RepositoryCheshire Record Office
LevelCollection (Fonds)
ReferenceLGM
TitleMacclesfield Poor Law Union
Date19th century-20th century
DescriptionIncludes workhouse records. Miscellaneous committee minutes 1880-1922, papers conceming erection of workhouse etc 1836-1904; workhouse records (Macclesfield Workhouse, from 1940 West Park Hospital): registers of births, baptisms and deaths 1848-1949, inmates 1849-1940, admission and discharge 1863-1940, children's admission and discharge 1913-33, military patients' admission and discharge 1914-25, creeds 1885-1933; workhouse dietaries 1871-1939, typescript history of workhouse c.1888
Administrative HistoryThe Poor Law Amendment Act, 1834, removed the responsibility for the relief of the poor from the parish, and the overseers of the poor, to boards of guardians appointed to administer groups of parishes in poor law unions. These boards, which were responsible initially to the central Poor Law Commission, and, from 1847 to the Poor Law Board, were empowered to build union workhouses. Additional duties not related to the poor law were, from time to time, allocated to the guardians. These included the registration of births, marriages and deaths from 1837, vaccination from 1840, rate assessment from 1862, nuisance removal from 1860, public health as rural sanitary authorities from 1872, school attendance from 1876 and infant life protection from 1897. Rating duties were transferred to the district councils in 1925. The poor law unions in Cheshire, set up in 1836, were Bucklow (Altrincham prior to 1895), Chester, Congleton, Macclesfield, Nantwich, Northwich, Runcorn, Stockport, Tarvin (Great Boughton prior to 1871) and Wirral. There were several boundary changes, generally involving townships lying on either side of the county boundaries. Unions were abolished in 1930, following the Local Government Act, 1929, their functions passing to the county council, through the Public Assistance Committee. Responsible to this committee were eight local area guardians' committees, appointed to supervise the institutions in each district. Finally, in 1948, the poor law system was abolished, hospitals being nationalised under the National Health Service and the local authority remaining responsible for the care of children and old people. The continuity of administration before and after 1930, and in some institutions after 1948 is reflected in the records.

Macclesfield Poor-Law Union was formed on 26 September 1836, and included the following parishes and townships: Adlington, Alderley Edge (from 1894), Birtles, Bollington [nr. Macclesfied], Bosley, Butley, Capesthorne, Chelford, Chorley [nr. Wilmslow], Eaton [nr. Congleton], Fallibroome, Gawsworth, Great Warford, Henbury cum Pexall, Hurdsfield, Kerridge (1894-1900), Kettleshulme, Lower Withington, Lyme Handley, Macclesfield, Macclesfield Forest, Marton [nr. Congleton], Mottram St. Andrew, Nether Alderley, Newton [nr. Prestbury], North Rode, Old Withington, Over Alderley, Pott Shrigley, Poynton (until 1881), Poynton with Worth (from 1881), Prestbury, Rainow, Siddington, Snelson, Sutton [nr. Macclesfield], Taxal, Tytherington, Upton [nr. Macclesfield], Wildboarclough, Wincle, Woodford, Worth (until 1881), and Yeardsley cum Whaley.

The Union Workhouse was opened in 1845 at Prestbury Road, Macclesfield. After 1930 it was known as West Park Hospital, or the West Park Branch of Macclesfield District General Hpsital (see also NHM 1). It closed in 1994.
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