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The first full Cheshire Police Committee met at the Crewe Arms Hotel, Crewe, on 3 February 1857 and the new Cheshire Constabulary was officially formed on 20 April 1857. [3] The first headquarters was established at 4 Seller Street, Chester. In 1862 this office was removed to 1 Egerton Street, Chester and remained there until 1870, when it was ...
8 February: Darren Martland is confirmed as Chief Constable of Cheshire Constabulary. Cheshire PCC. 7 February: Horse racing across Britain is suspended after horses from a stable in Cholmondeley test positive for equine influenza. BBC, Cheshire Live. 3 February: Demonstrators rally outside Cheshire Constabulary headquarters in Winsford ...
It was created as a merger of the Manchester City Police and Salford City Police and covered the adjacent county boroughs of Manchester and Salford. It was amalgamated with parts of the Lancashire Constabulary, Cheshire Constabulary and West Yorkshire Police under the Local Government Act 1972 to form Greater Manchester Police.
It is the second-largest settlement in Cheshire after Warrington, with a population of nearly 80,000 in 2011, and as of 2019 serves as Cheshire West and Chester's administrative headquarters. It was founded as the Roman fort of Deva Victrix in 79 AD, one of the main army camps in Roman Britain , and later a major civilian settlement.
For the 2023 Periodic Review of Westminster constituencies, which redrew the constituency map ahead of the 2024 United Kingdom general election, the Boundary Commission for England opted to combine Cheshire with Merseyside as a sub-region of the North West Region, with the creation of two cross-county boundary constituencies of Ellesmere Port ...
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The etymology of Frodsham's name is not entirely clear. It is called Frotesham in the Domesday Book. [2] A literal translation of the Old English would give personal name of Frod or an old spelling of ford, and ham which means a village or homestead; hence Frod's village or the village on the ford (ford-ham).
John Dwyer is a former police officer who served as the Conservative Party Cheshire Police and Crime Commissioner from 2021 to 2024, and previously from 2012 to 2016. Dwyer was the first person to hold the post and was elected on 15 November 2012. [1] He was defeated by the Labour Party candidate David Keane at the 2016 election.