| Meir | |
|---|---|
|   The A520 leading north, across the roundabout at Meir | |
| Location within Staffordshire  | |
| OS grid reference | SJ927427 | 
| Unitary authority | |
| Ceremonial county | |
| Region | |
| Country | England | 
| Sovereign state | United Kingdom | 
| Post town | Stoke-on-Trent | 
| Postcode district | ST3 | 
| Dialling code | 01782 | 
| Police | Staffordshire | 
| Fire | Staffordshire | 
| Ambulance | West Midlands | 
| UK Parliament | |
Meir is a suburb in Stoke-on-Trent, Staffordshire situated between Lightwood and Longton. [1] [2] Meir Park estate extends from Meir uphill to the Meir Heath and Rough Close village hall, located in Meir Heath.
Meir Aerodrome closed in the early 1970s [3] and the site has now become the Meir Park housing estate. The earlier parts have mainly aviation-associated street names. The last official flight was on 16 August 1973 when Fred Holdcroft flew a Piper Tri-Pacer carrying a Sentinel journalist to Manchester. [4] The last unofficial flight "a year or two" later by Eric Clutton was in a home-made folding machine called FRED (Flying Runabout Experimental Design) which the pilot towed home behind his car. [5] [6] The light planes used to be parked on the grass alongside the A50 road, opposite the Airport Garage, which remains. Staffordshire Potteries had a factory (now demolished) beside the aerodrome.
 
 Meir is situated along the A50. At the centre sits the junction with the A520. Once a notorious traffic jam site, a tunnel was built in 1997 to take the A50 underneath. The twin tunnels were walled with ceramic panels which were reported to have cost about £1,000 each when they began to come loose through rusting of their attachments after a few years[ citation needed ].
Meir was served by a railway station from 1894 to 1966.
{{cite book}}:  CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)