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Allostock

Allostock photos (3 available)

Old photo of Allostock

Allostock maps (2 available)

Old map of Allostock

Allostock books (15 available)

Allostock memories

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You can also read memories of nearby places in Cheshire below.

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
A memory of Goostrey contributed by First name Last name

The old laundry

Knutsford, the Old Laundry c1955

I have always heard that my gran's sister  started the laundry.  Prior to this she was a wardress at the prison.  Her name was Maria Stanley.  I know that family stories get distorted and maybe she just worked at the laundry.  She was definitely a wardress in 1901 and I would be interested to know when the laundry came into being.  Later in life my great aunt started a laundry in Liverpool which survived till after the second world war.  Maybe someone could solve this little mystery for me.
Audrey Frost
A memory of Knutsford contributed by First name Last name

An exotic world, for young Canadians

We arrived in Knutsford in September 1955: two bewildered parents and four children, the youngest only 10 months old.

My father, a major, had been sent by the Canadian Army to take a year-long course in Manchester. Why he ever sought or consented to this is unknown -- but I suspect he was keen to return to England, since he had so enjoyed his four years there 1942-46.

It was a little less jolly for my longsuffering mother, encumbered with four of the most precocious, heedless children ever born -- of which I was surely the worst.

We settled into a rented house ("Beech House, Toft Road, Knutsford, Cheshire, England" as we were taught to recite to ...read more here
A memory of Knutsford contributed by Ted Gale

Childhood memories

Knutsford holds a special place in my heart as I was born there in 1956 and spent nearly eight years of my childhood growing up in this then safe and close community. I have very strong memories of family, home, school and friends and the environment during these years up until late 1963 when we emigrated to Western Australia as "10 pound poms". Our family home was 65 Mobberley Rd., Crosstown right next door to the pub (Lee Arms?). My memories of my school days are especially vivid and the now demolished Crosstown school will always have a place in my heart. My elderly aunt still lives across the road from where the school used to be -in the family home ...read more here
A memory of Knutsford contributed by julie nunn

Extracts From Allostock & Cheshire books

Allostock, All Ways Filling Station c1955

These old petrol pumps have long gone. In the 18th century there was a boys’ school in Allostock run by a minister of the Unitarian chapel; it was attended at one time by Robert Clive, the future conqueror of India. Clive is said to have been thrown out of three schools – perhaps this was one of them!
An extract from from"Cheshire Living Memories".

Alderley Edge, West Mine 1896

This great open-cast canyon no longer exists, it was filled in by tipping household waste in the 1960s, but it shows how active the Alderley Edge Mining Company was in the second quarter of the 19th century. Alderley Edge is possibly the earliest site of copper mining in England, as traces of Early Bronze Age activity was proved by the Manchester University`s excavation here in 1997.
An extract from from"Wilmslow and Alderley Edge Photographic Memories".

Nether Alderley, the Cross 1896

This view, looking north along what is now the main A34 towards Alderley Edge village, shows where Welsh Row crossed the old turnpike, connecting the old enclosed fields on the plain with the open common land of the Edge. At the crossroads is the stump of a cross, a reminder that in the 13th century, the then lord of the manor, Sir Walklyn Arderne, attempted but failed to found a market town here.
An extract from from"Wilmslow and Alderley Edge Photographic Memories".

Mobberley, Slade Lane c1960

This peaceful unassuming lane crossing the brook is typical of the quiet countryside that has now gone with the expansion of Manchester Airport.
An extract from from"Wilmslow and Alderley Edge Photographic Memories".

Chelford, Church 1896

Dedicated to St John the Evangelist, the main part of the church was built at the Parkers` expense at the end of the 18th century, but the tower is an 1840s addition by their successors the Dixons. Inside, there are pleasant Arts and Crafts features, including some late Morris and Co windows.
An extract from from"Wilmslow and Alderley Edge Photographic Memories".