Free Removal Quote Service for Alsager
Here at MoveHouse.com, we remove the stress of trying to find the perfect removal company in Alsager when you move house.
We match only quality moving companies in Alsager to help you get the very best price and service. It only takes a few seconds to tell us a little about your move and then we do the rest. You will receive up to 5 quotes from Alsager removal companies [who will usually want to visit your property to give you the quote].
Alsager is a town and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire East and the ceremonial county of Cheshire, England, to the north-west of the city of Stoke-on-Trent, and east of the railway town of Crewe. Alsager has a population of 12,578, Going clockwise, starting from the north, the civil parish is bordered by the parishes of Betchton to the north, Church Lawton to the north-east and east, Kidsgrove in Staffordshire to the south-east, Audley Rural, in Staffordshire to the south, Barthomley to the south-west, Haslington to the west, and Hassall to the north-west. In the centre of Alsager is the lake, Alsager Mere. This isolated pool, once the focal point of Alsager, is now only accessible by two fenced public viewing areas and by local residents who have gardens adjoining the waters. Alsager hosts an annual Summer Carnival.[3] In the summer of 2007 Alsager was awarded Fairtrade Town status by the Fairtrade Foundation. The Church Lawton Barrows form part of a significant Bronze Age site near Alsager, though in the neighbouring civil parish and village of Church Lawton. Alsager ('Eleacier' in the Domesday Book) was a small farming village until the 19th century when due to its rail connections and rural character, it became a home of choice for pottery works managers from the nearby Federation of Six Towns which later became the city of Stoke-on-Trent. During the Second World War, a large armaments factory was built outside Alsager at Radway Green, and it was expanded dramatically to house the influx of factory workers. Formerly housed on the Manchester Metropolitan University's campus, Alsager Arts Centre had an acclaimed public programme of touring new performance and visual art work presented in two intensive seasons – September to November and January to March. But the centre has now moved to the university's Crewe campus, as its Alsager site is closing. In August 2010 Alsager hosted the first annual Alsager Arts Festival. Artist James Lloyd was born in Alsager. Alsager is close to junction 16 of the M6 motorway, and is served by Alsager railway station on the Crewe to Derby line. Regional Route 70 passes to the west of Alsager. The 78 bus service links Alsager with Sandbach, Congleton and Rode Heath.
