Adlington, Cheshire

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Adlington
Cheshire

Adlington village hall
Location
Grid reference: SJ912803
Location: 53°19’8"N, 2°7’59"W
Data
Population: 1,081  (2001)
Post town: Macclesfield
Postcode: SK10
Dialling code: 01625
Local Government
Council: Cheshire East
Parliamentary
constituency:
Macclesfield

Adlington is a village in Cheshire.

An old place, it is recorded as Eduluintune in the Domesday Book of 1086,[1] a name believed to be from the Old English Æþelingestun; "Prince's village". At the 2001 census the parish had a population of 1,081 souls across 401 households.

Adlington (Cheshire) railway station, on the Manchester-Macclesfield line, is used mainly by commuters to Manchester and Stockport.

History

Adlington Hall

Adlington was anciently a chapelry and township in Prestbury parish.[2] It became a separate civil parish in 1866.[2]

Adlington Hall, dating from at least the end of the 13th century, is at the western end of the village.[3]

Adlington made the news in January 2008, when a delivery vehicle shed 18 tons of mango chutney onto the road through the village. A spokesman for F Swain and Sons, the company which owns the lorry, said: "It was just one of those things."[4]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Adlington, Cheshire)

References

Books

  • Phillips, A. D. M.; Phillips, C. B. (2002). A new historical atlas of Cheshire. Chester, UK: Cheshire County Council and Cheshire Community Council Publications Trust. ISBN 0-904532-46-1. 
  • Youngs, F. A. (1991). Guide to the local administrative units of England. (Volume 1: Northern England). London: Royal Historical Society. ISBN 0-86193-127-0. 

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