Hotels in Salford Manchester

Hotels in the city of Salford Manchester are often required for tourists who need accommodation in the city. Some tourists may want to visit the city to explore the Greater Manchester area. Or they may want to see the city of Salford. Some may want to see the culture, the entertainment, the historic areas and the landmarks and landscapes of the area. Some may want to go to Salford to study, or see entertainment, or sports events. Mnay tourists or people who want to visit the city want hotels in Manchester Salford. Some tourists want Salford hotels Manchester

Hotels in Salford Manchester

Salford lies at the heart of the City of Salford, a metropolitan borough of Greater Manchester, in North West England. Salford is located by a meander of the River Irwell, which forms its boundary with the city of Manchester to the east. Together with neighbouring towns to the west, Salford forms the local government district of the City of Salford, which is administered from neighbouring Swinton. The borough of Salford was granted city status in 1926.

At 205 miles northwest of London, Salford stands around 160 feet above sea level, on relatively flat ground to the west of a meander of the River Irwell – the city's main topographical feature. In 1904 Salford was recorded as "within a great loop of the River Irwell ... roughly three quarters of a mile from north to south and one mile from east to west". Salford is contiguous with Manchester, and has been described "in participation of its trade, and for all other practical purposes, an integral part of it; presents a near resemblance to it in streets and edifices; contains several public buildings and a great public park, which belong fully more to Manchester than to itself". Greengate, the original centre of Salford, is located at a fording point on the river opposite Manchester Cathedral.

Salford's built environment comprises a range of building stock. Some inner-city areas are noted for chronic urban decay. Salford's housing stock is characterised by an oversupply of older, smaller terraced housing, and flatted accommodation that declined in value during the late-20th century. As demand fell, it left many owners in negative equity and often without a means to maintain their homes in reasonable condition. Subsequently much of the built environment is poor.

The Irwell, sourced at Cliviger in Lancashire, flows from the north and forms the statutory boundary with the City of Manchester to the east. Flooding has historically been a problem and the Irwell has seen much modification along its course in Salford with some bends being removed, channelisation, and the construction of levees and bank reinforcements. Salford has expanded along the river valley to the north and south and on to higher ground on the valley sides at Irlams o' th' Height and Higher Broughton.

Historically a part of Lancashire, Salford's early history is marked by its status as the judicial seat of the ancient hundred of Salfordshire, to which it lends its name. It was granted a charter by Ranulf, Earl of Chester, about 1230 which made Salford a free borough. During the early stages of its growth, Salford was of greater cultural and commercial importance than its neighbour Manchester, although most contemporary sources agree that since the Industrial Revolution this position has been reversed.

Salford became a major factory town and inland port during the 18th and 19th centuries. Cotton and silk spinning and weaving in local mills provided Salford with a strong economy. Salford Quays was a principal dockyard of the Manchester Ship Canal. Industrial activities declined during the 20th century however, causing a local economic depression. The city subsequently became one of contrasts, with regenerated inner-city areas like Salford Quays next to some of the most socially deprived and violent areas in England.

The name of Salford derives from the Anglo-Saxon Sealhford = "sallow-tree ford", in reference to the sallows or willow (Latin salix) trees that grow alongside the banks of the River Irwell. The ford was about where Victoria Bridge is today. Willow trees are still found in Lower Broughton. Salford appears in the Pipe Roll of 1169 as Sauford and in the Lancashire Inquisitions of 1226 as "Sainford".

In 1228, the town of Salford received from King Henry III the right to hold a market and an annual fair. During the years of 1230 - 1232, Ranulf de Blundeville, Earl of Chester, granted the charter by which the town became a free borough, a charter by which Salford was governed until the Manchester and Salford Police Act 1791. There are references in official records to the Manor of Salford being one of the possessions of the Duchy of Lancaster. Since Henry IV's accession in 1399, the Duchy has been held by The Crown, and the Sovereign has thereby always been the Lord of the Manor of Salford.

Salford has a history of textile processing that pre-dates the Industrial Revolution. It had a cloth hall at Greengate and a considerable trade in the production and finishing of woollen goods and fustians before the dominance of cotton. There were other cottage industries, including clogging, cobbling, weaving and brewing during this time. It was textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution that had a profound effect on the population, urbanisation as well as socioeconomic and cultural conditions of Salford however.

Some visitors to the city want to see the Salford hotels, and stay at hotels in Salford.

Eccles is a town within the metropolitan borough of the City of Salford, in Greater Manchester, England. It is around 4 miles to the west of Manchester city centre. Historically a part of Lancashire, Eccles was formerly an important industrial centre on the Manchester Ship Canal. Eccles is perhaps best known today for being credited as the "birthplace" of the Eccles Cake. The early history of Eccles appears to have been uneventful. There was a skirmish at Woolden during the English Civil War, and the Jacobite army passed through in 1745, in its advance and subsequent retreat. Coal mines have been worked in the area since at least the 16th century, encouraged in the 18th century by the construction of the Bridgewater Canal. The construction of the Manchester Ship Canal in the late 19th century required that James Brindley's original aqueduct on the canal be replaced by a metal aquedeuct, which could be swung to allow ships to pass along the canal; it weighs 1,450 tons, including 800 tons of water.

Salford Quays is an area of Salford, in Greater Manchester, England, near the end of the Manchester Ship Canal. Previously the site of Salford Docks. The Salford Docks were built by the same company that built the Manchester Ship Canal and was intended to serve the canal and act as a dock for the cargo being moved along the canal. Many tourists want Salford quays hotels. They may require a cheap hotels at Salford quays. They may want to see the views. So some visitors to the city want hotels in Manchester Salford quays.
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