northwichcat
Veteran Member
Holme Moss was historically the boundary of Cheshire and the West Riding. Hard to imagine pastoral Cheshire as peat bog almost 2000ft high. There's an old stone sign at the bottom of Holme Moss, Yorkshire side quite some distance north of the present boundary, which shows a historic Derbyshire border. Derbyshire ended in Holmebridge it seems.
Of course most of the places in Greater Manchester and Merseyside were either in Cheshire and Lancashire before 1974, so Cheshire included the more industrial towns of Birkenhead and Stockport alongside many rural places now in Tameside (plus Tintwistle which got moved to Derbyshire.)
The Catholic dioceses were drawn up so that Cheshire (with it's original boundaries) was placed with Shropshire, which has been retained to this day. This means that Wythenshawe is in the Shrewsbury diocese not Salford and Birkenhead is also in the Shrewsbury diocese, not the Liverpool diocese despite the Catholic cathedral in Liverpool being visible from Birkenhead!