Shrigley Hall Hotel, Golf & Country Club, Macclesfield, England, United Kingdom
Shrigley Hall Hotel, Golf & Country Club, Macclesfield, England, United Kingdom
Shrigley Park, Pott Shrigley, Macclesfield, England, SK10 5SB, United Kingdom
4-star hotel in Pott Shrigley with 2 restaurants, 2 bars/lounges
Free WiFi and free parking
New 3rd hole Macclesfield golf club
Drunk Dell Boy Macclesfield Golf Club
Queensbury, 105 Macclesfield Road, Prestbury, SK10 4AG
New property live with Stuart Rushton & Co
Contact for hire:
bold.media@outlook.com
Macclesfield - Park Lane 1
A short video clip taken on Park Lane in Macclesfield, Cheshire.
The video includes a view of some of the former weaver's garret houses on Park Lane and also the Ivy House Public House.
Stuart Rushton Henbury, Macclesfield Property
macclesfield road party
had a road party outside in the street check the guys dancing in the street well funny
Shrigley Hall Hotel, Macclesfield, Cheshire
This hotel is haunted
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Kevin MacLeod: Feral Chase – na licencji Creative Commons Attribution (
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Macclesfield Hockey Club
Promotional Video - Video Filmed during Chairman's Day (14 Apr 2012)
4 Mens Teams
2 Ladies Team
Junior Section
Over 150 members, 75 are Junior Members
Lots of social events
Contact info to join
Theo Brown Golf GSCE evidence. Northamptonshire county golf course
Theo Brown playing 3 holes at Northamptonshire county Golf course on a sunny but cold Saturday morning.
A54 Buxton Road, Wildboarclough, Macclesfield
We're undertaking essential work to upgrade and replace a section of the safety barriers along the south edge of the A54 Buxton Road, Wildboarclough, Macclesfield.
This drone footage shows how the project has progressed so far.
25/11/2018 01:09 (57 Chelford Rd, Prestbury, Macclesfield SK10 4PT, UK)
Start time: 25 Nov 2018 01:09:13
End time: 25 Nov 2018 01:12:14
Address: 57 Chelford Rd, Prestbury, Macclesfield SK10 4PT, UK
Type: Normal
Distance: 1.3mile
File path: /storage/9016-4EF8/Android/data/com.hovans.autoguard/files/AutoGuard/2018_11_25_01_09_13.3gp
File size: 74 MBytes
This video is recorded and uploaded by AutoGuard.
Macclesfield Ukulele Club
This video contains a series of stills taken be Nick Peck and Roger Baker. Roger also recorded the sound (I hesitate to say music) and wore 'that' hat.
Narrowboat Living vlogs - We travel along the beautiful Macclesfield Canal. Breathtaking.
Canal Narrowboat vlogs or blogs blogger or vlogger vlog or blog Living videos Take your pick.
Narrowboat Potteries. We continued on our journey up the Macclesfield Canal. It is the most beautiful canal you could imagine, Very tight in places but if you proceed with caution, you see some wonderful scenery. Just above the shot of the viaduct you can just make out the dish at Jodrell Bank. We also get a good view of Mow Cop.
Narrowboat Potteries is the play thing of John, Tom & Ethel.
The Macclesfield Canal is a canal in east Cheshire, England. There were various proposals for a canal to connect the town of Macclesfield to the national network from 1765 onwards, but it was not until 1824 that a scheme came to fruition. There were already suggestions by that date that a railway would be better, but the committee that had been formed elected for a canal, and the engineer Thomas Telford endorsed the decision. The canal as built was a typical Telford canal, constructed using cut and fill, with numerous cuttings and embankments to enable it to follow as straight a course as possible, although Telford had little to do with its construction, which was managed by William Crosley.
The canal opened in 1831, and is 26.1 miles (42.0 km) long. All of its twelve locks are concentrated in a single flight at Bosley, which alters the level by 118 feet (36 m). The canal runs from a junction with the Peak Forest Canal at Marple in the north, in a generally southerly direction, through the towns of Macclesfield and Congleton, to an end-on junction with the Hall Green Branch of the Trent and Mersey Canal. There is a stop lock at the junction, which drops the level by 1 foot (0.30 m), and the branch runs for another 1.5 miles (2.4 km) to Hardings Wood Junction, where it joins the Trent and Mersey main line. This short branch is usually considered to be part of the Macclesfield Canal in modern literature.
Faced with growing threats from railways, and the fact that the Trent and Mersey was proposing to merge with a railway company, the management did all they could to cut costs, but in 1846 reached an agreement to sell the canal to a railway company, which became the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway soon afterwards. Under railway ownership, the canal fared better than many, and commercial carrying continued until 1954. There had been some leisure use of the canal since the end of the First World War, and the North Cheshire Cruising Club, formed in 1943 and based at the High Lane arm, became the first such cruising club on the British inland waterways. There were dangers that the northern end would be isolated under plans to close the Ashton Canal and the lower Peak Forest Canal in the early 1960s, but vigorous campaigning and a growing restoration movement resulted in the Transport Act 1968, which secured the future of those canals. The designation of the canal as part of the Cheshire Ring in 1965 was part of the strategy by the Inland Waterways Association to promote the leisure potential of canals.
The whole canal was designated as a Conservation Area by Macclesfield Borough Council in 1975, and a large number of its structures have been Grade II listed in recognition of their historic importance. This includes a number of elegant roving bridges, which are known locally as snake bridges. Much of the canal is rural, passing through open countryside, and there are a number of impressive embankments and aqueducts, where the canal crosses river valleys. In the centres of population, there are several large mills, once served by the canal but now repurposed as small industrial units or apartments.
#narrowboat #cut_cruising #gongoozler
Shrigley Hall general video
Leave the stresses and strains of everyday life behind and escape to Shrigley Hall for a spa break
Combine luxurious accommodation with the three course dinner in the Oakridge Restaurant, full English and continental breakfast the following morning, full use of the leisure facilities and of course, treatments in the Chapel Spa to relax, invigorate and rejuvenate
Places to see in ( Congleton - UK )
Places to see in ( Congleton - UK )
Congleton is a town and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire East and the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England. Congleton lies on the banks of the River Dane, 21 miles south of Manchester and to the west of the Macclesfield Canal.
The town of Congleton is broken up by the Congleton townspeople into seven main areas. These are Buglawton, otherwise known as Bug Town; the Bromley Farm estate, otherwise known as Tin Town due to the number of tin RSJs built there; Mossley, which is sometimes classed as the wealthier part of town; Hightown, which is located before Mossley between town and the railway station; West Heath, which is a relatively new estate built in the early 1960s to the early 1980s; Lower Heath to the north of the town; and finally the town centre.
Congleton is located in a river valley (the River Dane). To the south of the town lies an expanse of green space known locally as Priesty Fields that forms a green corridor right into the heart of the town – a rare feature in English towns.
The National Trust Tudor house Little Moreton Hall is four miles (6.4 km) southwest of the town. Congleton is home to one of the oldest recorded rugby union clubs in the country, dating back to 1860, although there have been periods when the club were not able to field a side.
There is also a local football team, Congleton Town F.C., known as the Bears, who play in the North West Counties League. Their ground is at Booth Street. There are also two cricket clubs, Congleton CC and Mossley CC. There are two golf clubs in the town; the historic Congleton Golf Club which is an undulating nine-hole course with views over the Cloud End, and the 18-hole parkland course at Astbury. There is also a running club, Congleton Harriers, which meets weekly at Congleton Leisure Centre.
Congleton Park is located along the banks of the River Dane just north east of the town centre. Town Wood on the northern edge of the park is a Grade A Site of Biological Interest and contains many nationally important plants. Congleton Paddling Pool was built in the 1930s and is open in the summer months. Astbury Mere Country Park lies just to the south west of the town centre, on the site of a former sand quarry. The lake is used for fishing and sailing and despite its name, is actually in the West Heath area of Congleton, with the boundary between Congleton and Newbold Astbury parishes lying further to the south.
Congleton Museum is on Market Square in the centre of town. It was established in 2002 and is dedicated to Congleton's industrial history. It also contains an ancient log boat and gold and silver coin hoards. Congleton is seven miles (11 km) east of the M6 motorway, connected by the A534.
Congleton railway station opened on 9 October 1848. It lies on the Manchester to Stoke-on-Trent branch of the West Coast Main Line. It was revealed in The Sentinel newspaper on 7 September 2011. The Macclesfield Canal, completed in 1831, passes through the town. It runs 26 miles (42 km) from Marple Junction at Marple, where it joins the Upper Peak Forest Canal, southwards (through Bollington and Macclesfield), before arriving at Bosley.
( Congleton - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Congleton . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Congleton - UK
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Macclesfield Ukulele Club - Leaning On A Lamp Post
Macclesfield (Cheshire UK) Ukulele Group playing Leaning on a Lamp Post at their Higher Hurdsfield debut on 17 Nov 2012. Featuring Alan, Dave, Hazel, Huw, Jim, Lawrence, Len, Mark, Peter, Phil and Roger.
Prestbury Cheshire June 27, 2015
Prestbury Cheshire
Video diary - My first golf session
Alex, a Managing Director of Mum’s in the Know attended a golf taster session at the The Tytherington Club, Macclesfield.
Hear how she got on and what she enjoyed about the day.