Early origins The name
Winsford is of uncertain origin, but is thought to derive from a personal name Wain or Wynne and
ford, referencing a crossing point of the
River Weaver. The Norman
Earls of Chester had a hunting lodge or summer palace at
Darnhall in Over parish. There was an enclosed area where deer and wild boar were kept to be hunted by the Earl and his guests. King
Henry III annexed the title and its lands, spending time at Darnhall. In 1270 at the behest of his son, Henry III gave the estate to the Cistercians, who built
Darnhall Abbey in 1274. However, the land was not suitable for the grand scale of building envisaged, and the locals were not co-operative, so the monks left Darnhall to found
Vale Royal Abbey in
Whitegate in 1281. A charter to hold a Wednesday market and an annual fair at Over was granted on 24 November 1280 by
Edward I to the Abbot and convent of Vale Royal Abbey. From this charter can be traced the origins of the market that is still held in the town.
Expansion Winsford began to significantly expand after 1721, when Parliament gave permission for locks and other improvements on the
River Weaver to go ahead which allowed sea-going vessels to reach Winsford from the port of
Liverpool. At first, this was the closest that barges carrying
china clay from
Cornwall could get to the
Potteries district of north
Staffordshire. Locally produced salt was also transported to the Potteries, for use in the manufacture of
salt-glazed stoneware. Finished ceramics from the Potteries were brought back to Winsford, for export through the
Port of Liverpool. That trade ended in the 1780s when the
Trent and Mersey Canal opened and carried the goods through
Middlewich, bypassing Winsford. The canalised River Weaver was the inspiration for the
Duke of Bridgewater's canals and later the engineer for the
Weaver Navigation, Edwin Leader Williams, designed and built the
Manchester Ship Canal. Railways came relatively early to Winsford, with the opening of
Winsford station on the
Grand Junction Railway in 1837. In his guide to the line, published that year, Arthur Freeling wrote: "There is so little worth attention in this village, that it is not even noticed in Parliamentary Population Returns." From the 1830s, salt became important to Winsford, partly because the salt mines under
Northwich had begun to collapse and another source of salt near the River Weaver was needed. A new source was discovered in Winsford, leading to the development of a salt industry along the course of the River Weaver, where many factories were established. As a result, a new town developed within of the old
Borough of Over which had been focused on Delamere Street.
20th century By the
Second World War, employment in the salt trade had declined as one company took control of all the salt works and introduced methods of manufacture that needed much less labour.
Slum clearance started in the 1930s and, by the 1950s three new housing estates had been built on both sides of the river to replace sub-standard homes. However, even in the 1960s, Winsford could be described as "one long line of mainly terraced houses from the station to Salterswall." The town experienced a major expansion in the late 1960s and 1970s, with its designation as an expanded town under the
Town Development Act 1952 to take excess
'overspill' population from Liverpool. This saw the development of two new industrial areas on both sides of the town, new estates of council and private housing and a new shopping centre with a library, sports centre, civic hall and doctors' surgeries. However, the town's population did not grow as much as planned, so the new civic buildings were too large for the population.
Vale Royal Borough Council was formed in 1974, covering Winsford, Northwich and a large rural area of mid-Cheshire. In 1991, the council moved its main office from Northwich to a purpose-built headquarters in Winsford, which since April 2009 has been used by its successor authority
Cheshire West and Chester Council. The same building also houses
Winsford Town Council. Since then, both Cheshire Fire Service (in 1997) and Cheshire Police (in 2003) have moved headquarters from the county town of
Chester to Winsford. ==Governance==