Toponymy Bedford means the "
ford of Beda", which crossed Pennington Brook, probably near Beaston Bridge on Warrington Road. It was recorded as Beneford in 1200–21 and Bedeford in 1200 and 1296.
Manor The
manor, held by the Botelers of
Warrington, was divided before the time when records survived.
Bedford Hall never assumed the role of a
manor house and was occupied by tenants of the Kighleys who were absentee landlords. In 1301 half of the manor was held by the Kighleys, a quarter by the Sales who lived at the
moated Hopecarr Hall and the rest by John Waverton of Brick House. Thomas Shuttleworth lived at Sandypool which was taken from the Kighley share. The area was rural and a small settlement grew at Butts where the road to Warrington branched from the Leigh to Manchester road. Several inns were built near the junction and in 1641 there was a shop selling "cheese, gunpowder, hops, tobacco and a variety of other goods". A corn mill was built by the Breaston Brook.
Industry Agriculture,
fustian weaving and mining from small coal pits near the
Astley and
Tyldesley border were the chief occupations until the
Bridgewater Canal promoted the development of industry and rapid increases in population during the 19th century. Corn mills powered by steam were built at the canal basin by Butts Bridge in 1831 to process wheat imported from the prairies of America through the
Port of Liverpool. Bickham and Pownall built a
silk mill in Duke Street in 1833 and Richard le Mare, a French
Huguenot immigrant, opened a silk weaving shed in Brewery Lane in 1859. After 1845 the Bedford Foundry made agricultural machinery and fire ranges in premises near the canal. In 1858 the
Fletchers built a private railway linking their collieries at
Howe Bridge to Bedford Basin which the company built to facilitate the transport of coal. After the
London and North Western Railway line was built in the north of the township, John Speakman sank
Bedford Colliery where there was a
disaster in 1886. ==Governance==