Audlem
Audlem (
History
Audlem was mentioned in the Domesday Book as Aldelime, and Edward I granted it a market charter in 1295.[3]
Geography
Audlem is on the Shropshire Union Canal, which has a flight of 15 locks, designed by Thomas Telford, to raise the canal 93 feet (28 m) from the Cheshire Plain to the Shropshire Plain. The River Weaver passes west of the village. Audlem railway station closed along with the local railway line in the 1960s.
Landmarks
Moss Hall is an Elizabethan timber-framed hall from 1616 0.5 miles (1 km) from Audlem village centre.
Education and facilities
Audlem has clubs for
Notable residents and associated people
- Isabella Whitney (c.1546/48–after 1624), the first woman known to have published secular poetry in the English language, grew up in Ryle Green when her father took a lease of a farm there.[5] Her brother, Geoffrey Whitney (c.1548–c.1601), is likewise believed to have been brought up there; also a poet, he is known for his collection Choice of Emblemes.[6]
- William Baker (1705–71), architect, surveyor and building contractor, lived at Highfields from the 1740s.[7]
- Field Marshal Stapleton Cotton, 1st Viscount Combermere (1773–1865), soldier, associate of the Duke of Wellington, was educated at a grammar school then in Audlem for three years from age nine before entering Westminster School.[8]
- Henry Lisle (1846 in Audlem – 1916), lawyer[9] and political figure in Saskatchewan, Canada
- Alice Elizabeth Gillington (1863 in Audlem – 1934), author, poet and journalist;[10]published books about Gypsies
- Mary Clarissa Gillington, later better known as May Byron (1861 in Audlem – 1936), author, poet, elder sister of Alice Gillington
- Herbert Broomfield (1878 in Audlem – unknown), football goalkeeper,[11] 28 pro appearances for Bolton Wanderers F.C.
- Peter Ellson (1925 in Audlem – 2014), professional footballing goalkeeper,[12] 219 pro appearances for Crewe Alexandra F.C.
- Peter McGarr (born 1953), classical composer and teacher; he has written several pieces inspired by Audlem ('Audlem Sonatas', 'Night-time' and 'Mourning Gamelan'), as homage to his mother, who lived in the village when she was a child.[13]
- Margaret Canovan (1939–2018), political theorist, lived in Audlem from 1979 to 2003 while working at Keele University.[14]
See also
- Listed buildings in Audlem
- St. James' Church, Audlem
- Audlem Baptist Church
Notes and references
Notes
- ^ "2001 Census: Audlem". Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 14 May 2007.
- ^ "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 13 March 2016.
- ^ Scholes, R. (2000). pages 24–25.
- ^ "Home page". AudlemOnline. Retrieved 27 February 2022.
- ^ Travitsky BS. 'Whitney, Isabella (fl. 1566–1573)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 (accessed 21 April 2010)
- ^ Dictionary of National Biography, vol. LXI, pp. 142–143 (Oxford University Press, 1900)
- ^ Robinson JM. 'Highfields, Audlem, Cheshire'. Country Life, 31 January 1991
- ^ Memoirs and Correspondence of Field-marshal Viscount Combermere, by Mary, Viscountess Combermere and W.W. Knollys (1866), Volume 1, page 25.
- ^ Saskatchewan Archives Board, Members of the Legislative Assembly retrieved 17 March 2018
- ^ EFDSS Folk Music Journal, Alice E. Gillington, Dweller on the Roughs retrieved 17 March 2018
- ^ Profile at MUFC Info.com retrieved 17 March 2018
- ^ Crewe Alexandra F.C., 16 April 2014, Peter Ellson, A Tribute retrieved 17 March 2018
- ^ Website of UK Composer Peter McGarr
- ISBN 9783111577555. Retrieved 17 May 2021.
Bibliography
- Scholes, R. (2000). Towns and villages of Britain: Cheshire. Wilmslow, Cheshire: Sigma Press. ISBN 1-85058-637-3.