Waverton, Cheshire
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Waverton is a village and civil parishes in England, civil parish on the outskirts of Chester in the unitary authority of Cheshire West and Chester and the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England. It lies about south-east of Chester High Cross, south of Liverpool and south west of Manchester. It is almost continuous with the village of Rowton, Cheshire, Rowton to the north west and that in turn is almost continuous with Christleton. According to the United Kingdom Census 2011, 2011 Census, the population of the parish was 1,587. The village's Anglicanism, Anglican church is dedicated to St Peter's Church, Waverton, St. Peter. The village has an Evangelicalism, Evangelical church and there is a Methodist Church of Great Britain, Methodist church on the edge of the village in the parish of Rowton. The village has a post office, a number of shops, a takeaway, hairdressers, a primary school and a pub called the Black Dog. The village is home to the outdoor children's adventure attraction, the Crocky Trail. The Waverton Good Read Award was founded in 2003 for first-time UK novelists. Waverton Business Park is also located in the village, off the A41 road (England), A41. The Shropshire Union Canal (originally Chester Canal) runs through the middle of Waverton. The village had a Waverton railway station, railway station on the North Wales Coast Line until it closed in the 1960s. The line, which runs between Chester railway station, Chester, Crewe railway station, Crewe, and North Wales, is named Route 22 on Network Rail's 2006 reorganisation. Services on this line are offered by Transport for Wales Rail, Transport for Wales, and, as the "London to Holyhead" spur of the West Coast Main Line route, by Avanti West Coast. The train station is now a bus depot run by Stagecoach Merseyside & South Lancashire. The village also has a large junior football team, AFC Waverton, which competes in both the Chester and District Junior Football League and the Ellesmere Port Junior Football League.


History

The settlement was named ''Wavretone'' in the ''Domesday Book'', where it was said to be in the Dudestan Hundred (county subdivision), Hundred. The name was first given as ''Waverton'' in 1260, having been called ''Waueretone'' in 1150, and ''Wauertone'' in 1100. The origin of the name is not certain. The Church of St Peter's nave has a roof that has been dated to 1665. The tower, on the west end of the building, is built in the Church architecture#England, Perpendicular Style and possess a nineteenth-century pyramidal roof. Although the church was restored in the 1880s, the chancel's timber framing, the windows, and clerestory are all original. New residential developments led to a significant expansion of the village in the 20th Century. Until the late 1970s there was a chemical works located on the canal in the centre of Waverton. Residents of the village tend to be commuters to Liverpool and Manchester with easy access to the M53 motorway and M56 motorway, as well as into Chester city centre.


Notable people

*Joseph Wright (greyhound trainer), born in Waverton 1824. He farmed at Avenue Farm, previously being the innkeeper of The White Horse public house in the villageWAVERTON A History of its People and Places, page 131/132 *Jack Wright (greyhound trainer), born in Waverton 1850 *Joe Wright (greyhound trainer), born in Waverton 1855 *Robert Kelsell Wright, born in Waverton 1858, slipped the Waterloo Cup finals in 1890 & 1895. He farmed at Well House Farm. *Tom Wright (greyhound trainer), born in Waverton 1861


See also

*Listed buildings in Waverton, Cheshire *Waverton school and schoolmaster's house


References


External links


Waverton website
{{authority control Villages in Cheshire Civil parishes in Cheshire