- Lees, Greater Manchester
infobox UK place
country = England
latitude= 53.5389
longitude= -2.0696
official_name= Lees
population= 10,132 (2001 Census)
metropolitan_borough= Oldham
metropolitan_county=Greater Manchester
region= North West England
constituency_westminster= Oldham East and Saddleworth
post_town= OLDHAM
postcode_area= OL
postcode_district= OL4
dial_code= 0161
os_grid_reference= SD955045
static_
static_image_caption=Lees village centre
london_distance=Lees (pop. 10,100) is a village within the
Metropolitan Borough of Oldham , inGreater Manchester , England.cite web |url=http://www.gmcro.co.uk/guides/gazette/gazframe.htm |title=A select gazetteer of local government areas, Greater Manchester County|publisher=Greater Manchester County Record Office |accessdate=2008-06-17|date=2003-07-31] It lies amongst thePennines on elevated ground on the east side of theRiver Medlock , convert|1.8|mi|km|1 east ofOldham , and convert|8.2|mi|km|1 east-northeast ofManchester . Historically, Lees has been positioned on theLancashire side of the ancient county boundary with theWest Riding of Yorkshire , giving rise to a part of Lees being known locally as County End.Lees is believed to have obtained its name in the 14th century from John de Leghes, a retainer of the local
Lord of the Manor . For centuries, Lees was a conglomeration of hamlets, ecclesiastically linked with the township ofAshton-under-Lyne . Farming was the main industry of this rural area, with locals supplementing their incomes byhand-loom weaving in thedomestic system . At the beginning of the 19th century Lees had obtained a reputation for its mineral springs; ambitions to develop Lees into aspa town were thwarted by an unplanned process of urbanisation caused by introduction and profitability oftextile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution .cite web|url=http://www.spinningtheweb.org.uk/a_display.php?irn=239&QueryPage=&lang=|title= Oldham Towns; Lees|publisher=spinningtheweb.org.uk|author=Manchester City Council |accessdate=2007-01-05] cite web|url=http://www.visitoldham.co.uk/heritage/lees.htm|title=The Oldham Boroughs: Lees|date=|accessdate=2008-06-25|publisher=visitoldham.co.uk]Lees expanded into a factory village during the late-19th century on the back of neighbouring Oldham's booming cotton spinning sector. The former
Lees Urban District , an area of convert|0.4|sqmi|km2|0, [cite web|url=http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/data_cube_table_page.jsp?data_theme=T_POP&data_cube=N_AREA_A&u_id=10002862&c_id=10001043&add=Y|publisher=visionofbritain.org.uk|accessdate=2008-06-24|title=Lees UD: Area (acres)] had elevencotton mill s at its manufacturing zenith. Notable people associated with Lees includeHelen Bradley , a 20th century oil painter, andLaurence Chaderton , one of the original translators of theAuthorized King James Version of the Bible.History
The settlement dates back to the 14th century, and is thought to have been named after former retainer of the manor, John de Leghes.
Lees was one of the localities which, on 16 August 1819, sent a contingent of parishioners to the mass public demonstration at
Manchester , now known as thePeterloo Massacre . [cite book |first=Joyce |last=Marlow |title=The Peterloo Massacre |publisher=Rapp & Whiting |date=1969 |isbn=0-85391-122-3|page=118] In the week before Peterloo (an assembly demanding the reform of parliamentary representation), weavers in Lees had paraded through the village with a large black flag adorned with the slogans "no Borough Mongering, Taxation Without Representation is Unject and Tyrannical," and "Unite and be Free, "Equal Representation or Death". The growing unrest in the village prompted one alarmed inhabitant to write to theHome Office . [cite book|title=Radical Expression: Political Language, Ritual, and Symbol in England, 1790-1850|first=James A. |last=Epstein |publisher=Oxford University Press |date= 1994|page=75|isbn=978-0195065503]In the late-18th century, a natural
chalybeate spring was discovered in the locality, and by the-early 19th century the village gained a reputation for these "fashionable" mineral springs. In the early-19th century, water from Lees Spa, had become fashionable to drink, so much so, that it was bottled and sold around the country. In the month of August 1821, 60,000 people visited Lees Spa. Ambitions to develop Lees into aspa town - "Lancashire's very ownHarrogate " - were thwarted by an unplanned process of urbanisation caused by introduction and profitability oftextile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution . TheIndustrial Revolution brought cotton spinning to Lees in the form of eleven mills, which by the late-19th century, had changed the character of the village completely.Lees has grown in size recently in terms of both amenities and residential population, in its role as a commuter village for people working in Oldham and
West Yorkshire . It is home to commercial and distribution companies. The main street is notable for the number ofpublic house s in close proximity.Governance
Lees (or Hey) was within the Knott Lanes division of the
parish and township ofAshton-under-Lyne , and hundred of Salford. In 1859 aLocal Board of Health (at first known as Lees-with-Crossbank, subsequently as Lees) was established for the Lees area. This area was in the Ashton under Lynepoor law Union .Between 1894 and 1974, Lees constituted the
Lees Urban District , in the administrative county ofLancashire ; the Local Board became the Lees Urban District Council. As the district was situated entirely between theCounty Borough of Oldham and the West Riding of Yorkshire, it constituted an exclave of the administrative county of Lancashire. In 1911 part of the Urban District was added to thecivil parish ofCrossbank , but in 1914 Crossbank was absorbed into the Lees Urban District.In 1974 the Lees Urban District was amagamated with six other local government districts, to from the newly created
Metropolitan Borough of Oldham within themetropolitan county ofGreater Manchester .The Saddleworth & Lees area committee meets regularly to discuss the progress of the villages.
Geography
The village consists of a small cluster of shops and businesses on either side of the A669 Lees Road, surrounded by some
terraced house s and some small estates. Lees is separated from the main conurbation of Oldham by a small amount ofgreen belt land in the valley of Leesbrook, on either bank of theRiver Medlock .A part of Lees is known locally as County End; Springhead in
Saddleworth forms a contiguous urban area with Lees, though the border between the two forms part of the ancient county boundary betweenLancashire and theWest Riding of Yorkshire .Crossbank is an area of Lees.Transport
Lees is accessed on the roads on the A669 from Saddleworth and Oldham. Along this road, there are frequent buses running towards Oldham and Manchester on
First Manchester 's 180 and 184 services. Other destinations which can be reached from Lees on the bus are Huddersfield, Hyde, Middleton, Mossley, Saddleworth and Stalybridge.There is also no train station.
Lees railway station closed in 1955, followed by the complete closure of the line in 1964. [An Illustrated History of Oldham's Railways by John Hooper (ISBN 1-871608-19-8)]Notable people
Notable people associated with Lees include Springhead-born
Annie Kenney , one of the firstsuffragette s to be imprisoned worked at Lees's Leesbrook Mill. Annie's younger, Lees-born sister Jessie Kenney was also a campaigner forwomen's suffrage in the United Kingdom . By the age of 21 Jessie was theWomen's Social and Political Union 's youngest organiser. [cite book|title=Women's Suffrage Movement: A Reference Guide 1866-1928 |date= 1999|publisher= Routledge|last= Crawford|first=Elizabeth|page=319-320|isbn=978-1841420318]Laurence Chaderton , one of the original translators of theAuthorized King James Version of theBible was a native of Lees.Phil Woolas MP lives in the locality. [Citation | last =Woolas, P.|title=Letters to the editor; Woolas lives locally|newspaper=Oldham Evening Chronicle |pages=6|year=2007|date=2007-07-27 ]Helen Bradley was born in Lees in 1900. [cite web|url=http://www.helenbradley.co.uk/originals/index.htm|title=Originals: Helen Bradley|author=Whittle, Stephen|date=|accessdate=2008-06-26|publisher=helenbradley.co.uk]References
External links
* [http://www.visitoldham.co.uk/heritage/lees.htm www.visitoldham.co.uk] , A brief history of Lees.
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