The Francis Frith Collection.
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Cranage, Cheshire

Cranage photos

Displaying 3 of 5 old photos of Cranage.   View all Cranage photos

Cranage, the River Dane c1955 photo

Cranage, the River Dane c1955

Cranage, the Old Vicarage Hotel c1955 photo

Cranage, the Old Vicarage Hotel c1955

Cranage, the Village Stores c1955 photo

Cranage, the Village Stores c1955

Cranage photos
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Cranage maps

Historic maps of Cranage and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all Cranage maps

Cranage map

Historic map of Cranage

Cheshire map

Illustrated Victorian map of Cheshire

Cranage map

Historic Map of any Cranage postcode

Cranage maps
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Cranage books

Displaying 2 of 10 books about Cranage and the local area.   View all Cranage books

On Sale! 70 off

Macclesfield Town and City Memories
Hardback
rrp £14.99  £4.50

On Sale! 70 off

Macclesfield Town and City Memories
Paperback
rrp £11.99  £3.60

On Sale! 70 off

Wilmslow and Alderley Edge Photographic Memories
Paperback
rrp £10.99  £3.30

Cranage books
View all 10 Cranage and Cheshire books

Memories of Cranage

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Cheshire memories

Blackden Hall

My great great grandfather, Simon Myall, had a farm called Blackden Hall according to the 1851 census. The house is still there but no longer a farm.

Audrey Frost

Shared on 24 March 2008

My primary school

What a lovely old photo! I was lucky enough to spend my primary school years, 1962 to 1968, at Lower Withington primary school as did my sister Cathy and my mum and uncle before us. Our headmistress lived in the house next door to the school and believe it or not she actually taught my mum and uncle also!

We all have many good memories of growing up in Lower Withington and all these years on it still feels like home when we go back even though we moved away in 1969.

The village has changed a bit over the years, what place hasn't; the school is now a large house and the grass in the front of the photo is now the Village Hall car park. In our day there was a hall but it was a low wooden building and we knew it as the
'Parish Room'; the church is still the same though, a green corrugated tin building but all the more special for not being replaced or closed.

Shared on 02 December 2007 by Margaret Tatton.

Thursday  Market Bus Trips from Bradwall

In this picture one can see the town hall in the background and next to it now is Price City (2008), prior to that the Co-op. When I was a child this building used to be the Hungerford Cafe. I used to look forward to getting on the market bus at lunchtime with my mother and going to the Cafe for a glass of orange - this was then a real treat! The corn tradesmen used to stand outside the arches in front of the Town Hall to take orders for next week deliveries. It was the days when the Co-op van, the butcher's (Wakefield's), the bread man and the paraffin man, not to forget the Corona pop man, used to deliver to our homes and we as children could get the old threepence back on an empty bottle! There was Holland's shop where Burnell's is now. We had a Co-operative drapers and tailors in Bold Street with their offices upstairs where mum used to get her Co-op divvy! You could buy anything on the market then. Buses used to come from Hanley on Potters' Wakes and I remember people queuing up for the buses home and every other person seem to have four foam cushions tied up with string to take home to the Potteries. There was Melias and Hunter's on the High Street where one could buy all the groceries There was Dickinson & Lunts hardware on the High St. Woolworth's as well. Everyone I went to school with seemed to buy a lucky rabbit's foot from there,  they had metal tops so that when we wore them we had black marks on our skin! Ugh! Woolworth's was the place to shop, they had warm peanuts for sale that we used to love, sold in a bag that ended up full of grease - must not have been an healthy option. But then neither were Florrie's fish & chips. We remember buying some one night and cutting into the fish, it just oozed grease (I think it would have been lard in those days), but you could not fault her, she was a character in her own right!

Shared on 11 March 2009 by Gillian Mitchell.

The Square

I remember Florrie's chip shop, the chips were 6d a bag and were great. The sweet shop next door was called Timmins, and like you said, Mrs Farnsworth's shop was across the road where the betting shop is now. I used to walk through there to go to church school which is now St Mary's church hall.

Shared on 19 November 2008 by Douglas Coppenhall.

Extracts From Cranage & Cheshire books

Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Cranage, inspired by Frith photos.

Congleton Town and City Memories

The sham castle on Mow Cop is clearly visible from much of Congleton.

This is an extract from Congleton Town and City Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Congleton Town and City Memories

The photographer was looking eastwards from the entrance. At this time, all but the uppermost section of the east window had clear glass. Stained glass was introduced later in 1922. Although not discernible in this picture (perhaps because of the glare from the windows), there are two oil paintings by Edward Penny on either side of the window, which were painted in 1748. They depict St Paul and St Peter.

This is an extract from Congleton Town and City Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Congleton Town and City Memories

Later photographs from the 1950s show no change to the building apart from the addition of a hanging sign at the front, and the replacement of the gas lamp-post with an electric, concrete one. This scene looks practically the same today. Smaller timber-framed buildings can be seen in Lawton Street, Moody Street and Little Street. Others exist but are hidden by later frontages. A few more survive in the surrounding countryside, and a couple of miles along the Manchester Road is the timber-framed Marton Church, one of the earliest and most complete examples in the country.

This is an extract from Congleton Town and City Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.