Tarporley
Tarporley is a large village and civil parish in Cheshire, England. The civil parish also contains the village of Rhuddall Heath. Tarporley is bypassed by the A49 and A51 roads.
At the 2011 census, the population was 2,614.
History
Tarporley is near the site of a prehistoric settlement. Several prehistoric artefacts have been discovered within close proximity of the present-day village: a Neolithic stone axe, a flint scraper and a Bronze Age barbed and tanged arrow head.It is listed in the Domesday Book as Torpelei, which has been translated as meaning “a pear wood near a hill called Torr”. For this reason, Tarporley Church of England Primary School has a pear tree for its emblem. However, the exact origins and meaning are unclear. The name has also been suggested to mean "a peasant's wood/clearing", derived from the Old English words þorpere and lēah
In 1066, the settlement was owned by Wulfgeat of Madeley and was worth one pound. Twenty years later, under the ownership of Gilbert the Hunter, Tarporley's value had halved, to ten shillings. This small agricultural settlement comprised eight households. The Domesday entry suggests that Tarporley was one of many townships still recovering from the devastation caused by the Normans' Harrying of the North in 1069–70.
Governance
The parish council comprises 12 locally elected members.An electoral ward of the same name exists. This ward stretches north-east to the Budworths with a total population at the 2011 census of 4,398.
Civic history
Tarporley was an ancient parish, appearing in the Domesday Book of 1086 in the hundred of Rushton, but by the late 12th century it had become part of Eddisbury Hundred. The parish included four townships, being Eaton, Rushton, Utkinton and a Tarporley township that covered the main settlement and adjoining areas. In 1863 the whole parish was declared to be a local government district, governed by a local board.Such districts were reconstituted as urban districts in 1894. Tarporley Urban District Council met at the Public Hall on Forest Road. The urban district was abolished in 1936, when the area was split into three rural parishes called Tarporley, Rushton and Utkinton within the Northwich Rural District. Northwich Rural District was abolished in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972. From 1 April 1974 Tarporley formed part of the borough of Vale Royal, within Cheshire and was included in the new unitary authority of Cheshire West and Chester on 1 April 2009.
Political representation
Tarporley is part of the parliamentary constituency of Chester South and Eddisbury, represented since the 2024 general election by Aphra Brandreth of the Conservative Party. It was previously part of the Eddisbury constituency, which had been represented by Conservative Party MPs since its re-establishment in 1983, apart from a brief period in 2019 when the sitting MP Antoinette Sandbach had the Conservative whip removed and eventually sat as a Liberal Democrat before losing her seat to the Conservative Edward Timpson in the 2019 general election.Geography and transport
Tarporley is bypassed by the A49 and A51 roads. The village was once served by Beeston Castle and Tarporley railway station on the North Wales Coast Line between Crewe and Chester, more than two miles from the village; the line remains open but the station closed in April 1966.A local bus service, route 84, is provided by Stagecoach in Lancashire.
Education
Tarporley has two schools: Tarporley High School and Tarporley Church of England Primary School.Brook Farm School was a state special education boarding school located in the village that closed in 2001 and was demolished in 2013.
Culture
Established in 1983, through The British Council, Tarporley is twinned with the Breton village of Bohars, near Brest, France.Tarporley Hunt Club, the oldest surviving hunt club in England, meets in the village every Christmas.
Notable people
- Maria Elizabetha Jacson, writer of books on botany, lived locally after 1787, when her father was local rector.
- Henry Shaw, taxidermist working in Shropshire, but born locally.
- Dominic Cotton, trained and worked as an actor, now a London journalist.
- Tom Oliphant, racing driver.
- Will Goodwin, footballer who has played over 80 games in the English Football League.