This name originated in Lancashire. As "Tonacliffe" it is a neighbourhood name of a settlement which is to be found almost on the boundary separating Lancashire from Greater Manchester. Travelling north from Rochdale along the A671 (Rochdale-Burnley) one first crosses the county borders at Middle Healey, next through Broadley and then passes by Tonacliffe and on to Whitworth. The geography of the district is important towards some understanding of the name which was originally "Tunwaleclif'. The feature which provides the "cliff' is the high land either side of the main highway (A671).
At Tonacliffe it presents a narrow passage in which, as well as the highway, there is the track of the former Lancashire and Yorkshire railway, the minor service road for Tonacliffe as well as the course of the river Spodden. The sides may not be absolutely precipitous but they rise to an average of 1000 feet, with a spot height of 1050 at "Rushy Hill".
Communications over the top must have been difficult because even today the older routes around the lower levels are still called "Rakes". This is an old expression which in this context describes narrow paths through a gap. It may be significant that because passages to the summit were limited, one possible route was specifically described as being accessible by farm vehicles and still bears the name "Waingap Hill".
Furthermore it is interesting to note that near the summit, land appears to rise suddenly to form a spur, on either side of which the tracks noticeably separate. In Old English such a division was called a "tang" and this is still preserved as "Tonacliffe Tang". The route now shown running over the top appears to be a restricted private road mostly serving a golf course (Lobden Golf Course) and a club house as well as a few farms. It is, no doubt, of modern construction.
The earliest reference to the place is dated 1246 and is to be found in the Assize Rolls for Lancaster. It takes the form "Tunwaleclif". The advantages of the site for protection and surveillance are obvious and encouraged the establishment of the settlement.
This accounts for the unit "Ton-" in the place-name. It is identical with the Old English word "tun" which was at first applicable to any enclosed space attached to a dwelling. It corresponds with the modem German "zaun" meaning "fence". The expression gradually carried over to mean a "farmstead" then a cluster of dwellings and nowadays provides the word "town". The constricted nature of the site of "Tonacliffe" indicates that it never advanced beyond being a small group of habitations around a farmstead. The interpolated unit "wale" in the former spelling of the name would now take the form "-well-" and the meaning is obvious: a spring or a supply of water which would have been vital to the survival of the early community. Why and when it was dropped from the spelling of the place-name is not known.
It may have been that the original spring mysteriously dried up. Otherwise a possible site could be a small pond lying alongside two public footpaths. It is of sufficient height above the valley to have provided a convenient focus for the original settlement, where security from surprise attack was desirable.
The foregoing analysis is based on a study of the largest scale map available to the "Peak Advertiser" (O.S. 3½ to the mile) and it is willingly conceded that it is only inspired speculation and that local observers may have a different interpretation.
As a surname it does not appear to have been much adopted before the 1600's. All the earlier records give it as a place of origin. The reference dated 1246, just mentioned, refers to a "Henry (who comes from) Tunwaleclif" and some 300 years pass before it is heard of again, and in similar terms. It is dated 1545 (Chester) and speaks of a "Husbandman" who is called "James Scholfield of Tunnicliffe, (which is near) Rochdale".
This very likely illustrates the situation where a local surname was based on the place name but it had become so insignificant as hardly to be known much beyond the vicinity. If a man emigrated to a neighbouring settlement the name "Tunwaleclif" could be meaningless and his new neighbours would soon find another name for him - usually derived from his occupation or a nickname. So it is not altogether surprising that the surname first appears only in 1724 with regard to a John Tunnecliff. There was a mayor of Macclesfield called Joseph Tunnicliff in 1818.
The most celebrated bearer of the name was the artist Charles Tunnicliffe (1901-1979).
2006-08-18 22:23:00
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Mersey
2006-08-22 14:19:47
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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There are many famous and renowned people with this name, the earliest of which i have found in Ireland but I am unable to trace it back further than the eighteenth century, perhaps if you try
http://www.ancestry.com/ they might be able to help you further or http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DBY/NamesPersonal/Tunnicliffe.html
they seem to have the wherefore on the name
best of luck
"Daddy Dave"
2006-08-21 17:58:16
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answer #3
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answered by uncle Dave 1
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http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/DBY/NamesPersonal/Tunnicliffe.html
Hope this helps. Or some other geneology sites could also give info
2006-08-18 19:52:04
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answer #4
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answered by waftycrank 2
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buy em both a ps2
2006-08-21 08:07:23
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answer #5
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answered by stretchy_baby69 2
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yes it is
2006-08-18 20:38:59
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answer #6
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answered by xxxxxxxxxx 3
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Dunno.
2006-08-21 17:00:31
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answer #7
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answered by Noadonis 3
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