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Coordinates: 53°22′30″N 2°06′40″W / 53.375°N 2.111°W / 53.375; -2.111
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Sport and recreation: added Hazel Grove Snooker Club, which seems to have been 'airbrushed' from Hazel Grove community by certain editors.
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Hazel Grove has several recreational centres: Hazel Grove Sports Centre, in the grounds of Hazel Grove High School,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hazelgrovehigh.co.uk/page/?title=Leisure+Centre&pid=7 |title=Welcome to HG Sports Centre |publisher=Hazel Grove High School |accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> Hazel Grove Pools and Target Fitness and Torkington Park which provides crown green bowling, tennis courts and football pitches.
Hazel Grove has several recreational centres: Hazel Grove Sports Centre, in the grounds of Hazel Grove High School,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.hazelgrovehigh.co.uk/page/?title=Leisure+Centre&pid=7 |title=Welcome to HG Sports Centre |publisher=Hazel Grove High School |accessdate=20 June 2017}}</ref> Hazel Grove Pools and Target Fitness and Torkington Park which provides crown green bowling, tennis courts and football pitches.

The Hazel Grove Snooker Club, located on Macclesfield road, has been a notable centre of National Snooker competitions since its establishment in November 1984. Being one of the largest snooker venues in the UK<ref>https://www.hazelgrovesnooker.com/</ref>, this snooker club has hosted a substantial number of WPBSA (later WSA) and ESPB competitions throughout the last three decades, leading to two confirmed and referee-verified 147-breaks at the club (Jason Prince in British Open Qualifier - 13 January 1999 <ref>https://www.eurosport.com/snooker/on-this-week-nugget-147_sto2179445/story.shtml</ref>; and Nick Dyson in UK Tour Event 4 - 22 March 1999<ref>https://www.eurosport.com/snooker/on-this-week_sto2263493/story.shtml</ref>). The club has also hosted major disability sports events, such as the WDBS Northern Classic 2019 for participants with learning and physical disabilities <ref>https://www.wpbsa.com/hazel-grove-hosts-successful-disability-snooker-event/</ref> and the WDBS DS Active Workshop 2019 providing snooker training for players with Downs Syndrome <ref>https://www.dsactive.org.uk/news/dsactive-team-run-first-workshop-for-world-disability-billiards-and-snooker/</ref>.


There is also a tennis and bowling club on Douglas Road and two cricket clubs, Hazel Grove CC and Norbury CC, the latter including a lacrosse club and crown green bowling club, each with their own facilities, whilst Norbury Athletic is a junior football club based opposite the high school on Jacksons Lane.
There is also a tennis and bowling club on Douglas Road and two cricket clubs, Hazel Grove CC and Norbury CC, the latter including a lacrosse club and crown green bowling club, each with their own facilities, whilst Norbury Athletic is a junior football club based opposite the high school on Jacksons Lane.

Revision as of 21:14, 8 July 2019

Hazel Grove
London Road, the major road going through Hazel Grove
Hazel Grove is located in Greater Manchester
Hazel Grove
Hazel Grove
Location within Greater Manchester
Area4.19 km2 (1.62 sq mi)
Population15,265 "(2011 census)".
• Density3,643/km2 (9,440/sq mi)
OS grid referenceSJ925865
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townSTOCKPORT
Postcode districtSK6, SK7
Dialling code0161, 01625
PoliceGreater Manchester
FireGreater Manchester
AmbulanceNorth West
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Greater Manchester
53°22′30″N 2°06′40″W / 53.375°N 2.111°W / 53.375; -2.111

Hazel Grove is a suburb in the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport, Greater Manchester, England, close to the Peak District national park.

Historically part of Cheshire, until 1836 the area was known as Bullock Smithy.

History

Early history

Hazel Grove is made up of three separate townships: Norbury, Torkington and Bosden-cum-Handforth, Norbury (Nordberie) being mentioned in the Domesday Survey, 1086.[1] Each of the townships were manorial lands. Until the 17th century the area was known exclusively by each of the respective townships.

In 1560, Richard Bullock built a smithy on the corner of what is now Torkington Park. This building later became the Bullock Smithy Inn and gradually the whole area became known as Bullock Smithy.

The Bull's Head pub and Bullock Smithy Inn at the Hazel Grove tram terminus around 1900

Non-conformists

There was no church in the area until the end of the 16th century. The church consisted of a very basic chapel, without communion. It was a favoured hotbed of the northeast Cheshire Non-conformist movement. After the Restoration in 1662, it was forbidden for ministers to preach without the Book of Common Prayer. The minister of Norbury Chapel, John Jolie, went to preach, but found that the door was locked. He and his followers broke down the door and he preached as usual. Subsequently, he was tried for Non-conformity, but it was decided that Norbury Chapel was not a consecrated place. In 1750, John Wesley preached in Bullock Smithy describing it as "... one of the most famous villages in the county for all manner of wickedness."

Religion

London Road, Hazel Grove around 1900

By 1833, the village had grown to over 3,000 people and it was decided the area should have its own parish. In July 1834, the Church of St Thomas was consecrated at Norbury.

Name change

The village elders began to tire of the jokes surrounding the name Bullock Smithy. The Manchester Guardian had carried a humorous story about an auctioneer trying to sell a rare book. No bidders were coming forward, so in an act of encouragement he told the crowd "Come on, Where's tha al from? Bullock Smithy? because tha don't know a book from a brick." In 1835, it was decided that the village would be known as Hazel Grove. The name Hazel Grove had been used in the village previously. An area called Hassel Grave near High Lane appears on a map of 1674, and an area near Poise Brook was locally known as Hazel Grove. The present Grove Inn had been called the Hazel Grove Inn since it opened; however on 26 September 1836 the name was officially changed.

Civic Hall at Hazel Grove

Governance

The village was part of the civil parish of Norbury which was included in the Stockport Rural District of Cheshire from 1894 to 1900. From 1900 to 1974 Hazel Grove was part of the Hazel Grove and Bramhall civil parish and urban district. Hazel Grove and Bramhall was abolished in 1974 and its former area was transferred to Greater Manchester to form part of the Metropolitan Borough of Stockport.

Though the constituency of Hazel Grove is named after it, the western part of the village actually lies in the Cheadle constituency. Its current MP is William Wragg of the Conservatives.

Transport

Notable features of Hazel Grove include the A6 road, a major thoroughfare running from London to Carlisle, which passes through the centre of the area. There have been many attempts and plans to build a by-pass for the large amount of heavy traffic which uses the A6 on its way into and around Stockport and south Manchester and in early 2015, the plans for the by-pass had been finalised and put into effect. The by-pass has since been completed as of October 2018. Hazel Grove is the southern terminus for the 192 bus route which runs along the A6 to Manchester via Stockport. The village is served by Hazel Grove railway station which is on the Hope Valley and Buxton lines from Stockport. Hazel Grove (Midland) was situated between the railway overbridges at the south end of the town and was open from 1902 until 1917. The local tram services to Stockport, Reddish and Manchester terminated near Norbury Church and the Rising Sun pub until about 1950, when they were replaced by buses and the cobbles on the A6 were covered by tarmac. At the start of the operation of the tram services Hazel Grove residents were – jokingly – alleged to black-lead the tramlines early in the morning.

Education

Hazel Grove has a number of primary schools and Hazel Grove High School. The main primary schools in the area are Hazel Grove Primary School, Torkington Primary School, Norbury Hall Primary School and Moorfield Primary School. There are two local Catholic primary schools, St Simon's and St Peter's.

Economy

London Road

Most village residents work outside the village. The village is also home to the UK Adidas Headquarters who have their main warehouse on the edge of Hazel Grove, and the nearby Stepping Hill Hospital which is the main maternity and A&E hospital serving the Stockport and south Manchester areas.

Mirlees, Bickerton and Day established a factory in October 1908, where diesel engines were manufactured for many years.

Nexperia (formerly NXP, Philips, Mullard) have a semiconductor manufacturing plant (wafer Fab) off Bramhall Moor Lane in Hazel Grove. The site has been there for over 25 years and currently employs around 650 people.[citation needed] Before that, the site was at School Street, which has an interesting history. Before 1939 the site beside the Marcliff (later Warwick) cinema at the south end of the village had a garage and petrol station (opposite Jack Sharp's greyhound track), which was converted at the outbreak of war into an aircraft factory,[citation needed] occupying the entire triangle between Macclesfield Road and the two railway lines. This seemed also to have been extended behind the Norbury Church, in School Street. At the end of the war prefabs were built. The Macclesfield Road site was taken over later for pharmaceuticals by British Schering. Eventually G.E.C. started a transistor factory at the School St address. Both of these locations are now light industrial estates housing a number of small businesses, some still in the original buildings.[citation needed]

Hazel Grove "High Street" (London Road) and its surrounding area is the largest district centre in Stockport Borough with a diverse range of small shops and larger supermarkets, public houses, restaurants and takeaways.

Sport and recreation

Speedway racing was staged at the Hazel Grove Greyhound Stadium in 1937 although details of the meetings are sketchy. Greyhound racing meetings were held every Saturday afternoon for many years, until the track was closed around 1960. In the 1970s part of the site was made into an extension of the local football pitches on Torkington Park for amateur teams to use until the site was sold and redeveloped, partly as a Carpetright store, partly as the Greyhound Industrial Estate.

Hazel Grove has several recreational centres: Hazel Grove Sports Centre, in the grounds of Hazel Grove High School,[2] Hazel Grove Pools and Target Fitness and Torkington Park which provides crown green bowling, tennis courts and football pitches.

The Hazel Grove Snooker Club, located on Macclesfield road, has been a notable centre of National Snooker competitions since its establishment in November 1984. Being one of the largest snooker venues in the UK[3], this snooker club has hosted a substantial number of WPBSA (later WSA) and ESPB competitions throughout the last three decades, leading to two confirmed and referee-verified 147-breaks at the club (Jason Prince in British Open Qualifier - 13 January 1999 [4]; and Nick Dyson in UK Tour Event 4 - 22 March 1999[5]). The club has also hosted major disability sports events, such as the WDBS Northern Classic 2019 for participants with learning and physical disabilities [6] and the WDBS DS Active Workshop 2019 providing snooker training for players with Downs Syndrome [7].

There is also a tennis and bowling club on Douglas Road and two cricket clubs, Hazel Grove CC and Norbury CC, the latter including a lacrosse club and crown green bowling club, each with their own facilities, whilst Norbury Athletic is a junior football club based opposite the high school on Jacksons Lane.

Hazel Grove Football Club was founded in 1957 and play their home games at Torkington Park. The club was taken over by new management in 2014 and plays in the Manchester Saturday Morning Football League.

Notable citizens

  • William Garbutt, the first professional manager in Italian football, was born in Hazel Grove.[8]

See also

References

Notes

Bibliography

  • Coutie, H (1982). Hazel Grove: A Village History Trail: Hazel Grove or Bullock Smithy?. Stockport Historical Society. ISBN 0-905164-75-X.
  • Speak, R (1964). The Story of Hazel Grove and Bramhall. Stockport: The Crescent Press.