Online Encyclopedia

STOCKPORT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 937 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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STOCKPORT  , a municipal,

county and
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parliamentary borough of England, mainly in
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Cheshire, but partly in
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Lancashire, 6 m . S.E. of Manchester . Pop . (1901), 92,832 . It occupies a hilly site at the junction of the rivers Tame and
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Mersey; the larger
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part of the
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town lying on the south (
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left)
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bank, while the suburb of Heaton Norris is on the Lancashire bank . Several bridges
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cross the stream, and a lofty railway viaduct bestrides the valley . Stockport is served by the
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London & North Western, Midland,
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Great Central, Cheshire lines, and Sheffield & Midland
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railways, and has
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tramway connexion with Manchester . It is a town of varied
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industries, but the most important are the cotton and
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hat manufactures . The church of St Mary was built mainly c . 1817, but the chancel belonged to a former church, and retains a Decorated east window and other good details . The town hall was designed by
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Sir Brumwell Thomas,and opened in r9o8, and St George's church (1897) . On the acquisition of the market rights by the town from Lord Vernon in 1847 the corporation secured the site of Vernon Park, in which stands a museum presented in 1858 by James Kershaw and John Benjamin Smith .

The

grammar school was founded in 1487 by Sir Edmund Shaa or Shaw, lord mayor of London . The Stockport
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Sunday school, founded in 1784, is one of the largest in England . Stockport was enfranchised in 1832, and returns two members . Its most distinguished representative was Richard Cobden (1841-1847), who is commemorated by a statue in St Peter's Square . The town was incorporated in 1835, and is under a mayor, 16 aldermen and 48 councillors . The county borough was created in 1888 .
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Area, 5492 acres . During the
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Roman occupation of Britain there was a small military station on the site of Stockport, acting as an outpost to the Roman camp at Manchester . The convergence of Roman roads at this point would make the place a particularly convenient centre . The etymology of the name may be Saxon,. but there is no evidence of a Saxon settlement, and the place is not mentioned in Domesday . A castle was in existence in the 12th century, but is not mentioned after 1327 . Stockport (Stokeporte, Stopport, Stopford) was made a
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free borough by a charter of Robert de Stokeport about the
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year 1220 .

It was then granted that the burgesses might elect from among themselves a

chief officer, who was first called a mayor in 1296 . The right of the burgesses to his election was, however, lost, and the mayor was always nominated by the lord of the
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manor . This arrangement lasted until 1565, when the burgesses put in a claim to their right of election, and it was decided that out of four burgesses nominated by the lord of the manor the
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jury of the court leet should select the mayor . Thus Stockport was not a true municipal borough until formally incorporated under the Municipal Corporations Act of 1835 . The manufacture of hemp began in Stockport in the 16th century, and that of
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silk-covered buttons in the 17th . In 1732 a silk mill was erected, but the silk trade was superseded by the cotton trade early in the '9th century . The hat trade
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developed at least as early as the end of the 18th century . See Henry Heginbotham, Stockport Ancient and
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Modern (1882); J . P . Earwaker, East Cheshire (1877) ; John Watson,
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Memoirs of the Earls of Warren and Surrey (1782) .

End of Article: STOCKPORT
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