Difference between revisions of "Flixton, Lancashire"

From Wikishire
Jump to: navigation, search
(Created page with "{{Infobox town |name=Flixton |county=Lancaster |latitude=53.441866 |longitude=-2.381937 |population=10,786 |LG district=Trafford |constituency=Stretford and Urmston |post town...")
 
(Industrial Revolution)
 
Line 35: Line 35:
 
During the Industrial Revolution many of the townships in the region experienced fairly rapid population growth, although Flixton remained an exception, its population growing by only 22&nbsp;per cent between 1801 and 1851.  This was in stark contrast to Altrincham (165%), Bowdon (242%) and Stretford (238%), and is attributed to the emigration of villagers to more industrialised areas like Manchester, and the agricultural depression of the 1830s and 1840s.  The domestic production of textiles, popular during the 17th and early 18th centuries in Flixton and other nearby townships, and the newer factory-based system which replaced it, had disappeared in Altrincham by the middle of the 19th century.  Weaving continued in Flixton, although within ten years of the construction of Flixton Cotton Mills in 1851, domestic textile production had ended.  In nearby Urmston, 28&nbsp;per cent of the township's population was in 1851 engaged in textile work,<ref>{{Harvnb|Nevell|1997|pp=85–89}}</ref> but the area did not experience the level of industrialisation seen in towns like [[Ashton-under-Lyne]], east of Manchester, where 16&nbsp;mills were built between 1815 and 1829, doubling the population.  The reasons for this reliance on land rather than industry are unclear.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nevell|1997|p=91}}</ref>
 
During the Industrial Revolution many of the townships in the region experienced fairly rapid population growth, although Flixton remained an exception, its population growing by only 22&nbsp;per cent between 1801 and 1851.  This was in stark contrast to Altrincham (165%), Bowdon (242%) and Stretford (238%), and is attributed to the emigration of villagers to more industrialised areas like Manchester, and the agricultural depression of the 1830s and 1840s.  The domestic production of textiles, popular during the 17th and early 18th centuries in Flixton and other nearby townships, and the newer factory-based system which replaced it, had disappeared in Altrincham by the middle of the 19th century.  Weaving continued in Flixton, although within ten years of the construction of Flixton Cotton Mills in 1851, domestic textile production had ended.  In nearby Urmston, 28&nbsp;per cent of the township's population was in 1851 engaged in textile work,<ref>{{Harvnb|Nevell|1997|pp=85–89}}</ref> but the area did not experience the level of industrialisation seen in towns like [[Ashton-under-Lyne]], east of Manchester, where 16&nbsp;mills were built between 1815 and 1829, doubling the population.  The reasons for this reliance on land rather than industry are unclear.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nevell|1997|p=91}}</ref>
  
Flixton was a remote rural area with few transport links to nearby towns, the rivers Irwell and Mersey for the most part cutting off access to other areas.<!--cited to either nevell or heywood, not to harrison-->  To the southwest, Carrington Old Bridge, removed in about 1840, was an old wooden structure too narrow to accommodate carts, which were forced to use a nearby ford.  Another ford existed near Flixton Church and yet another near Shaw Hall.<ref>{{Harvnb|Harrison|1894|p=13}}</ref>  An omnibus service carried passengers to and from Stretford, where the nearest railway station was located, but it was the town's connection on 2&nbsp;September 1873 to the UK's railway network, through the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (later the Cheshire Lines Committee) line from Manchester to [[Liverpool]], which helped transform the area.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nevell|1997|pp=100,&nbsp;109–110}}</ref>  A new bridge across the Mersey was built around 1906–1907, replacing the earlier structure nearer to [[Carrington]].<ref>{{Citation | title = The Flixton Bridge | url = http://search.proquest.com/docview/474688214?accountid=37105 | publisher = The Manchester Guardian, hosted at search.proquest.com | date = 2 July 1907 | page = 5}} {{subscription}}</ref>  Flixton gradually became a middle-class railway suburb of Manchester.<ref>{{Harvnb|Haywood|2009|pp=237–238}}</ref>
+
Flixton was a remote rural area with few transport links to nearby towns, the rivers Irwell and Mersey for the most part cutting off access to other areas.<!--cited to either nevell or heywood, not to harrison-->  To the southwest, Carrington Old Bridge, removed in about 1840, was an old wooden structure too narrow to accommodate carts, which were forced to use a nearby ford.  Another ford existed near Flixton Church and yet another near Shaw Hall.<ref>{{Harvnb|Harrison|1894|p=13}}</ref>  An omnibus service carried passengers to and from Stretford, where the nearest railway station was located, but it was the town's connection on 2&nbsp;September 1873 to the UK's railway network, through the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (later the Cheshire Lines Committee) line from Manchester to [[Liverpool]], which helped transform the area.<ref>{{Harvnb|Nevell|1997|pp=100,&nbsp;109–110}}</ref>  A new bridge across the Mersey was built around 1906–1907, replacing the earlier structure nearer to [[Carrington, Cheshire|Carrington]].<ref>{{Citation | title = The Flixton Bridge | url = http://search.proquest.com/docview/474688214?accountid=37105 | publisher = The Manchester Guardian, hosted at search.proquest.com | date = 2 July 1907 | page = 5}} {{subscription}}</ref>  Flixton gradually became a middle-class railway suburb of Manchester.<ref>{{Harvnb|Haywood|2009|pp=237–238}}</ref>
  
 
[[File:Duttons Pond Flixton Manchester.jpg|thumb|250px|Dutton's Pond]]
 
[[File:Duttons Pond Flixton Manchester.jpg|thumb|250px|Dutton's Pond]]

Latest revision as of 19:00, 17 November 2019

Flixton
Lancashire
Flixton House, Flixton, Greater Manchester.jpg
Flixton House
Location
Grid reference: SJ755945
Location: 53°26’31"N, 2°22’55"W
Data
Population: 10,786
Post town: Manchester
Postcode: M41
Dialling code: 0161
Local Government
Council: Trafford
Parliamentary
constituency:
Stretford and Urmston

Flixton is a village and parish in Lancashire, adjacent to the border with Cheshire, at the edge of the conurbation spreading out from Manchester. The population at the 2011 census was 10,786.[1] It lies about six miles to the south-west of Manchester city centre. Flixton and neighbouring Davyhulme are considered areas within Urmston. Neolithic and Bronze Age artefacts have been found locally and the area may have been inhabited in those periods. Mediæval Flixton encompassed the manor of Flixton, along with its church, first mentioned in the 12th century. The parish comprised isolated farmsteads and a manor house. Toward the end of the 17th century its population began to rise, continuing through the 19th century, although at a much slower pace than its neighbours. Flixton was a remote rural area with few transport links and did not witness the level of industrialisation other parts of Manchester saw, but its connection to the railway network in 1873 helped transform the area into a middle-class suburb.

Etymology

Flixton has been recorded as fflixton, Fluxton, Flyxton, Flyxeton, Fleece-town, Flixston and Flixtone.[2] It is not mentioned in the Domesday Book, and first appears in historical records in 1176 or 1177.[3] The name may be Scandinavian in origin, the Anglo-Saxon ton meaning a farmstead, although along with nearby Urmston, it may be an anglicised personal name from the 10th or 11th centuries and not a primary settlement name from earlier times.[4]

History

Early history

The area may have been inhabited during the Neolithic and Bronze Ages. Stone axes have been found on the banks of the River Mersey in Flixton, as well as on the banks of the River Irwell in Old Trafford. Further afield, two Neolithic arrowheads have been found in Altrincham and Dunham Massey, and a Bronze Age arrowhead in Warburton.[5]

The Radclyff Brass, now in St Michael's Church. Richard Radclyff lived at Newcroft Hall in nearby Urmston.[6]

Mediæval Flixton was one of several parishes which existed in the Hundred of Salford. The parish encompassed the manors of Urmston and Flixton; the latter is first mentioned between 1189 and 1181 and was granted by the Mascy family of Dunham. The manor of Flixton's boundaries are unclear, although they were perhaps formed by a mixture of natural and man-made features including Carr Ditch, which divided Flixton and Urmston.[7] St Michael's Church is also first recorded at about the same time, although the building may date from an earlier period.[8] In keeping with a pattern found in northern and eastern Cheshire and south-eastern Lancashire, the parish comprised isolated farmsteads and a mediæval manor house, rather than a village centre.[9] Notable place names in mediæval Flixton include Shaw Hall, located near the present-day Roebuck Hotel, east of the modern Flixton village. The location of Berne is unknown, while Booths was possibly somewhere near Hulme Bridge Farm, close to the Irwell. An area named Wood may have existed in the north-western part of Flixton, near a Woods-end Farm noted in an 1818 survey. A Shaw Hall, whose name first appears in 1508 and was derived from a small wood, was described by historian Michael Nevell as "the most significant mediæval estate within the township".[10] Reputed to be a Jacobean era mansion,[11] it was referred to as a manor in 1594, although whether this was also the case during the mediæval period is unknown.[3] It was the home of the Valentines, the Asshawes and the Egertons, and during the Civil War was defended against a potential attack by Royalist forces. The Egertons remained at Shaw Hall until 1757; thereafter it was occupied by various families, until it was demolished in the 20th century.[12]

An early mention of Flixton appears in the Testa de Nevil, which includes the entry: "Albert Gredle, sen., gave to Henry, son of Siward, one carucate of land in Flixton by 10s. yearly. The heirs hold that land." The manor of Flixton was, for a time, controlled by the Grelleys, Barons of Manchester. Robert of Lathom, who inherited the manor, granted the parish of Flixton to the newly created Burscough Priory, located near Ormskirk, in 1190. The Grelleys may not have been Flixton manor's only masters, as in 1250–1251 part of the area came into the possession of David de Hulton.[13] The Hultons united what in the 12th century was a fragmented manor. In 1330 they sub-let one half of it to the Valentine family and the other to two branches of the Radcliffe family. The Valentines are included in the Exchequer Lay Subsidy Rolls of 1332, which show five tax payers in Flixton: Richard le Valentine, Henry de l'Wode, William de l'Berne, Richard son of Robert and John de Booth.[3] The name Valentine also appears in Flixton's parish registers, which begin in 1570. Written on vellum and mostly in Latin,[14] the first records 11 baptisms, 2 marriages and 7 burials. Christian names include Hamlet, Randle and Ralph. The registers show that surnames such as Gilbody, Valentine, Millatt and Low remained prevalent in the area well into the 19th century.[15]

Industrial Revolution

The River Mersey forms Flixton's southern border

Flixton's population remained fairly stable until the end of the 17th century, when, along with other nearby parishes, it began to rise steadily. It was by that time a small hamlet, with several buildings around the parish church and its parsonage.[16] The 1664 hearth tax returns show that Flixton had 70 heads of household,[17] who were likely engaged mainly in agricultural activities. Evidence exists to suggest that some areas in the parish were used for textile production, with "yarn croft" in Flixton, Stretford and Warburton indicating the production of flax. Almost 20 per cent of wills and other documents gathered from nearby areas contain references to textiles, hemp and flax.[18]

During the Industrial Revolution many of the townships in the region experienced fairly rapid population growth, although Flixton remained an exception, its population growing by only 22 per cent between 1801 and 1851. This was in stark contrast to Altrincham (165%), Bowdon (242%) and Stretford (238%), and is attributed to the emigration of villagers to more industrialised areas like Manchester, and the agricultural depression of the 1830s and 1840s. The domestic production of textiles, popular during the 17th and early 18th centuries in Flixton and other nearby townships, and the newer factory-based system which replaced it, had disappeared in Altrincham by the middle of the 19th century. Weaving continued in Flixton, although within ten years of the construction of Flixton Cotton Mills in 1851, domestic textile production had ended. In nearby Urmston, 28 per cent of the township's population was in 1851 engaged in textile work,[19] but the area did not experience the level of industrialisation seen in towns like Ashton-under-Lyne, east of Manchester, where 16 mills were built between 1815 and 1829, doubling the population. The reasons for this reliance on land rather than industry are unclear.[20]

Flixton was a remote rural area with few transport links to nearby towns, the rivers Irwell and Mersey for the most part cutting off access to other areas. To the southwest, Carrington Old Bridge, removed in about 1840, was an old wooden structure too narrow to accommodate carts, which were forced to use a nearby ford. Another ford existed near Flixton Church and yet another near Shaw Hall.[21] An omnibus service carried passengers to and from Stretford, where the nearest railway station was located, but it was the town's connection on 2 September 1873 to the UK's railway network, through the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway (later the Cheshire Lines Committee) line from Manchester to Liverpool, which helped transform the area.[22] A new bridge across the Mersey was built around 1906–1907, replacing the earlier structure nearer to Carrington.[23] Flixton gradually became a middle-class railway suburb of Manchester.[24]

Dutton's Pond

Culture

St Michaels Church in Flixton Village

Flixton Band, formed in 1877, played at the official opening of the Manchester Ship Canal in 1894, attended by Queen Victoria. It was disbanded in 1933 but reformed in 1967, since when it has performed on television and radio.[25]

Local artist Frances Lennon, born in nearby Stretford, moved with her husband to Flixton in the late 1970s. Following his death she became a full-time painter, releasing several books including A Trafford Childhood (1986) and A Manchester Childhood (2001). Dubbed "the people's artist",[26] she was the official artist for the 2002 Commonwealth Games and produced a special book of paintings relating to games and sports.[27][28]

Religion

Flixton is in the Church of England Diocese of Manchester and the Roman Catholic Diocese of Salford.[29][30] Historically church life has centred around the Grade-II*-listed 12th-century St Michaels Church, built on raised land close to the centre of Flixton village.[31] For about 500 years the church was attached to Lichfield Cathedral.[32][33] Another Church of England place of worship, St John's Church, can be found on Irlam Road.[34] Flixton's Catholic Community worships at St Monica's Church on Woodsend Road South. The parish was founded in 1950 and the church built from 1968 to 1969.[35]

Landmarks

Flixton House, a late 18th-century Grade-II listed building set in Flixton Park and Gardens,[36] was the focus of one of the first footpath battles in England after its owner, Ralph Wright, in 1824 closed several footpaths crossing his estate. Local residents accepted the closures, but Wright also attempted to change the route of footpaths not on his land, ploughing the entrance to one and sowing it with oats. A local farmer, Samuel Wood, objected to Wright's tactics and removed each obstruction, restoring the footpath. Wright successfully gained an order supporting his changes at his third attempt, but by then the case had attracted considerable interest and in 1826 the Manchester Society for the Preservation of Ancient Footpaths was formed. After several years of expensive legal wrangling, Wright's order was quashed and in June 1827 the footpaths affected were reopened. Wright obtained further orders and again closed the footpaths, before the matter was finally resolved at the Quarter Session on 29 October that year, to Wright's cost.[37] His loss proved to be an important event in the movement for footpath preservation in England.[38]

Abbotsfield Park was the venue for a 1963 Beatles concert, booked before they became famous.[39] The Urmston and District Model Engineering Society operates a miniature railway around the park and ran a yearly May Day Steam rally in conjunction with the Lancashire Traction Engine Club until 2010.[40] Stocks, once located in Flixton village and seldom used, were removed in 1823. A tree planted in 1887 to celebrate Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee, and known locally as 'The Jubilee Tree', now stands in the same area.[41][42]

Transport

Chassen Road railway station

Bus services in Flixton run to destinations such as Davyhulme, Urmston, Stretford, Partington, Hulme and Manchester.[43] The two local railway stations, Flixton and Chassen Road.[44]

Education

Flixton has several primary and secondary schools. Its first was founded by Peter Egerton, in 1643, and built close to the parish church. The building was later replaced by the Dog and Partridge Inn, but another school was opened near the present-day Roebuck pub in 1662, of thatched wood and plaster. Shawtown school, which was slightly closer to Urmston than the building it replaced, was still extant in 1826, but was later used as cottages. A school built in 1861 opposite the parish church and expanded in 1893[45] has since been demolished.

Flixton Girls' School is a non-selective sports specialist academy school, for girls aged 11–16.

Sport

William Wroe Golf Course before it closed in 2017

Flixton was witness to bull and bear baiting, performed in several places throughout the village. One of these was in Shawtown, on "Schoo' Green", and another was at "Th' Grane", at the top of Woodsend Road, opposite where the Red Lion pub once stood. The practice was ended in 1816. Badger baiting was also practised, at certain inns.[46] Anecdotal evidence exists to suggest that hunting, cockfighting and horse racing took place in Flixton, the latter in the fields around the parish church.[47]

Formed in 1990, Trafford Football Club plays in the Northern Premier League.[48] Local golf courses include the privately owned Flixton Golf Club.[49] The William Wroe course, named after Councillor William Wroe, was opened in 1973 as a fourteen-hole course, six holes occupying land on the Flixton road side of the railway, and eight on the Church road side. The land it occupies was originally purchased by Urmston District Council in 1935, but from 1947 to 1970, aware that it was gradually becoming occupied, Wroe campaigned for the establishment of a municipal golf course. It was expanded to fifteen holes, then eventually to eighteen holes in 1984, after the nearby Acre Gate Farm became vacant.[50] The course was closed at the end of March 2017 due to council cutbacks.[51]

References

Notes

  1. "Trafford ward population 2011". http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=13689335&c=Flixton&d=14&e=62&g=6347377&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=1&s=1452269915859&enc=1. Retrieved 8 January 2016. 
  2. Langton 1898, p. 13
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Nevell 1997, p. 46
  4. Nevell 1997, p. 24
  5. Nevell 1997, p. 15
  6. Lawson 1898, p. 28
  7. Nevell 1997, p. 37
  8. Nevell 1997, pp. 28–29, 32
  9. Nevell 1997, pp. 45–46
  10. Nevell 1997, pp. 46–47
  11. "Townships: Flixton", A History of the County of Lancaster (british-history.ac.uk) 5: pp. 46–50, 1911, http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=52998, retrieved 20 April 2007 
  12. Lawson 1898, pp. 51–54
  13. Langton 1991, pp. 14–15
  14. Langton 1991, p. 78
  15. Lawson 1898, p. 24
  16. Nevell 1997, p. 56
  17. Nevell 1997, p. 58
  18. Nevell 1997, p. 68
  19. Nevell 1997, pp. 85–89
  20. Nevell 1997, p. 91
  21. Harrison 1894, p. 13
  22. Nevell 1997, pp. 100, 109–110
  23. The Flixton Bridge, The Manchester Guardian, hosted at search.proquest.com, 2 July 1907, p. 5, http://search.proquest.com/docview/474688214?accountid=37105  (subscription required)
  24. Haywood 2009, pp. 237–238
  25. History of the Band, flixtonband.org.uk, http://www.flixtonband.org.uk/history.htm, retrieved 21 July 2007 
  26. "Honorary degree for Games artist", BBC News, 14 July 2004, http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/manchester/3891499.stm, retrieved 29 November 2008 
  27. Razaq, Rashid (1 July 2004), "Two degrees for veteran artist, 92", Manchester Evening News (M.E.N. Media), http://menmedia.co.uk/manchestereveningnews/news/s/122/122728_two_degrees_for_veteran_artist_92.html, retrieved 16 March 2012 
  28. The people's artist, bbc.co.uk, 3 February 2005, http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/womanshour/2005_05_thu_04.shtml, retrieved 22 June 2011 
  29. The Church of England Diocese of Manchester, manchester.anglican.org, http://www.manchester.anglican.org/churches/parish-list?search=flixton, retrieved 11 March 2012 
  30. Catholic Diocese of Salford, dioceseofsalford.org.uk, archived from the original on 3 August 2012, https://archive.is/20120803162601/http://www.dioceseofsalford.org.uk/component/content/article/43-the-diocese/2637-parish-priests-a-z, retrieved 11 March 2012 
  31. National Heritage List 1067876: Church of St Michael
  32. History, Restoration, Conservation, stmichaelsflixton.co.uk, http://www.stmichaelsflixton.co.uk/www.stmichaelsflixton.co.uk/info.php?p=12, retrieved 11 March 2012 
  33. Lawson 1898, p. 6
  34. Welcome to St John's Church, Flixton, stjohnsflixton.org.uk, http://www.stjohnsflixton.org.uk/, retrieved 12 March 2012 
  35. A Brief History of St Monica's Parish (Flixton), stmonicasflixton.webs.com, http://stmonicasflixton.webs.com/parishhistory.htm, retrieved 11 March 2012 
  36. National Heritage List 1067878: Flixton House and Outbuilding Adjoining Immediately North of Flixton House
  37. Lawson 1898, pp. 77–78
  38. Sidaway 2005, p. 17
  39. Live: Abbotsfield Park, Urmston, beatlesbible.com, http://www.beatlesbible.com/1963/08/05/live-abbotsfield-park-urmston/, retrieved 11 March 2012 
  40. May Day of Steam, http://www.maydaysteam.co.uk/, retrieved 20 June 2011 
  41. The Jubilee Tree, trafford.gov.uk, http://www.trafford.gov.uk/content/tca/display_image.asp?ImageID=367, retrieved 11 March 2012 
  42. Langton 1991, p. 99
  43. Local Bus Stop Finder, tfgm.com, http://www.tfgm.com/journey_planning/local_bus_stop_finder.cfm, retrieved 11 March 2012 
  44. Flixton (FLI), nationalrail.co.uk, http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/stations/fli/details.html, retrieved 11 March 2012 
  45. Langton 1991, pp. 89–90
  46. Langton 1991, pp. 93–95
  47. Langton 1991, p. 101
  48. Club History, traffordfc.co.uk, http://www.traffordfc.co.uk/page19.html, retrieved 11 March 2012 
  49. Welcome to Flixton Golf Club - 2012!, flixtongolfclub.co.uk, http://www.flixtongolfclub.co.uk/, retrieved 11 March 2012 
  50. Our History, acregategolfclub.co.uk, http://www.acregategolfclub.co.uk/page2.html, retrieved 18 March 2012 
  51. Flixton residents stunned at the closure of William Wroe Golf Course, Messenger Newspapers, http://www.messengernewspapers.co.uk/news/whereyoulive/15106196.Flixton_residents_stunned_at_the_closure_of_William_Wroe_Golf_Course/, retrieved 15 September 2017 

Bibliography

Further reading

  • For an interior view of Shaw Hall, see Rimmer, Alfred (2010) [1890], Summer Rambles Around Manchester, Kessinger Publishing, LLC, ISBN 1-120-86750-9 

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Flixton, Lancashire)