The name "Handforth" is believed to originate from the
Saxon name for a crossing on the
River Dean, "Hanna's
Ford". The first mention of Handforth is found in a charter dated between 1233 and 1236, with a later mention found in a deed of transfer between Lord Edmund Phitoun and Henry de Honeford, dated to 1291. The settlement is not mentioned in the
Domesday Book of 1086, though it may have, at that time, been recorded as a component part of the parish of
Cheadle. During the
Crusades, Handforth acquired its own
coat of arms, which include the 'Honford Star', emblem of Henry de Honeford, a member of the local
nobility. The town was referred to as "Honford" in
John Speede's map of the area in 1611, also named after the de Honford family. The oldest building in Handforth is
Handforth Hall, a typical
Tudor-styled black and white timber building built by
Sir Urian Brereton in 1562, also originally named "Honford Hall" after the de Honfords. Sir Urian Brereton, the
escheator of Cheshire and one of the
privy grooms to King
Henry VIII, died at Handforth Hall on 19 March 1577, and is thought to be buried in one of the chapels of
St Mary's Church, Cheadle. In the church's south chapel, two recumbent effigies depicted in
alabaster are thought to represent members of the Hondford family; Sir John, who died in 1461, and his son, also named John. A third, depicted in
sandstone, represents Sir Thomas Brereton, who died in 1673. The most famous resident of Handforth is Sir Urian's great-grandson, the
Parliamentary General
Sir William Brereton, 1st Baronet, who fought in the
English Civil War. During the
First World War, an
internment camp was set up in Handforth, for both civilian and military prisoners. The site, converted from a disused print works built in 1910 and requisitioned by the War Office in 1914, was designed to hold no more than 3,000 men, and was opened on 6 November 1914 with the arrival of 500 prisoners. From May 1915, following the aftermath of a number of Anti-German riots which swept a number of cities in England, the camp's civilian population increased, following decisions to intern 'enemy aliens', with a number of men sent to Handforth from
Liverpool. The camp was inspected by an attaché to the American Embassy in
London on 1 April 1916, at which a time there were 2,713 prisoners living in the camp. At the height of the camp's operations, the interned population of the camp was greater than that of the village of Handforth itself; later in the war, when German soldiers captured from the front lines began to arrive, the local population started to take a greater interest in the camp, and would watch the new arrivals, with crowds gathering at the nearby railway station. The
Manchester Evening News reported on 17 March 1915: "Great excitement prevailed at Handforth and Wilmslow today when it became generally known that about 600 German prisoners taken during heavy fighting in the North of France were expected to arrive for internment at the concentration camp." During the
Second World War, Handforth, along with
Cheadle Hulme, became home to large parts of
RAF Handforth, a maintenance unit classed as a universal stores depot, with the official
Royal Air Force name 'RAF Handforth No 61 M.U. (Maintenance unit)'. The depot, which covered large areas of land in both Handforth and neighbouring Cheadle Hulme, opened in 1939 and closed in 1959. The depot's stores spanned every single item required by the RAF in wartime, from utensils and everyday tools to aircraft engines. The site was served by a large, internal railway system, which left the
Manchester to
Crewe mainline near
Handforth railway station; the site of the exchange sidings and junction is now found on the modern-day Epsom Avenue. The depot also featured its own
shunting locomotives, which were stored in an
engine shed that stood at the
Wilmslow bound exit slip road for the
Handforth Dean shopping centre. The only surviving buildings of RAF Handforth are the government pay offices, now found on Dairyhouse Lane; these buildings, used as the headquarters of the depot, have survived in
Ministry of Defence use to this day. In January 2017, government plans were announced to build a garden village on the eastern margin of Handforth village, to include 2,000 houses with facilities including a nursery and care home. ==Geography==