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  2. Cheadle Hulme was historically part of the ancient parish of Cheadle within the historic county boundaries of Cheshire. It formed the township of Cheadle Moseley . Following the Municipal Corporations Act 1835 , part of Cheadle Moseley was amalgamated into the Municipal Borough of Stockport . [ 3 ]

  3. The new station was renamed Cheadle Hulme on March 1st 1866. The two lines are extant today and the two bridges across the narrow Station Road are shown in 'Maps & Pictures '. The new line also crossed land belonging to Hill Top House and a high wall was erected around it.

  4. The Cheadle and Gatley District was abolished in 1974 and Cheadle Hulme became part of the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport. If anyone has any further information on the history of Cheadle Hulme, please email us .

  5. Much of the land changed in prehistoric times from barren tundra to peat bogs and mosses, to open farmland, and in the second millennium to cultivated farmland, to isolated cornmills, to home textile production, and finally to housing, light industry and shopping areas.

  6. In 1870-72, John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales described Cheadle Hulme like this: CHEADLE-HULME, a chapelry in Cheadle parish, Cheshire; mainly identical with Cheadle-Bulkeley township. It was constituted in 1868; and it has a post office under Stockport, and a r. station. The living is a vicarage.

  7. It is suggested that the earliest human activity in the area dates from the Mesolithic period or Middle Stone Age when hunter-gatherers migrated northwards as the climate warmed ( the ice sheets began to retreat about 12,000 years ago) and woodland began to replace the barren tundra.

  8. Jun 25, 2023 · The list also includes entries for two Stockport towns - Bramhall at 29, and Cheadle Hulme at 26, climbing up from 43 last year. Why? The Manchester Evening News went to Cheadle Hulme to...

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