Six females have been engaged as an experiment …’ The Role of Women in Birkenhead Corporation Transport, 1915 to 1969. The Struggle for Equality in the Workplace in Microcosm.
During both World Wars women were recruited in Birkenhead to take the place of men who had gone off to fight. They were not easily accepted at the time and when peace returned they were no longer wanted.  They had to fight the popular prejudice that they were not up to the job, a recognition that did not finally come until 1965.

plus five book reviews.

The cost of Cheshire History is £10.00 inc. postage and packing . Cheques should be made payable to ‘Cheshire Local History Association’ and returned, with this form, to:

 

Cheshire Local History Association
c/o Cheshire and Chester Archives and Local Studies Service
Duke Street
Chester, CH1 1RL.

 

Cheshire History Number 47

 Name…………………………………………………….……………………………

Address…………………………………………………….…..………………………

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Cheshire History is free to members of the Cheshire Local History Association.  Please note that members receive the issue published at the end of the subscription year.  

The Editor, Stephen Matthews, will be pleased to consider items for inclusion in future issues of Cheshire History.

Cheshire History No. 46 and a number of other back numbers are available for purchase.

Notes for contributors are available.

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