Frodsham
Frodsham is a market town, civil parish as well as selecting ward in the unitary authority of Cheshire West and also Chester and the ritualistic area of Cheshire, England. Its population was 8,982 in 2001, boosting to 9,077 at the 2011 Census. It is approximately 3 miles (5 km) south of Runcorn, 16 miles (26 km) south of Liverpool, as well as 28 miles (45 km) southwest of Manchester. The River Weaver runs to its northeast as well as on the west it ignores the tidewater of the River Mersey. The A56 roadway and also the Chester-- Manchester railway line travel through the town, and the M56 motorway passes to the northwest. In middle ages times Frodsham was a crucial district and also port belonging to the Earls of Chester. Its parish church, St. Laurence's, still displays proof of a structure present in the 12th century in its nave and also is referenced in Domesday Book. A market is held each Thursday, as well as Frodsham's stability as a trading centre was stressed by the presence of the "big five" clearing banks and a number of building societies, though the branches of HSBC as well as NatWest have lately shut. Development in the community's stores and facilities with alcohol permits appears via the current (post-2002) opening or modernisation of contemporary-style bar/restaurants, take-away food stores as well as public houses, and in the continued presence of small, specialised, organisations running from town-centre stores.