Chapter one
Early days of land search
The small hamlet of Staley
Bridge was chosen as the centre for a manufacturing town for different reasons
than at first might appear obvious. Coal
became a vital source of fuel supplies in the later years, but the attraction
of this small village with its plentiful supply of water, as well as the close
proximity of hills which encouraged a high humidity level, proved irresistible
to the owners of the cotton and spinning mills.
Cotton was to be the
foundation of the prosperity of Staley Bridge and it was this single factor
which enabled and encouraged the village to grow into a significant industrial
town with a population of over 25,000 people.
It is thought that the
name of Stalybridge comes from a combination of two separate words namely
Staley and Staly. These two words are
thought to derive from the ancient families of the Staveleighs and the
Staveleys who once lived in the area.
The addition of the word bridge as a suffix to the family name, is
naturally assumed to come from the bridge constructed to ford the river Tame
and built for the use of pedestrians and for pack animals. That bridge was approximately in the same
position as the current road bridge.
Though many historians have
suggested that this bridge was built by the Staveleigh family, no record to
that effect can be found, neither can the bridge be dated. Certainly the bridge is referred to in
historical documents as early as 1621 and it would have remained standing until
the Saddleback bridge was built in 1707.
A Saddleback bridge is a construction with a centre pier in midstream.
Much of what is now
sprawling housing estates would at that time have been woodland, accessible
only to people on foot or to their pack animals. Not only the surroundings were different but
the same is also true of the river. The
River Tame that we know today is full of bicycle wheels, old prams, beer cans
and other debris, but in the 19th century records show that the river was
pure. There are even records of trout
being fished from the river, hard though that might for us to believe.
Little Bohemia, a small
collection of cottages built in 1721, stands at the foot of what became known
as Cocker Hill, the eventual site of the church building. These few cottages became the focus of a
small community. At that time this
numbered no more than 140 people, not an insignificant number as far as the
Church was concerned.
Those who chose to worship
God had quite a journey on their hands, for at that time Staley Bridge was very
much part of the parish of Ashton, then in the Diocese of Chester, and any
alternative to that place of worship lay in the opposite direction. The
only alternative was to travel to Mottram.
Clearly the Church
officials of Ashton recognised the needs of the growing population of Staley
Bridge and began in the early 18th century to look for a possible site where a
chapel could be built to serve the new community.
The Cocker Hill site was,
as far as records show, first conveyed on the 5th May, 1698 in an agreement
reached between John Kenworth and John Haworth. The reason and purpose of the
purchase is not recorded but it is known that nothing "was made of the
land" at that time. The land
measured only three acres of "Cheshire large Measure" and was sold at
a cost of £1001.2s.0d and bore the peculiar name, as described in the deed of
"a clance close, a parcell of land".
John Haworth was acting as agent for the Earl of Stamford.
Long after securing the
land, pressure to build a chapel began in earnest. In the early part of 1770 a
movement began to establish a Chapel of Ease though at that stage the site of
Cocker Hill still belonged to Lord Stamford. On 30th, June,1774 he agreed with
the Commissioners to allow it to be used for the purpose of building a Chapel.
Once the land had been secured, ecclesiastical permission to build on the site was needed and this was a long
process. The land had to be cleared,
plans had to be drawn and contractors for the work had to be organised.
Money for the building was
raised by public subscription and by grants and gifts from
"notables", culminating in a petition sent by the Rt. Hon. George
Harry, Earl of Stamford, Thomas Milne, James Kenworthy and other principal
inhabitants of Staley Bridge to The Rt.
Revd William Markham. Lord Bishop of Chester.
The wording of the
petition, and indeed petitions of a similar kind, has not changed in any
significant way over the centuries.
Despite this it does bear repeating here, particularly as it was the
first document of its kind to be used for an ecclesiastical building in this
area. The document runs as follows:
"This petition
....SHOWETH
that for the ease and
convenience of the Inhabitants of Staley Bridge the aforesaid being very
distant and remote from their Parish Church and of other neighbouring
Inhabitants of the Parish of Mottram and the Townships of Newton and
Duckenfield in the Parish of Stockport aforesaid who by reason of the distance
of the several Habitations from their several Chapels and Parish Churches
cannot without great Inconvenience especially in the Winter Season resort to
Divine Service there THIS CHAPEL or
edifice for a chapel with your Lordships consent hath been erected at the expense
of the said Right Honourable George Harry Earl of Stamford and several other
pious and well disposed persons on a piece or parcell of waste ground late
belonging to the said Earl who by deed duly executed granted the said piece or
parcell of waste ground together with a footway nine feet broad from the public
road or highway to the south end of the chapel yard to the said Thomas Milne
and James Kenworthy and their heirs in trust and to the intent and purpose for
the chapel or edifice for a chapel might be erected on some part thereof and
that the residue of the said piece or parcell of waste ground might be enclosed
for a chapel yard, and that the said chapel when built and the chapel yard
might be consecrated, set apart and devoted to the worship of God according to
the usage of the Church of England AND
WHEREAS now the same chapel or edifice for a chapel is compleated and furnished
and adorned with a Table, Font, Pulpit, Reading Desk, and other necessaries for
Divine Service by the pious benevolence of the said noble Earl together with
the voluntary contributions of other pious and well disposed persons.......TO
ACCEPT this our free will offering decree this chapel and the ground about to
be severed from all common and profane uses and TO DEDICATE AND CONSECRATE the
said chapel to the worship and service of God and the said ground about it to
be a cemetery or place of burial wherein the bodies of the dead may be laid up
untill the general Resurrection and WE DO PROMISE that we will forever
hereafter hold the said chapel as a holy place even as Gods house and the said
chapel yard as holy ground and use them accordingly.
Signed Stamford
Thos Milne
James Kenworthy (as well as these three
signatures there are a further
forty eight names signed alongside; it would serve no real purpose to listing them all)
It will be clear to the
modern day reader that the legal eagles of yesteryear were not concerned with
punctuation. Many spellings are
different and it is interesting that the name of the town of Dukinfield is
recorded in its original form.
This petition heralded the
opening of the first place of worship in the village/town of Staley
Bridge. The new Chapel was to be called
"Cocker Hill Chapel of Ease"