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The Municipal Buildings are used as one of the meeting places of Cheshire East Council. [17] The council initially established its main offices in Sandbach, but in 2023 announced plans to make Delamere House in Crewe its main office. [18] Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex visited the Municipal Buildings and met with apprentices on 16 April 2013. [19]
Until the Grand Junction Railway established a railway station in 1837, Crewe was a "tiny township with a few farms". [2] There are only two listed buildings dating from before the arrival of the railway: a much altered farmhouse that probably originated in the 16th century [3] and a timber-framed farmhouse dating from the late 17th century. [4]
Clock Tower, Crewe; Crewe Arms Hotel; Crewe Carriage Sidings; St Michael and All Angels Church, Crewe Green; Crewe Gresty Lane TMD; Crewe Hall; Crewe Heritage Centre; Crewe Municipal Buildings; Crewe railway station; Crewe Stadium; Crewe Works; Christ Church Tower, Crewe; St Barnabas' Church, Crewe; St Peter's Church, Crewe
The Municipal Buildings in Crewe, head office of the Borough Council. Crewe and Nantwich was, from 1974 to 2009, a local government district with borough status in Cheshire, England. It had a population (2001 census) of 111,007. [citation needed] It contained 69 civil parishes and one unparished area: the town of Crewe.
Crewe (/ k r uː / ⓘ) is a railway town and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire East in Cheshire, England.At the 2021 census, the parish had a population of 55,318 and the built-up area had a population of 74,120.
Crewe was formerly a township in the parish of Farndon, [2] in 1866 Crewe became a separate civil parish, [3] on 1 April 2015 the parish was abolished and merged with Farndon. [ 4 ] There is a small Methodist Chapel, founded in 1858, located on Crewe Lane South.
The farm buildings are in brick with a tiled roof. There are three two-storey gabled bays with two single-storey bays with lofts between them. The windows have stone heads and sills. In the lofts are dormers. In the central gable is a panel with the Crewe Estate emblem and the date. [10] [27] II: Farm buildings, Crewe Hall Home Farm
Barthomley was an ancient parish within Cheshire. It contained five townships: Alsager, Balterley, Barthomley itself, Crewe, and Haslington. [3] Of these, Balterley township and (now) civil parish was and is entirely in the neighbouring county of Staffordshire, and Crewe was later renamed Crewe Green to avoid confusion with the neighbouring unparished borough and railway town. [4]