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Cheshire |
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CheshireCounty of northwest England, which has contained the unitary authorities Halton and Warrington since April 1998. Area2,320 sq km/896 sq mi.Towns and citiesChester (administrative headquarters), Crewe, Congleton, MacclesfieldPhysicalchiefly a fertile plain, with the Pennines in the east; rivers: Mersey, Dee, Weaver; a sandstone ridge extending south through central Cheshire together with Delamere Forest constitute a woodland and heath landscapeFeaturessalt mines and geologically rich former copper workings at Alderley Edge (in use from Roman times until the 1920s); Little Moreton Hall (15th century); Tatton Park Mansion (1790); Old Hall (1520); Chester Roman Amphitheatre (the largest in the UK); Chester Cathedral (1092), Chester Zoo (1930), Chester Races (16th-century; the oldest in the UK); discovery of Lindow Man, the first ‘bogman’ to be found in mainland Britain, dating from around 500 BC; Museum of the Chemical Industry on Spike Island; Quarry Bank Mill (1784) at Styal is a cotton-industry museumAgriculturearable farming in the north; cheese (at one time produced entirely in farmhouses) and dairy products in the centre and south of the countyIndustriesaerospace industry, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, salt, textiles, vehicles, oil, financial services, tourismFamous peopleCharles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll), Elizabeth GaskellPopulation(2001) 673,800
Cheshire
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| `It's a Cheshire cat,' said the Duchess, `and that's why. I want to take you first to see a remarkable relic of Mercia, and then we'll go to Liverpool through what is called 'The Great Vale of Cheshire. His breakfast consisted of a side-dish, a broiled fish with Reading sauce, a scarlet slice of roast beef garnished with mushrooms, a rhubarb and gooseberry tart, and a morsel of Cheshire cheese, the whole being washed down with several cups of tea, for which the Reform is famous. |
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