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Mow Cop information


Mow Cop
Mow Cop Castle
Mow Cop Castle, a folly
Mow Cop is located in Staffordshire
Mow Cop
Mow Cop
Location within Staffordshire
Mow Cop is located in Cheshire
Mow Cop
Mow Cop
Location within Cheshire
OS grid referenceSJ855573
Civil parish
  • Odd Rode
  • Kidsgrove
District
  • Newcastle-under-Lyme
Unitary authority
  • Cheshire East
Shire county
  • Staffordshire
Ceremonial county
  • Cheshire
Region
  • North West
  • West Midlands
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townSTOKE-ON-TRENT
Postcode districtST7
Dialling code01782
PoliceCheshire
 
  • Staffordshire
FireCheshire
 
  • Staffordshire
AmbulanceNorth West
 West Midlands
UK Parliament
  • Congleton
  • Staffordshire Moorlands
List of places
UK
England
Cheshire
53°06′47″N 2°13′03″W / 53.112973°N 2.217582°W / 53.112973; -2.217582

Mow Cop /ˈmˈkɒp/ is a village split between Cheshire and Staffordshire, and therefore divided between the North West and West Midlands regions of England. It is 24 miles (39 km) south of Manchester and 6 miles (9.7 km) north of Stoke-on-Trent, on a steep hill of the same name rising to 335 metres (1,099 ft) above sea level.[1] The village is at the edge of the southern Pennines, with the Cheshire Plain directly to the west. For population details taken at the 2011 census, see Kidsgrove. The Cheshire section is the highest settlement within the county of Cheshire.

  1. ^ "Mow Cop – Trig Point". Hill Bagging. Retrieved 29 April 2016.

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Mow Cop

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Mow Cop /ˈmaʊˈkɒp/ is a village split between Cheshire and Staffordshire, and therefore divided between the North West and West Midlands regions of England...

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Mow Cop Castle

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Mow Cop Castle is a folly at Mow Cop in the civil parish of Odd Rode, Cheshire, England. It is designated as a Grade II listed building on the National...

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Rode Hall

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bellcote, with an ogee dome. Mow Cop Castle is an elaborate, Gothic Revival folly, built two miles from Rode Hall, at Mow Cop, land previously belonging...

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Mow Cop and Scholar Green railway station

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Mow Cop and Scholar Green railway station was a station on the North Staffordshire Railway between Stoke-on-Trent and Congleton. It served the village...

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Biddulph Moor

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the Staffordshire Moorlands district in England. It is very similar to Mow Cop which is located on the other side of the valley of Biddulph. It is semi-rural...

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Hugh Bourne

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field at School Farm, Mow Cop, about a quarter of a mile south west of Mow Cop Folly (a mock castle ruins built in 1754). Mow Cop, on the Staffordshire–Cheshire...

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Staffordshire

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Bourne, a native of Stoke-on-Trent, at a public gathering in the village of Mow Cop. He originally followed the Wesleyan form of Methodism but in 1801 he reformed...

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Biddulph

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Survey maps as Biddulph. Biddulph is in a valley between the ridges of Mow Cop to the east and Biddulph Moor to the west. It encompasses the hamlets of...

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Scholar Green

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settlements of Kent Green and The Bank, it is situated on the A34 near Mow Cop, Alsager, Rode Heath, Butt Lane and Kidsgrove and in the unitary authority...

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Kidsgrove

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Newchapel & Mow Cop are in the Stoke-on-Trent North Parliamentary Constituency represented by Jonathan Gullis and whilst parts of Mow Cop currently sit...

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South Cheshire Way

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Brook, near Whitchurch, runs through farmland; the eastern section from Mow Cop, near Biddulph, runs through low hills. The footpath is waymarked with...

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Folly

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Sutton-in-Craven, North Yorkshire Luttrell's Tower, Fawley, Hampshire Mow Cop Castle, Staffordshire Old John, Bradgate Park, Leicestershire Painshill...

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Primitive Methodism in the United Kingdom

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about 1810 until the Methodist Union in 1932. It emerged from a revival at Mow Cop in Staffordshire. Primitive meant "simple" or "relating to an original...

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List of National Trust properties in England

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Yarn Market, Dunster Biddulph Grange Downs Banks Kinver Edge Letocetum Mow Cop Castle Moseley Old Hall South Peak Estate Shugborough Hall Angel Corner...

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Sztafeta

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became so popular that he decided to gather four of them in one volume, C.O.P. Ognisko siły, published in 1938. The book was immediately sold out, as...

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Camp meeting

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On Sunday, 31 May 1807, the first Camp Meeting was held in England at Mow Cop. At the time, Wesleyan Methodists disapproved and subsequently expelled...

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List of places in Staffordshire

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Mill Meece, Milton, Milwich, Moreton, Morrilow Heath, Mount Pleasant, Mow Cop, Mucklestone. Meir park Meir heath Newborough, Newcastle-under-Lyme, Newchapel...

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Methodism

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largest of these were the Primitive Methodists, deriving from a revival at Mow Cop in Staffordshire, the Bible Christians, and the Methodist New Connexion...

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1807

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IV. May 31 – Primitive Methodism originates in an All Day of Prayer at Mow Cop, in the north midlands of England. June 9 – The Duke of Portland is chosen...

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Fustian

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fringe of the Lancashire cotton region, such as Congleton in Cheshire, Mow Cop in Staffordshire and Heptonstall in Calderdale. From 1800 to 1850 it was...

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Staffordshire Way

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Association to mark the Association's 60th anniversary in 1995. Starting at Mow Cop Castle on gritstone hills on the edge of the Peak District in North Staffordshire...

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Primitive Methodist Church

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camp meetings, and held a fourteen-hour camp meeting on May 31, 1807, at Mow Cop on the Staffordshire and Cheshire border, which resulted in many converts...

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Old John

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of Anstey to build him the mock ruin, which had strong similarities to Mow Cop, Staffordshire. It was adapted in the mid-19th century by the seventh Earl...

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