Ringway

Ringway can mean:

  • Ringway, Greater Manchester, a civil parish within the city of Manchester, England
    • Manchester Airport, initially known as Ringway Airport, located near Ringway.
      • RAF Ringway, the predecessor air base to Manchester (né Ringway) Airport
  • Manchester Airport, initially known as Ringway Airport, located near Ringway.
    • RAF Ringway, the predecessor air base to Manchester (né Ringway) Airport
  • RAF Ringway, the predecessor air base to Manchester (né Ringway) Airport
  • London Ringways, a series of proposed ring roads
  • See also

  • Route 1 (Iceland), a road all round the edge of Iceland
  • Ringway, Manchester

    Coordinates: 53°21′25″N 2°16′19″W / 53.357°N 2.272°W / 53.357; -2.272

    Ringway is a civil parish on the southern border of Manchester, England. Historically in Cheshire, it is the only civil parish in the city of Manchester. The population at the 2011 census was 103.

    History

    The name appears to come from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) Hringhæg meaning "circular or enclosing hedged enclosure".

    Ringway Chapel is on Wilmslow Road near the south edge of Manchester Airport.

  • 1173: First mention of Ullerwood Castle, which is now in Ringway parish. It is a shell keep; at that time it was owned by Hamon de Massey.
  • 1515: First mention of 'Ringey Chapel', a chapel of ease in Bowdon parish.
  • English Civil War (1642–1651): Dissenters started using the Ringway Chapel.
  • 1721 or shortly before: John Crewe of Crewe Hall inherited the Lordship of Ringway.
  • 1721 Dissenters were ejected from the chapel, and moved to a barn, and in 1723 re-established themselves at Hale.
  • About 1736: Ringway Chapel was demolished, and replaced by a new plain red brick building. According to the St Wilfrid's Mobberley Christening Records Abraham Johnson was baptised on 24 October 1736 "the first Sunday after it was finished by me, Faithful Meaykin (curate of St Wilfrid's) who preached the first sermon"
  • Ringway 4

    Ringway 4 was the outermost of the series of four London Ringways, ring roads planned in the 1960s to circle London at various distances from the city centre. They were part of a comprehensive scheme developed by the Greater London Council (GLC) to alleviate traffic congestion on the city's road system by providing high speed motorway-standard roads within the capital linking a series of radial roads taking traffic into and out of the city. Most of the scheme was cancelled in 1973.

    Ringway 4 was planned as a new rural motorway/dual carriageway connecting a number of towns around the capital including Sevenoaks, Redhill/Reigate, Leatherhead, Staines, Uxbridge, Watford, St Albans, Hatfield, Hertford and Hoddesdon.

    Despite its name, the route of Ringway 4 did not make a complete circuit of London. It was, instead, U-shaped. The planned route started at a junction with the M20 motorway (then also being planned) near Wrotham in Kent and ran west as motorway around the capital to Hunton Bridge near Watford. From Watford the road was to become dual carriageway heading east until it met Ringway 3 near Navestock in Essex. The designation for the motorway section was M25.

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