I am back in Compstall, which is just 5 miles from Stockport and even closer to Marple.*
Compstall, 1888 |
We found it by accident at the weekend, and it keeps drawing me back, not least because of Etherow Country Park.
My Wikipedia tells me that “Compstall is a village in the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport, Greater Manchester, England; it is situated between Marple Bridge and Romiley and is historically part of Cheshire.
Compstall, 1840 |
It was formerly a mill village built by George Andrew in the 1820s to house his 800 workers. Most of the original mill cottages and other structures remain unchanged”.**
Added to which Mr. Andrew in 1851 admitted to employing “472 Males and 598 Females” in his textile mills, while Samuel Lewis’s Topographical Dictionary recorded that the village contained “1600 inhabitants of whom 1200 are employed in spinning, power loom weaving, bleaching, and printing and the remainder at the extensive coal-works in the neigbourhood”***
Cottages on Montague Street, 2009 |
And as the Andrew’s family owned the mills, the printing works and leased the coal mine, it is fair to say that Compstall was a “company town”, a fact that extended to the streets, many of which were named after members of the family.
The Andrew's estate also also built many of the cottages to house their workers as well as the local church and the community hall known as the Atheneaum.
This was not lost on Samuel Lewis who concluded his entry on the village with, “Thirty years ago, Compstall consisted of only a few straggling cottages, but since its establishment of the cotton manufacture, it has been gradually rising to its present thriving condition”.****
All of which is confirmed by the 1851 census which records, a range of textile occupations, including power loom workers, factory hands, calico printers, and a few former hand loom weavers.
Added to these were several families who owed a living from working down the coal mine, and a handful of factory apprentices.
Like any study of a small community what fascinates me is the detail of people’s lives.
From the 1851 census |
And in particular, where they came from, and Compstall was full of outsiders.
So of the 136 householders recorded as living in the village and the surrounding area in the 1851 census, 68% were from Cheshire and the remaining 32% were from Derbyshire, Lancashire, and Yorkshire with a few from as far away as Staffordshire, Sussex, Wales and Ireland.
Most of these new comers were working in the textile trade and some were coal miners, which suggests they had been attracted to the village by the mills and coal mine owned by the Andrew’s family.
And a closer look at the 90 Cheshire householders, shows that 40% were not from Romiley or nearby Bredbury, but drawn from across the county, which is where we came in.
For whatever Compstall had been before the development of the textile trade that trade had transformed it.
Location; Compstall
Pictures; Compstall in 1881, from the OS map of the area 1881, Montague Street, built by George Andrew for his workers, 2009, by Skinsmoke, licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
*A Country Park ……. a big bit of history …….. and the village of Compstall, https://chorltonhistory.blogspot.com/2021/06/a-country-park-big-bit-of-history-and.html
**Compstall, Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compstall
***Lewis, Samuel, A Topographical Dictionary, Vol 1, 1840
****ibid, Lewis
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