The name Ordsall has
Old English origins, being the personal name
Ord and the word
halh, meaning a corner or nook, which has become the modern
dialect word "haugh". This, indeed, describes the position of the manor of Ordsall, for its boundary on the south side is a large bend in the
River Irwell, which became the site of the docks for the
Manchester Ship Canal. Ordsall first appears in records in 1177 when Ordeshala paid two marks towards an aid, a
feudal due or
tax.
Antiquarian and Geologist,
Samuel Hibbert-Ware gave a different etymology for the name;
ord is a Saxon word for "primeval" or "very old" and
hal meaning "den" - hence the name Ordeshal could mean "very old den". His reasoning for this was the location in the area of the cave known as Woden's Den.
Woden's Den Before the River Irwell was deepened to make it navigable there was an ancient, paved ford at Ordsall known as
Woden's Ford and nearby, in a lane leading to Ordsall Hall, was a cave known as Woden's Den. The cave was of great interest to 19th-century antiquarians, but their constant trespassing to view the site prompted the landowner to completely destroy it early in the century, and no trace of the feature remains. However, the cave was described and sketched by Thomas Barret in about 1780. He postulated that, as this part of the Irwell was subject to regular flooding, travellers would have made offerings to Odin, the protector of travellers, before attempting the crossing. ==Regeneration project==