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Stoke-on-Trent Districts: Meir


 

Meir,  Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire.

Situated at the junction of the main A50 road from Derby and Uttoxeter through Stoke-on-Trent and the minor A520 road from Stone to Leek.  

The village of Meir has always been a gateway in to North Staffordshire and the Potteries area.....

1 .... in Roman times it was situated on the Roman road Rykeneld Street which ran from Derby/Uttoxeter, through Meir to Chesterton and then onto Chester.

2 .... the 1087 Domesday book records  Normacot, Weston (Coyney) and Caverswall which all centre on Meir. The village of Meir was located on the boundary of the Pirehill and Totmonslow Hundreds. 

3 .... in 1223 Henry de Audley granted land to the monks of Hulton Abbey, this included land in Normancote (became Normacot Grange) and monks passed through the village of Meir on their way to the Grange at Normacot.

4 .... today the A50 major trunk road enters the city at Meir.

The following maps show Mearlane end (Meer Lane), Meare (Meer) and Normacot Grange.



Plot's map of North Staffordshire c.1670
showing Mearlane end
- click map for large view -

The development of the footpath and tracks developed in this area.........
"Tracks led south-eastward from Meare Lane End to Stone and northward over Sandford Hill to Hanley, Adderley Green, Leek, and the north-east of the county by the 18th century.  The turnpiking of the Newcastle to Uttoxeter road under an Act of 1759, of the road to Stone under an Act of 1771"
 



William Yates Map of Staffordshire 1775
showing Meer and Meer Lane

- click map for large view -

 


1539 Muster Roll - an indication of the importance of Meir was the number of able men it could muster in time of need....

In 1539, Henry, Lord of Stafford, came to Penkhull and inspected the men over 16 years old who were able to serve in King Henry VIII's wars with France. The muster roll covering Pirehill Hundred, listed several local settlements and the number of men they could supply. Trentham had 35 able men, Meir had 33, Fenton and Longton 22 men, Norton 16, Penkhull 18 and Stoke 4; Fulford and Great Fenton 44 men, Tunstall 31 and Hanley 9.


"The principal road through Fenton is the road from Uttoxeter to Newcastle which crosses the area as King Street and City Road.
This follows the course of the Roman road called Ryknield Street as far as the junction of Vivian Road and King Street where it inclines westwards and runs directly to Stoke Bridge.
The road occurs as a highway in 13thcentury records.  It was subsequently turnpiked under an Act of 1759;  the toll house for this stretch was situated first at Meir and was replaced by a toll house on the Longton boundary at the Foley under an Act of 1763." 

 A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 8 (1963), pp. 205-224.



"..... the wider of the two valleys is the route of a Roman road from Derby and has long been one of the main ways of access into North Staffordshire from Derbyshire. It was on this road, roughly at the point where the Anchor Brook and the stream from Goldenhill meet, that the hamlet of Lane End or Meare Lane End grew up in the late 17th century under the influence of coal and ironstone mining and ironworking.

In 1666 13 houses in Longton were chargeable to Hearth Tax and 12 in Meare Lane End.  Meare Lane End was mentioned c. 1680 by Gregory King who noted that there were 5 or 6 houses in Longton itself.  Tracks led south-eastward from Meare Lane End to Stone and northward over Sandford Hill to Hanley, Adderley Green, Leek, and the north-east of the county by the 18th century.

A History of the County of Stafford: Volume 8 (1963), pp. 224-246.



 

questions / comments / contributions? email: Steve Birks

26 November 2007