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Milnrow (pop. 12,500) is a small town within the Metropolitan Borough of Rochdale, in Greater Manchester, England. It lies on the River Beal, 1.9 miles (3.1 km) east of Rochdale and 10.4 miles (16.7 km) north-northeast of the city of Manchester, in the foothills of the Pennines. Milnrow includes the village of Newhey, which lies at its southern boundary, and is adjacent to junction 21 of the M62 motorway.
Aatestco Niceic electrician Milnrow provide a fully comprehensive Niceic electrical service throughout the Milnrow area. We cover domestic, commercial and industrial clients. Our Niceic electricians Milnrow have carried out electrical installations in all manner of homes and outlets from hotels, restaurants, salons, shops to factories and warehouses, services range from full electrical project management to the installation of a single socket. Niceic electrician Milnrow work in line with British standard BS 7671:2008.
Niceic electrician Milnrow can cover all your reports and paperwork. Your local Niceic electricians also carry out electrical maintenance to existing buildings which includes Niceic inspection & testing (periodic inspection reports) Niceic electricians Milnrow will carry out an electrical survey, known as a periodic inspection report (PIR) which will reveal if electrical circuits are overloaded, find potential hazards in the installation, identify defective work, highlight any lack of earthling or bonding and carry out tests on the fixed wiring of the installation. The report will establish the overall condition of all the electrics and state whether it is satisfactory for continued use, and should detail any work that might need to be done.
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History
Milnrow is an area of Gorton, in the city of Manchester, England. It is known mainly for Debdale Park and Wright Robinson College.
It forms part of the electoral ward of Gorton North, which in itself forms part of the Manchester Gorton parliamentary constituency. The current MP is the Right Honourable Sir Gerald Kaufman, who has represented the constituency since 1983.
Sports
Although located just outside the boundaries, its local football club is Milnrow F.C..
Milnrow is in very close proximity to the Belle Vue Stadium, home to the Belle Vue Aces speedway team.
Transport
Due to its location, easy transport to Manchester City Centre is provided both by rail at the Gorton railway station or by a variety of Stagecoach bus routes.
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Population 12,541 (2001 Census)
OS grid reference SD926126 - London 168 mi (270 km) SSE
Metropolitan borough Rochdale
Metropolitan county Greater Manchester
Region North West
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town ROCHDALE
Postcode district OL16
Dialling code 01706
Police Greater Manchester
Fire Greater Manchester
Ambulance North West
EU Parliament North West England
UK Parliament Oldham East and Saddleworth
Milnrow (pop. 12,500) is a small town within the Metropolitan Borough of Rochdale, in Greater Manchester, England. It lies on the River Beal, 1.9 miles (3.1 km) east of Rochdale and 10.4 miles (16.7 km) north-northeast of the city of Manchester, in the foothills of the Pennines. Milnrow includes the village of Newhey, which lies at its southern boundary, and is adjacent to junction 21 of the M62 motorway.
Historically a part of Lancashire, what is now known as Milnrow emerged as a settlement following the Norman conquest of England, on the lands which had formed the ancient township of Butterworth. For centuries, Milnrow was a small centre of domestic flannel and woollen cloth production, and many of the original weavers' cottages survive today as listed buildings. Following the Industrial Revolution – and a building boom in nearby Oldham in the late-19th century – Milnrow became a mill town, its landscape dominated by distinctive and large rectangular brick-built woollen and cotton mills.
Milnrow has been described as "the centre of the south Lancashire dialect". John Collier (who wrote under the pseudonym of Tim Bobbin) was an acclaimed 18th-century caricaturist and satirical poet from Milnrow who wrote in a broad Lancashire dialect. Rochdale-born poet Edwin Waugh was influenced by Collier's work, and wrote an extensive account of Milnrow during the mid-19th century in a tribute to Collier.
There is evidence of Neolithic human activity in the area, with a stone axe found at Hollingworth, followed by evidence of the subsequent Bronze and Iron Age peoples: thousands of flint tools have been found on the moorland surrounding Milnrow, including a stone hammer found at Low Hill in 1879. Low Hill was the site of an ancient burial mound where a funerary urn was found. A small Roman statue of the goddess Victory was discovered at Tunshill Farm in 1793. During excavations at Piethorne Reservoir in the mid-18th century, a Celtic spear-head with a 5-inch (130 mm) blade was unearthed, implying human habitation in the locality during the British Iron Age. There is no physical manifestation of the Anglo-Saxons and Norsemen in the locality, but toponymic evidence implies they have been present.
The town now known as Milnrow emerged as a settlement after the Norman conquest of England in 1066; the Norman families of "de Butterworths", "de Turnaghs", "de Schofields", "de Birchinleghs", "de Wylds" and "Cleggs" controlled the lands which formed the township of Butterworth from which Milnrow evolved as its main settlement. In addition to the chapelry of Milnrow, Butterworth encompassed the hamlets of Clegg, Wildhouse, Belfield, Butterworth Hall, Lowhouse, Newhey, Ogden, Tunshill, Haughs, and Bleaked-gate-cum-Roughbank. Butterworth was linked, ecclesiastically, with the parish of Rochdale.
The origin of the name Milnrow has not been deciphered with any certainty. It has been suggested that the name is a corruption of the old pronunciation of "Millner Howe", a water driven corn mill mentioned in deeds of 1568 at a place called Mill Hill on the River Beal. Others have suggested that the name "Milnrow" is derived from a local family with the surname Milne, who owned a row of houses in the locality. A map from 1292 shows "Milnehouses" at Milnrow's present location, other spellings have included "Mylnerowe" (1545) and "Milneraw" (1577).
During the Middle Ages, the small, scattered community in and around Milnrow was primarily agrarian, with the growing and milling of grain and cereal being the main labour of the people. Dry ironstone smelting was introduced in to Milnrow at a very early time as evidenced from ancient kilns found at Tunshill. A chantry was constructed in the year 1400 by the Byrons—the then Lords of the Manor—and a chapel for the wider community in 1496; A document dated 20 March 1496, during the reign of Henry VII, proclaims that open land by the River Beal would be the site of the new chapel.
Legal documents dated 1624 state that Milnrow consisted of six cottages; there were a further nine at Butterworth Hall, and three at Ogden. Milnrow did not expand until the introduction of a woollen weaving trade which began in the Late Middle Ages and continued until the 19th century. During this time nearby Rochdale—the local market town—was used as a central marketing, finishing and fellmongering hub. The handloom weaving of woollen cloth and flannels in the domestic system became the staple industry of Milnrow, facilitating the community's growth and prosperity. Between 40,000 and 50,000 sheep skins were needed every week to provide for Milnrow's industries, and as early as the 16th century, the demand for wool was so great it had outstripped the local supply of the region and had to be imported from Ireland and the English Midlands. As a consequence of the woollen trade, rows of "fine stone domestic workshops" or weavers' cottages were constructed beyond Milnrow's original core, with dwelling quarters on the lower floors and loom-shops on the top floor.
With the onset of the Industrial Revolution, the River Beal was harnessed to power large weaving mills. In the late 19th century, following a boom in nearby Oldham, Milnrow's main industry changed from wool to cotton, which became the staple industry of the village. Soon, distinctive rectangular brick-built mills dominated Milnrow's landscape. Milnrow, the location of some of the earliest ring spinning companies, had many of the characteristics of a company town. The Heaps of Milnrow exercised significant deferential and political influence in the local area. Following the Great Depression, the region's textile sector experienced a decline until its eventual demise in the mid-20th century. Milnrow's last cotton mill was Butterworth Hall Mill, demolished in the late 1990s.
Governance
Lying within the historic county boundaries of Lancashire since the early 12th century, Milnrow was a chapelry and component area of Butterworth, an ancient township within the parish of Rochdale and hundred of Salford. Butterworth constituted a civil parish encompassing several settlements to the east of Rochdale, until its dissolution in 1894.
Under feudalism, Butterworth was governed by a number of ruling families, including the Byrons, who obtained the title of Lords of the Manor. Throughout the Late Middle Ages, local men acted as jurors and constables for the purposes of upholding law and order in Butterworth. Milnrow's first local authority was a Local board of health established in 1870; Milnrow Local Board of Health was a regulatory body responsible for standards of hygiene and sanitation in the locality. In 1879, a part of Castleton and another part of Butterworth were included in the area of the Local board. Under the Local Government Act 1894, the area of the local board broadly became the Milnrow Urban District, a local government district in the Rochdale Poor Law Union and administrative county of Lancashire. Under the Local Government Act 1972, the Milnrow Urban District was abolished, and Milnrow has, since 1 April 1974, formed an unparished area of the Metropolitan Borough of Rochdale, within the Metropolitan county of Greater Manchester. In anticipation of the new local government arrangement, Milnrow Urban District Council applied for successor parish status to be granted to the locality after 1974, however the application was not successful.
Since 1997, Milnrow has been represented in the House of Commons as part of the parliamentary constituency of Oldham East and Saddleworth, by Phil Woolas MP, a member of the Labour Party. Milnrow had previously formed part of the Littleborough and Saddleworth constituency.
Geography
At 53°36′36″N 2°6′40″W / 53.61°N 2.11111°W / 53.61; -2.11111 (53.6101°, -2.1111°), and 168 miles (270 km) north-northwest of central London, Milnrow stands roughly 830 feet (253 m) above sea level, on the western slopes of the Pennines, 10.4 miles (16.7 km) north-northeast of Manchester city centre, in the valley of the River Beal. Blackstone Edge and West Yorkshire are to the east; Rochdale and Shaw and Crompton are to the west and south respectively. Milnrow, considered as the area covered by the former Milnrow Urban District Council, extends over 8.1 square miles (21 km2).
The River Beal, a tributary of the River Roch, runs centrally through Milnrow from the south through Newhey. The soil is light gravel and clay, with subsoil of rough gravel, and the local geology is carboniferous coal measures. Milnrow's highest point (1,310 feet / 399 metres) is by its east-southeastern border with the Metropolitan Borough of Oldham at Denshaw and Bleakedgate Moor, above the rugged, upland Piethorne Valley and close to Windy Hill. From this point the average height of the land falls gradually towards the direction of Rochdale to the northwest, into a mixture of undulating farmland and suburbia. Milnrow experiences a temperate maritime climate, like much of the British Isles, with relatively cool summers and mild winters. There is regular but generally light precipitation throughout the year.
In 1855, the poet Edwin Waugh said of Milnow:
Milnrow lies on the ground not unlike a tall tree laid lengthwise, in a valley, by a riverside. At the bridge, its roots spread themselves in clots and fibrous shoots, in all directions; while the almost branchless trunk runs up, with a little bend, above half a mile towards Oldham, where it again spreads itself out in an umbrageous way.
Surrounded by open moor and grassland on its northern and eastern sides, Milnrow forms a continuous urban area with neighbouring Rochdale to the west, and, according to the Office for National Statistics, is part of the Greater Manchester Urban Area, the United Kingdom's third largest conurbation.
There are a number of small named-places in and around Milnrow, including Clegg, Firgrove, Gallows, Haugh, Newhey, Kitcliffe, Ogden, and Tunshill. Newhey, at the south of Milnrow by Shaw and Crompton, is the most distinct of these areas, and, with its own parish church and railway station, is invariably given as a separate village. The Gallows public house is said to occupy the land of an ancient execution site; Gallows, a former hamlet at northeastern Milnrow, is named in reference to a baronial gallows. Kitcliffe, Ogden and Tunshill, to the east of central Milnrow, are hamlets that occupy the upper, mid and lower Piethorne Valley respectively.