Atherton: Difference between revisions

From Wikishire
Jump to navigation Jump to search
RB (talk | contribs)
Created page with "{{Infobox town |name=Atherton |county=Lancashire |picture=Market Street, Atherton.jpg |picture caption=Market Street |os grid ref=SD672030 |longitude=-2.495 |latitude=53.523 |..."
 
mNo edit summary
 
Line 15: Line 15:
|constituency=Bolton West, Leigh
|constituency=Bolton West, Leigh
}}
}}
'''Atherton''' is a town in southern [[Lancashire]] which has become a suburb of [[Wigan]], five miles east of that town itself and two miles north of [[Leigh, Lancashire|Leigh]], and twn miles from [[Manchester]]. For about 300 years from the 17th century Atherton was referred to as 'Chowbent', which was frequently shortened to Bent, the town's old nickname.
'''Atherton''' is a town in southern [[Lancashire]] which has become a suburb of [[Wigan]], five miles east of that town itself and two miles north of [[Leigh, Lancashire|Leigh]], and ten miles from [[Manchester]]. For about 300 years from the 17th century Atherton was referred to as 'Chowbent', which was frequently shortened to Bent, the town's old nickname.


Along with neighbouring [[Shakerley]], Atherton has been associated with coal mining and nail manufacture since the 14th century, encouraged by its outcrops of coal. At the beginning of the 20th century the town was described as "the centre of a district of collieries, cotton mills and iron-works, which cover the surface of the country with their inartistic buildings and surroundings, and are linked together by the equally unlovely dwellings of the people".<ref name=vch/> Atherton's last deep coal mine closed in 1966, and the last working cotton mills closed in 1999. Today the town is a large retail centre: almost 20% of those employed in the area work in the wholesale and retail trade, although there is still some significant manufacturing industry in the town.
Along with neighbouring [[Shakerley]], Atherton has been associated with coal mining and nail manufacture since the 14th century, encouraged by its outcrops of coal. At the beginning of the 20th century the town was described as "the centre of a district of collieries, cotton mills and iron-works, which cover the surface of the country with their inartistic buildings and surroundings, and are linked together by the equally unlovely dwellings of the people".<ref name=vch/> Atherton's last deep coal mine closed in 1966, and the last working cotton mills closed in 1999. Today the town is a large retail centre: almost 20% of those employed in the area work in the wholesale and retail trade, although there is still some significant manufacturing industry in the town.

Latest revision as of 00:31, 1 January 2017

Atherton
Lancashire

Market Street
Location
Grid reference: SD672030
Location: 53°31’23"N, 2°29’42"W
Data
Population: 22,000  (2013 est.)
Post town: Manchester
Postcode: M46
Dialling code: 01942
Local Government
Council: Wigan
Parliamentary
constituency:
Bolton West, Leigh

Atherton is a town in southern Lancashire which has become a suburb of Wigan, five miles east of that town itself and two miles north of Leigh, and ten miles from Manchester. For about 300 years from the 17th century Atherton was referred to as 'Chowbent', which was frequently shortened to Bent, the town's old nickname.

Along with neighbouring Shakerley, Atherton has been associated with coal mining and nail manufacture since the 14th century, encouraged by its outcrops of coal. At the beginning of the 20th century the town was described as "the centre of a district of collieries, cotton mills and iron-works, which cover the surface of the country with their inartistic buildings and surroundings, and are linked together by the equally unlovely dwellings of the people".[1] Atherton's last deep coal mine closed in 1966, and the last working cotton mills closed in 1999. Today the town is a large retail centre: almost 20% of those employed in the area work in the wholesale and retail trade, although there is still some significant manufacturing industry in the town.

Evidence has been discovered of a Roman road passing through the area, on the ancient route between Coccium (Wigan) and Mamucium (Manchester).

Atherton itself dates from the Anglo-Saxon age, built on and around seven brooks, and it became part of the manor of Warrington until the Norman conquest, when it became a township or vill in the ancient parish of Leigh.[2]

Name

Atherton was recorded as Aderton in 1212 and 1242, and Atherton in 1259.[1]

Opinions differ as to the derivation of the name. One is the farmstead or village of a man named Aethelhere, an Old English personal name and the suffix tun, meaning an enclosure, farmstead or manor estate;[3][4] another is adre, Saxon for little brook with the suffix tun.[5] Either is possible as Atherton is bounded by brooks to the west and south, and crossed by several others. The western boundary is Hindsford Brook, originally named Goderic Brook after a Saxon saint.[6]

The Chow – also recorded as Chew, Cholle and Chowl – family were tenants of the Athertons living at the valley by Chanters Brook. This part of the township became known as Chow's Bent but the meaning of Bent has been lost, perhaps a bend or slope. It was referred to in the 14th century as Chollebynt or Shollebent.[7] Chowbent, or Bent, was the name given to the built-up part of Atherton from the mid-17th century for at least 300 years.[8] As the population grew, the resulting town was called Atherton, although the names Chowbent or Bent are used by locals.

History

Early history

Evidence of a Roman road and Bronze Age settlement have been found in the area.[9] The Roman road between Manchester and Wigan is shown on the 1849 6" OS map crossing Miller's Lane at 90 degrees about halfway down.[10] The site of Gadbury Brickworks at the Gibfield Colliery site has been excavated, and evidence of Roman and possibly earlier settlements found.[11]

Manor

Richard Atherton's daughter Elizabeth (by Joseph Wright of Derby)

The manor was held by the Atherton family from the de Botelers, whose chief manor was at Warrington.[1] William and Nicholas Atherton fought at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415.[12] The manor house was situated towards the south of the ancient township. Christopher Saxton's map shows that there was a mediæval deer park in the time of Queen Elizabeth I.[1][13] "Mad" Richard Atherton, the last direct male descendant of the Athertons is remembered for two events; his expulsion of the congregation from the first Atherton Chapel in 1721,[14] and building Atherton Hall on a grand scale, to designs by architect William Wakefield. Work on the hall started in 1723 and was not finished until 1743.[15] The carriage drive from the hall led over Lion's Bridge down an avenue to gates which faced the parish church in Leigh where the Atherton's had a chapel.[16] Richard Vernon Atherton was the last of the Atherton male line. He married Elizabeth Farington and had a daughter Elizabeth.

The Atherton family's association with the township ended with Richard Atherton's death in 1726. His daughter, Elizabeth, married Robert Gwillym and their son, Robert Vernon Atherton, married Henrietta Maria Legh. They had five children, the sons died young, their eldest daughter Henrietta Maria Atherton married Thomas Powys, 2nd Baron Lilford[17] whose father was ennobled by Pitt the Younger in 1797, taking the title of Baron Lilford. He left his estates to his son, Thomas Atherton Powys. The Atherton estate was inherited by Lord Lilford, who preferred to live at his family seat, Lilford Hall in Northamptonshire. Lord Lilford could not afford the upkeep of another house and Atherton Hall was put up for sale but, after failing to sell, it was demolished in 1824. Some of the outbuildings were left standing and are private property still known as Atherton Hall.[18] This portion of Atherton was incorporated into Leigh in 1894 and the area became a public park.[19]

Two battles

The area was divided in its allegiance during the Civil War, in 1642 men of Chowbent were on their way to Leigh Church when word came that James Stanley, 7th Earl of Derby's Royalist troops were marching through Leigh probably en route for Manchester. The men of Chowbent armed themselves and drove the Earl's men back to Lowton Common, killing some, wounding others and taking prisoner about 200 men: "... we are all upon our guard, and the Naylors of Chowbent, instead of making Nayles, have busied themselves making Bills and Battle Axes." (Civil War tracts of Lancashire, Chetham Society Series, vol II).[20]

In 1715, during the Jacobite Uprising the supporters of the Old Pretender were marching on Preston. General Charles Wills wrote to Minister Wood of Atherton Chapel asking him to raise a force to be at Cuerden Green the following day, 12 November.[21] Minister Wood led a force of Chowbent men who were given the job of guarding the bridge over the River Ribble at Walton-le-Dale and a ford at Penwortham, which they defended successfully. The Highlanders were routed, and for his efforts Parson James Wood was given £100 annuity by Parliament and the title "The General" by his congregation.[22]

Industrial history

Atherton, along with neighbouring Shakerley, was associated with coal mining and nail manufacture. Alexander Naylor was taxed on his goods in 1332, showing the industry was present for at least 600 years. Encouraged by the proximity of outcrops of coal, iron was brought from Derbyshire, Yorkshire and Spain. A variety of nails were made, lath nails, slate nails, thatching nails and sparrowbills. The nail smithies manufactured ploughs and scythes; their products were taken by pack horse to be sold in Manchester, Denbigh, Clitheroe and Kendal.[23] The nail industry developed into the manufacture of nuts and bolts. Thomas Blakemore was the first in 1843 and by 1853 there were eight makers of nuts and bolts including James Prestwich and Robert Parker.[24] Some manufacturers of nuts and bolts made spindles and flyers for spinning machinery.[1] Collier Brook Bolt Works on Bag Lane dating from 1856 survives and is a Grade II listed building.[25]

Coal had been mined for several hundred years in numerous shallow shafts and adits, but took on greater importance when in 1776 Robert Vernon Atherton leased the coal rights to Thomas Guest from Leigh and John Fletcher from Bolton.[26] In 1845 the era of deep mining arrived with the sinking of Fletcher's Lover's Lane pit at Howe Bridge. The Crombouke Day-Eye, a drift mine accessing the shallow Brassy and Crombouke mines, opened in 1870 and closed in 1907. (A coal seam was referred to as a "mine" in this part of Lancashire.) By the early 1870s Fletcher, Burrows and Company's Howe Bridge Colliery, the biggest of the three Howe Bridge pits, was sunk to the Black & White, or Seven Foot mine. It pit closed in 1959.[27][28] Gibfield Colliery, situated alongside the Bolton and Leigh Railway, was working in 1829, coal was mined from the Trencherbone mine.[29] Forty years later a |1,169 feet shaft was sunk to Arley Mine. The pit closed in 1963. In September 1913 the first pit head baths in the country were opened at Gibfield. Chanters Colliery was in Hindsford, where 1,120-foot shafts were sunk to the Trencherbone mine in 1854.[30] In the late 1890s shafts were deepened to 1,800 feet to reach the Arley mine. Atherton had its share of mining disasters, on 11 February 1850 five men died in a gas explosion caused by a lighted candle at Gibfield[31] and 27 men died at Lovers Lane Colliery after a firedamp explosion caused by blown-out shot on 28 March 1872.[32] On 6 March 1957 eight men died at Chanters Colliery after an explosion of gas.[33] Chanters closed in 1966 bringing the era of deep coal mining in the town to an end.[34]

In 1908, the Lancashire and Cheshire Coal Owners Association opened Howe Bridge Mines Rescue Station.[35]

Ena Mill in 2000

The cotton mills grew out of a cottage spinning and weaving industry that was widespread across the district. As industrialisation gathered pace, local weavers felt threatened by the advent of powered looms, and in April 1812 a mob smashed the machines and burnt down a new factory, Westhoughton Mill, in neighbouring Westhoughton. For this, the Luddites, three men and a boy of 14, were tried at Lancaster Assizes and hanged.[36] Fustian was woven and after 1827 silk[1] also was brought from Manchester.[37] In 1938 James Burton had built cotton mills on both sides of the Hindsford Brook including Lodge Mill. Dan Lane Spinning and Doubling Mills were built in the 1840s and lasted until the 1950s. Howe Bridge Spinning Mills, the largest complex in Atherton was started in 1868 and the last mill built in 1919. It closed as a textile factory in early 1999.[38] Mills built in the 20th century were Laburnum Mills in 1905 (closed 1980), and Ena Mill in 1908 which closed in 1999. The Ena Mill, now converted for other uses, is a Grade II listed building.[39][40]

Landmarks

Howe Bridge model village

There are several historic buildings in and around Atherton, some, but not all, in the area referred to as Chowbent. They include the 17th-century Alder House,[41] Chowbent Chapel,[42] St John the Baptist's Church (1879),[43] and Chanters Farmhouse,[44] all of which are listed buildings. The name "Chanters" derives from a chantry granted by the Bishop of Lichfield in 1360 to Sir William de Atherton. The name is also given to a bridge over the Hindsford Brook and a former colliery.[45]

A pseudo-Egyptian obelisk near the south-east corner of the parish church, similar to one in Leigh, was probably built for Robert Vernon Atherton in 1781. It was restored in 1867 twelve years before the church was finished. It is a Grade II listed structure.[46]

Between 1873 and 1875, mineowners Fletcher Burrows built a small model village at Howe Bridge, comprising cottages, shops, a village club, and a bath house for their employees. This Victorian village on either side of Leigh Road,[47][48] together with St Michael and All Angel's Church,[49] is a conservation area.

The Ena Mill, one of Atherton's large spinning mills, complete with chimney, survives as a reminder of the textile industry.

Atherton's war memorial is a cenotaph at the intersection of Leigh Road and Hamilton Street was designed by architect Arthur John Hope and constructed of Darley Dale stone. It was unveiled in January 1922 by Private J. Roylance, a soldier blinded in action during the First World War.[50]

Churches

The tower of Atherton Parish Church

There have been three chapels or churches on the site of the Parish Church of St John the Baptist. A chapel was built in 1645 by John Atherton. It is sometimes referred to as the Old Bent Chapel.[51] It remained unconsecrated and was used by the Presbyterians.[1] In 1721 Richard Atherton expelled the dissenters and the chapel was consecrated in 1723 by the Bishop of Sodor and Man. A new chapel on the site was consecrated by the Bishop of Chester in 1814.

The present church dedicated to St John the Baptist was consecrated in 1879.[1] The church, designed by Austin and Paley, is built in Runcorn stone. It is 60 feet wide, 127 feet long, and the 24-foot square tower rises to 120 feet. The fabric of the church has suffered from mining subsidence.

The New Bent or Chowbent Chapel, the earliest Nonconformist chapel in Atherton, was built in 1721 and opened in 1722.[51]The chapel was built by the Presbyterian congregation after it was expelled from the first chapel.[1]

St Anne's Church, Hindsford was originally a mission occupying a barn which was replaced in 1901 by a church designed by Austin and Paley on Tyldesley Road.[1] It has since been converted to residential use. St Michael and All Angels' Church, Howe Bridge|St Michael and All Angels at Howe Bridge was built in 1877.[1] There are chapels of the Wesleyan, Baptist, Independent Methodist, and Primitive Methodist denominations; a Congregational church at Howe Bridge was opened in 1904.[1] Roman Catholics celebrated mass in a loft behind the Star and Garter public house on Tyldesley Square until Sacred Heart Church opened in Hindsford in 1869. The site was given by Lord Lilford with building materials donated by John Holland, manager of Yew Tree Colliery in Tyldesley. It served the growing Catholic population in Hindsford and Tyldesley.[38] Sacred Heart closed in 2004 and its parish together with those of St Richard's in Mayfield Street which opened in 1928, Holy Family in Boothstown, St Ambrose Barlow in Astley, St Gabriel's, Higher Folds in Leigh are now united as a single community with St Margaret Clitherow as its patron.

Sport

  • Football:
    • Atherton Collieries A.F.C., formed in 1916.[52]
    • Atherton Laburnum Rovers F.C.[53]
    • Atherton Town FC.[54]
  • Cricket: Atherton Cricket Club, formed in 1872.[55]

Swimming baths opened in Mayfield Street in 1902 and a swimming club was formed, the baths closed in 2005 and the Atherton & Leigh Amateur Swimming Club moved to the new Leigh Sports Village facility in 2008.[56]

Society and culture

  • The Atherton Botanical Garden Club, a social club formed in 1850
  • Atherton & District Amateur Photographic Society, formed in 1938.[57]

Formby Hall plays host to the Bent 'n' Bongs Beer Festival over the last weekend of every January.

A public library was opened in 1905 with an Andrew Carnegie grant.[39]

Central Park, a 10-acre public park, was created in 1912. Other parks were later provided in Lodge Lane, Hindsford and Devonshire Place.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Atherton)

References

  1. 1.00 1.01 1.02 1.03 1.04 1.05 1.06 1.07 1.08 1.09 1.10 1.11 [1]A History of the County of - Volume pp 435–439: {{{2}}} (Victoria County History)
  2. Information on Atherton  from GENUKI
  3. Mills 1998, p. 10
  4. Mills 1998, p. 406
  5. Lunn 1971, p. 1
  6. Lunn 1971, p. 2
  7. Lunn 1971, p. 15
  8. Wright 1921, p. 10
  9. Newsletter 66, wiganarchsoc.co.uk, http://www.wiganarchsoc.co.uk/content/News_Letters/news066.htm, retrieved 30 November 2009 
  10. Newsletter 71, wiganarchsoc.co.uk, http://www.wiganarchsoc.co.uk/content/News_Letters/news071.htm, retrieved 7 September 2009 
  11. Megalithic Portal: Dig unearths ancient settlement and Roman road
  12. Lunn 1971, p. 9
  13. Christopher Saxton's 1579 map, ancestry.com, http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~genmaps/genfiles/COU_files/ENG/LAN/saxton_lancs_1579.htm, retrieved 16 September 2009 
  14. Lunn 1971, p. 99
  15. Nikolaus Pevsner: Pevsner Architectural Guides
  16. Wright 1921, p. 111
  17. Lunn 1971, p. 128
  18. Lunn 1971, p. 160
  19. Lunn 1971, p. 195
  20. Wright 1921, p. 27
  21. Wright 1921, p. 28
  22. Wright 1921, p. 31
  23. Lunn 1971, p. 19
  24. Lunn 1971, p. 171
  25. National Heritage List 1068454: Collier Brook Bolt House
  26. Lunn 1971, p. 117
  27. Lunn 1971, p. 187
  28. Sweeney 1996, p. 38
  29. Sweeney 1996, p. 33
  30. Sweeney 1996, p. 328
  31. (PDF) Gibfield Colliery Disaster, cmhrc.co.uk, p. 1, archived from the original on 13 June 2010, https://web.archive.org/web/20100613010419/http://www.cmhrc.co.uk:80/cms/document/1850_54.pdf, retrieved 17 October 2009 
  32. Lovers Lane Disaster Disaster, dmm.org.uk, http://www.dmm.org.uk/names/d1870-79.htm, retrieved 17 October 2009 
  33. Chanters Colliery Disaster, cmhrc.co.uk, p. 14, http://www.cmhrc.co.uk/cms/document/1952_57.pdf, retrieved 17 October 2009 
  34. Lunn 1971, p. 205
  35. Howe Bridge Mines Rescue, colsal.org.uk, http://www.colsal.org.uk/sites/lancashireminesrescue/HOWEBRIDGEMRS.asp, retrieved 14 September 2009 
  36. Lunn 1971, p. 152
  37. Holcroft 1998, p. 10
  38. 38.0 38.1 Lunn 1971, p. 180
  39. 39.0 39.1 Lunn 1971, p. 199
  40. National Heritage List 1253159: Ena Mill
  41. National Heritage List 1068470: Alder House
  42. National Heritage List 1068472: Chowbent Unitarian Chapel
  43. National Heritage List 1068475: Church of St John the Baptist
  44. National Heritage List 1309438: Chanters Farmhouse
  45. Bond, Ackers & Ward 1979, p. 22
  46. National Heritage List 1309446: Obelisk adjacent to south-east corner of Church of St. John the Baptist, Market Place
  47. National Heritage List 1253226: 94-118, Leigh Road
  48. National Heritage List 1068474: 147-191, Leigh Road
  49. National Heritage List 1268288: Church of St Michael and All Angels
  50. Atherton Cenotaph designed by A J Hope, wigan.gov.uk, archived from the original on 23 February 2012, https://web.archive.org/web/20120223075737/http://www.wigan.gov.uk/News/Archive/October2007/athertoncenotaph.htm, retrieved 4 April 2010 
  51. 51.0 51.1 Wright 1921, p. 37
  52. [http://www.pyramidpassion.co.uk/html/atherton_collieries.html Atherton Collieries AFC
  53. Atherton Laburnum Rovers FC
  54. Atherton Town
  55. Atherton Cricket Club
  56. Atherton Swimming Club
  57. Atherton & District Amateur Photographic Society