Throughout the year this little village sees a constant flow of visitors, many
of them attracted by its feeling of being somehow apart from the rush and bustle
of modern life, a quiet backwater. Yet it was not always so. For many centuries
there was constant coming and going, as travellers of all kinds came to cross
the Dee by the ford or ferry, and so pass into Wales, or later to take ship to
cross to Ireland or further afield. Gradually this traffic ceased as the Dee
silted up, and with the diversion of the river in 1725, the village became an
isolated farming community, although the ford was still used until 1796. |
It is not known when people first began to settle at this spot, although it is
likely that even in prehistoric times, the ford was part of a route followed by
men going into North Wales in search of the flints they were unable to find in
Cheshire. Some historians believe that the ‘wick’ refers to the creek which
afforded anchorage for small craft, and proves Viking penetration, whilst others
argue that the name derives from the small salt workings which were still there
when Leland wrote his itinerary, in 1539, but have completely disappeared.
However this might be, the first recorded mention is in the Domesday Book where
9 taxable families are listed, quite a prosperous little community. Also
recorded was the fishery which was to remain an important industry throughout
the Middle Ages. |
Traders were probably crossing the ford at Shotwick carrying salt from Cheshire
into North Wales long before the Normans came, salt having been produced in
Britain in Roman times and probably earlier. Certainly by the Middle Ages, a
‘Saltesway’ was well established, being a trading route from the 3 Cheshire
‘wiches’ into Wales. The latter part of this road became known as the King’s
way. “The Kynge’s highway near Chester for our lord the Kynge to leide his hoost
in the time of warre unto Shotwyk ford”.
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 So the trading route became a military highway. Henry III passed through
Shotwick in 1245 leading a great army across the ford into Wales and again
Edward I in 1278 and 1284. Cheshire was important as a major launching point for
operations against the Welsh. These became so much a way of life that the
experienced men of Cheshire were constantly called upon to strengthen the royal
armies on their way into Wales, to Ireland, Scotland or even France. In the
Cheshire records are details of the uniform supplied to these archers in the mid
14th century. There is positive evidence of their activities at Shotwick.
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The community was well placed to defend itself should the Welsh come raiding,
with the narrow creek to the south, the estuary to the west, and the fortified
ancient hall, long since gone, to the north. The church, being the only stone
building, would make a natural refuge. The royal castle of Shotwick, which Hugh
Lupus built during the years following the Norman Conquest and which was
surrounded by the royal estate of Shotwick Park, was a little over a mile away
along the river bank to the south east with the quay beside it. The castle was
maintained as a military stronghold as long as there was a threat from the
Welsh, but later was used as an alternative to St. Werburgh’s Abbey, to give
hospitality to royalty or other distinguished visitors to the area. When John
Leland, Henry VIII’s antiquary passed through Wirral in the mid 16th century he
noted “Shottowick Castelle on the very shore” of the Dee, and close by, the salt
works. By the time William Webb wrote ‘King’s Vale-Royall’ 60 years later, the
castle was already in ruins, “the ruins of a fair castle that stands upon the
brink of Dee within its park”. All that remains is a mound in a field, now well
inland. Some of the stones probably were brought for later repairs at the church
or for walls or farm buildings locally.
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Shotwick Park, being part of the estates of the earl of Chester, passed to the
crown with the earldom in 1237, and in 1312 Edward II created his son, later to
become Edward III, Earl of Chester. We find the Black Prince, son of Edward III,
writing to the Chamberlain of Cheshire on June 26th, 1353, “Make clean and
prepare my houses of Shotwick where I intend to stay and have sport in the
park”. The Prince used the park not only for hunting but also, in conjunction
with his other estates notably Macclesfield, for stock raising, the first known
instance of the association of distant manors for this purpose. Cattle raised in
Cheshire were driven to London for the households of the King and the Prince, or
on occasion to provision armies in Scotland or elsewhere. Shotwick Park passed
out of royal hands when Sir Thomas Wilbraham bought it from Charles II in 1677.
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The fortunes of the village of Shotwick are closely bound up with the river. Its
prosperity was dependent on the fishery, the ford and the ferry in the first
Instance, but gradually as the Dee silted up and large vessels found it
increasingly difficult to navigate as far as Chester and other outports in the
estuary, they would discharge their cargoes at Shotwick. For about a hundred
years, Shotwick took the place of Chester as the major port. At the end of this
period, the Dee having silted up still further, Burton, Neston, Parkgate and
Heswall each in turn handled the shipping which formerly went to Chester.
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The 17th Century brought great changes to the village. In 1641 the plague raged
at Shotwick for more than 4 months, and many dead were buried in the churchyard.
During the Civil War there was some skirmishing, and stones from the churchyard
walls were used to barricade the church doors. Whether as a result of these two
events or as part of the general domestic rebuilding that was going on
throughout the country, it was during the 17th Century that most of the houses
in the village were rebuilt. The old fortified manor was pulled down, and a new
one, which still stands and is now called Shotwick Hall, was built by Joseph
Hockenhull in 1662. |
Shotwick Hall, together with the church, all the other 17th Century houses and
some of the farm buildings which form the village group, is now subject to a
preservation order. The Vicarage, now in private hands, is included. It was
acquired by the church in 1765, being bought with Queen Anne’s Bounty. The
cellars date from the 16th Century, and are said to have been used by smugglers.
The remainder of the house, apart from the South wing which was added later, is
18th Century.
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At the time of the Norman Conquest the manor of Shotwick belonged to the secular
canons of St. Werburgh, and the Shotwick family were subordinate lords under the
Abbots of Chester. During the reign of Edward I the manor came, by marriage,
into the possession of the Hockenhulls of Huxley, Duddon and Tarvin. In 1715 the
family made Shotwick their home until the mid 18th Century when the estate was
mortgaged and sold. Joseph Hockenhull died in 1679 and is buried in the
sanctuary of the church. Mr. Samuel Bennett purchased the estate and bequeathed
it in 1763 to John Nevitt of Great Saughall who then assumed the name of
Bennett. |
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The story of Shotwick began with a road, the ancient ‘Saltesway’, part of which
ran from Shotwick Castle along to the village and on towards Puddington and
thence to Neston. In 1671 and 1675 there were complaints that the effects of
salt and fresh water beating on the bridge and causeway of Shotwick had caused
“the great road leading from Chester to Neston” to become impassable. The bridge
still exists, and parts of the old road have been uncovered and can be seen
alongside the wall on the north side of the churchyard. It continued past the
Vicarage and on past Shotwick Hall. The salt water referred to was the water of
the estuary which washed the banks on which Shotwick stands. The fresh water
exists now only as the little brook which until the time of the reclamation of
the “Sea-land” was a tidal creek.
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Throughout the 18th Century the ford was in continual use, the last recorded
crossing being in 1796, and a hazardous venture it must have been at this time
by all accounts, with the sands shifting so much that new routes had to be
followed constantly between heaps of sand and the deep holes. By the end of the
18th Century the approach to Shotwick from Chester was down the present lane,
leading from the Chester-Parkgate turnpike road which was opened in 1789. The
turnpike Toll-Bar is shown on the 1843 Tithe map between the Yacht Inn and
Woodbank Lane but all trace of it has disappeared. Prior to the opening of the
turnpike road, a six-horsed coach had run from Woodside, Birkenhead, to Chester
and Parkgate three days a week. By the end of the century, what had once been a
winding track through the forest of Wirral, then a rough roadway, became at last
a main highway that linked the parish of Shotwick with Chester and the
Birkenhead ferry.
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A later road to Queensferry, built in the 1830’s, was destined to cut the parish
in half with Woodbank on one side of the road and the church and village on the
other. The old Shotwick parish was later divided into three, the mother parish
and the two daughter parishes of Capenhurst, established in the mid 19th
Century, and Great Saughall, which came into being at the end of the 19th
Century.
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It might be appropriate at this point to mention the horned lady of Shotwick
which is how Mary Davies, born in 1596 in what is now Great Saughall, is
described in a pamphlet in the British Museum. We are told that in her twenties
this lady had two wens on her head which developed into horns. These she later
shed, whereupon another pair grew. She seems to have left Cheshire to cash in on
her misfortune by exhibiting herself at the Swan Inn, Charing Cross in London,
and there is no record of her having returned. |