CONTENTS

CHAP. PAGE
I.Position and Natural Features of Cheshire[9]
II.The Making of Cheshire (1)[16]
III. The Making of Cheshire (continued) (2)[21]
IV.Early Inhabitants of Cheshire[25]
V.The Romans in Cheshire (1)[29]
VI.The Romans in Cheshire (2)[36]
VII.Saxons and Angles come to Cheshire[43]
VIII.The Cross in Cheshire[47]
IX.The Coming of the Northmen[51]
X.The Normans come to Cheshire[58]
XI.The Norman Abbeys and Churches of Cheshire[64]
XII.The Earls of the County Palatine[74]
XIII.The Churches of the Thirteenth Century[81]
XIV.Growth of Towns in Cheshire[87]
XV.Edward the First and Cheshire[92]
XVI.The Coming of the Friars[99]
XVII.A Deposed King[107]
XVIII.The Rival Roses[114]
XIX.Churches of the Middle Ages[118]
XX.The Reformation and the Great Awakening[128]
XXI.Elizabethan Cheshire (1)[134]
XXII.Elizabethan Cheshire (2)[143]
XXIII.The Rule of the Stuarts[150]
XXIV.Civil War: (1) The Battles of Middlewich and Nantwich[153]
XXV.Civil War: (2) A Memorable Siege[158]
XXVI.Civil War: (3) The Protectorate and the Restoration[163]
XXVII.The Fall of the Stuarts[167]
XXVIII.The Eighteenth Century (1)[173]
XXIX.The Eighteenth Century (1)[180]
XXX.The Industrial Revolution (1)[183]
XXXI.The Industrial Revolution (2)[188]
XXXII.The Railways of Cheshire[192]
XXXIII.Progress and Reform in the Nineteenth Century[198]
XXXIV.The Reign of a Great Queen[204]
XXXV.Famous Men and Women of Cheshire[211]
XXXVI.Conclusion[216]

CHAPTER I
POSITION AND NATURAL FEATURES OF CHESHIRE

Few English counties owe more of their history to their geographical position and surroundings, and to the character of their natural features, than Cheshire. Not only in the past have the rocks and rivers of Cheshire helped to make history, but even to-day they have a very direct bearing upon the fortunes of Cheshire men and women. How many of us reflect, as our eyes travel over the plain to the distant hills, that on the wise and orderly arrangement of mountain and valley, forest and winding stream, our very existence and means of livelihood depend? Truly Nature has other work to do than merely create picturesque landscapes.

Cheshire is situated in the north-west of England, washed partly by the Irish Sea, and guarded as it were on its eastern and western sides by two great ramparts of hill country, that on the east formed by the southern spurs of the Pennine Chain, while the Welsh hills of Flint and Denbigh are the natural frontier on the west.

The western boundary, however, which has been frequently changed, now follows roughly the Valley of the Dee. A semicircle of hills of lesser height fringes the county on the south, and the river Mersey divides it from its northern neighbour, Lancashire.

In the north-west of the county a rectangular stretch of country known as Wirral is washed by two great estuaries and by the Irish Sea, and a wedge of moorland in the north-east penetrates into the heart of the Pennines. Here the hills reach their greatest height, Black Hill the highest point in Cheshire being just under 2,000 feet above sea-level. The low-lying lands enclosed by this amphitheatre of hills form the Cheshire Plain, broken only by ridges or terraces of low sandstone hills running north and south.

A glance at a map of the British Isles will show you that Cheshire lies in the very heart of the three kingdoms. Its geographical position has thus made it a meeting-place of nations, and you will see in later chapters that all the peoples that have helped to make our national history have in turn realized the importance of its position, and have fought desperately for its possession. Briton and Roman, Angle and Saxon and Dane, Welsh and Norman have all left some mark of their presence in the county, and from these many elements is derived the blood that flows in the veins of nearly all Cheshire boys and girls of to-day.