At the Court-House, at Lancaster, in the County of Lancaster, on the Llth

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

At the Court-House, at Lancaster, in the County of Lancaster, on the Llth Richard Booth, late of Hill, Greenacres-moor, Oldham» Adam Bird, late of Dale-street, Ashton-under-I.yne, Lan- Lancashire, Butcher and Beer Seller, afterwards lodging cashire, in copartnership with James Butterworth and at No. 52, Butler-street, Manchester, and late of No. 1G4, Walter Bates, as Slaters, under the firm of Butterworth Newton-lane, Manchester, Journeyman Butcher, also and Company, and allowing his name to be used as a Pork Butcher on his separate account. Beer Seller at the Jolly Carters, Stamford-street, Ashton John Harrison, formerly of Nelson-street, Chorlton-upon- aforesaid, and late of Currier-lane, Ashton, Slater on hia Medlock, occupying a Warehouse in Walton's-bui dings, separate account. Cannon-street, Manchester, Merchant,' then lodging in Hannah Tarbuck, late of Whiston, Lancashire, and late of Dale-street, Manchester, out of business, afterwards of Heyes-house, Rainhill, Widow. Polygon-avenue, Ardwick, occupying a Warehouse ia ThomES Bird, late of Old-street, Ashton-under-Lyne, Lan- Walton's-btiidings, Caunon-street, then a Warehouse in cashire, afterwards of Park-parade, Ashton aforesaid, Thomas-street, all in Manchester, Cotton Mauufacturer, then in Lodgings at Lower Arms, Stamford-street, Ash- and late of Paynton-street, Ardwick, Manchester, Ware- ton, afterwards of Margaret-street, Ashton, then of houseman and Labourer. Church-street, Ashton, Tea and Coffee Dealer, afterwards William Wainwright, late of Chancery lane, Ardwick, Man- of the Jolly Carters, Stamford-street, Ashton, part of the chester, Filer and Fitter-up. and Dealer in S'nalL Wares time currying on business in the name of Adam Bird, and Prints, afierwards of Maria-street, Manchester, then Beer Seller, and late of Portland-street, Ashton, out of of Bradford-road, Manchester, Filer and Fitter-up, and business. Beerseller, then of Newton-heath, near Manchester, after- John Hackett, late of Clarendon -street, Hulme, Lancashire, wards lodging at No. 25, Murray-street, Manchester, then occupying a Warehouse at No. 6, Palace-square, Man- of Union-street, Ardwick aforesaid, and late lodging in chester, Linen Merchant. Waterman-street, Ardwick aforesaid, Filer and Fitter-up Thomas Sharpies, formerly of Sharpies-place, Fullwood, only. Lancashire, and late of Friargate, Preston, Lancashire, Henry Pickup, formerly of No. 24, Henry-street, Manches- Seedsman, Fruiterer,. Gardener, Green Grocer, and ter, afterwards of No. 166, Great Ancoats-street, Man- Farmer, late Gardener only. chester, and late in Lodgings at No. 1, Chapel-street, Great John Sutclitfe. formerly of Astley-bridge, Lancashire, Ancoats-street, having a Stall at No. 48, Smithfield- afterwards of Enfield, Journeyman Calico Printer, part market, Manchester, Butcher. of the time Maker of Gas at a Cotton Factory. Jeremiah Greatorex, formerly of Weston-under-Wood, Der- Henry Alston, late of Whalley, Lancashire, Journeyman byshire, afterwards in Lodgings at No. 60, Tib-street, Plumber, Glazier, and Painter. Manchester, then of No. '2, Bradford-street, New Islington, John Leigh, late of No. 2, Cross-street, Preston, Lanca- Manchester, afterwards of No. 110, Medlock-street, Hulme, shire, Schoolmaster and Bailiff, and late of Brunswick- Manchester, Journeyman Butcher, then in Lodgings at street, Preston, Bailiff only. the Peel's Arms, Mastvi-street, Manchester, same time George Henry Sharp, formerly of No. 32, Bloom-street, occupying a Shop at No. 4, Great Ancoats-street, Man- Manchester, and No. 22, Church-street, Manchester, chester, afterwards of No. 14S, Great Ancoats-street afore- afterwards of Coupland-street, Green Hays, Manchester, said, occupying a Stall in Smithfield-market, Butcher, and having a Warehouse in No. 26, Church-street aforesaid, late in Lodgings at No. 152, Great Ancoats-street afore- Dealer in Silk and Woollen Goods and Commission said, Journeyman Butcher. Agent, then lodging at No. 31, Chatham-street, Chorlton- Thomas Potts Callender, formerly of FairfieM-street, then upon-Medlock, and late of No. Ill, Medlock-street, of Stock-street, both in Cheetham, occupying a Warehouse Hulme, Manchester, Commercial Traveller and Clerk to in Pall-mall, afterwards in Chancery-lane, both in Man- a Coal Proprietor. chester, Agent for Sale of Drysalteries on Commission, Henry Seed, late of Heatley-street, Preston, Lancashire, and occasionally a Dealer in Drysalteries on his -own afterwards of Adelphi-street and Tithebarn-street, Pres- account, then lodging at No. 50, Brazennose-street. Man- ton, Victualler, Plasterer, and Whuewasher, and late in chester, Agent for Sale of Printed Calicoes, and late a Lodgings in John-street, Preston, Plasterer and White- Lodger at No. 50, Brazennose-street aforesaid, out of smith only. employ. Edward Dean Thorley, formerly of Albion-crescent, North- John Michael Norris, formerly in Lodgings in Leitrim- ampton, Banker's Clerk, then lodging at No. 8, Frances- street, Cork, Ireland, afterwards residing at Sunday's- street, Strangeways, Manchester, Clerk to an Accountant, well, Cork aforesaid, Salesman at a Cotton and Woollen afterwards confined for Debt in Lancaster Castle, and Warehouse, then of the Crescent, Chorltou-upon-Medlock, late of No. 8, Frances-street aforesaid, out of employ. Manchester, Bookkeeper, afterwards lodging in Chancery- John Grimshaw, formerly of Church-street, Ashton-under- lane, Ardwick, Manchester, and. late of Hollyer-strcet, Lyne, Lancashire, afterwards of Park-street, Asbtoa Union-street, Ardwick, Salesman at a Woollen Stuff aforesaid, and late of Dukenfield, Ashton, Power Loom Warehouse. Weaver. John Massey Ashcroft, late of Barlow-moor, Dewsbury, At the Court-House, at Lancaster, in the County Lancashire, Dealer in Corn, Provision, Flour, Meal, Hay, and Straw. of Lancaster, on the llth day of July 1844, at Charles Dixon, late of No. 61, Loom-street, and No. 11, Ten o'Clock in the Forenoon precisely. George Leigh-street, Manchester, Grocer, Provision Joseph Altham, late of No. 70, Church-street, Preston, Lan- Dealer, and late lodging at Loom-street aforesaid, Iron cashire, Butcher. Dresser at a Foundry. George Lee, formerly of Heppleston-row, Attercliffe, Shef- Isaac Oliver, late of Newton-street, Back Woodward-street, field, Yorkshire. Farmer, Carter, and Horse Dealer, after- then of Rolleston-street, Manchester, Mechanic and Beer wards of Pinfold-lane, Atterclilfe, Carter and Horse Seller at the Dog Tavern, and late lodging at the Wheat Dealer, and late of Hunt's-bank, Manchester, out of Sheaf, Newton-lane, Manchester, Mechanic. business. Michael Casey, late of No. 10, Hanover-street, Manchester, Samuel Forrest, formerly of Chapel-green, Blackburn, occupying a Stall in Shude-hill-market, Manchester, Lancashire, Cotton Warper and Bookkeeper, then of afterwards of Bridge-street, Manchester, then of Edge- Chapel-street, Blackburn, Cotton Warper, Bookkeeper, street, Manchester, afterwards of Shude-hill, then of and Cowkeeper, afterwards of Penny-street, Blackburn, Miller's-lane, afterwards of Hanover-street, then of Cross- Provision Dealer and Cowkeeper, then of Northgate, street, and late of No. 26, Hanover-street, all in Man- Blackburn aforesaid, Dealer in Butcher's Meat, then of chester, Dealer in New and Second Hand Clothes. Higher-burn, Blackburn, Farmer, then of Penny-street, At the Court-House, at Maids tone, in the County Blackburn, then of Blakeley-moor, Labourer, Coal Dealer of Kent, on Tuesday the 9th day of and Milk Seller, afterwards Coachman, then of the High- land Lnddie, Nab-latie, Blackburn, Retail Dealer in Ale July 1844, at Ten o'Clock in the Forenoon and Milk Seller, afterwards of Lark-hill, Blackburn precisely. aforesaid, Milk Seller, Warper, and Farm Servant, and William Alexander Bennett, late of Milton, near Gravesend, late of Cleaves-street, Blackburn, Fowl and Pig Dealer Kent, Serjeant at Mace, Constable, Gaol Keeper, and and Milk Seller. Inspector of Weights and Measures..
Recommended publications
  • Q05a 2011 Census Summary
    Ward Summary Factsheet: 2011 Census Q05a • The largest ward is Cheetham with 22,562 residents, smallest is Didsbury West with 12,455 • City Centre Ward has grown 156% since 2001 (highest) followed by Hulme (64%), Cheetham (49%), Ardwick (37%), Gorton South (34%), Ancoats and Clayton (33%), Bradford (29%) and Moss Side (27%). These wards account for over half the city’s growth • Miles Platting and Newton Heath’s population has decreased since 2001(-5%) as has Moston (-0.2%) • 81,000 (16%) Manchester residents arrived in the UK between 2001 and 2011, mostly settling in City Centre ward (33% of ward’s current population), its neighbouring wards and Longsight (30% of current population) • Chorlton Park’s population has grown by 26% but only 8% of its residents are immigrants • Gorton South’s population of children aged 0-4 has increased by 87% since 2001 (13% of ward population) followed by Cheetham (70%), Crumpsall (68%), Charlestown (66%) and Moss Side (60%) • Moss Side, Gorton South, Crumpsall and Cheetham have around 25% more 5-15 year olds than in 2001 whereas Miles Platting and Newton Heath, Woodhouse Park, Moston and Withington have around 20-25% fewer. City Centre continues to have very few children in this age group • 18-24 year olds increased by 288% in City Centre since 2001 adding 6,330 residents to the ward. Ardwick, Hulme, Ancoats and Clayton and Bradford have also grown substantially in this age group • Didsbury West has lost 18-24 aged population (-33%) since 2001, followed by Chorlton (-26%) • City Centre working age population has grown by 192% since 2001.
    [Show full text]
  • Miles Platting, Newton Heath, Moston & City Centre Neighbourhood
    Miles Platting, Newton Heath, Moston & City Centre Neighbourhood Health & Social Care Profile Miles Platting, Newton Heath, Moston & City Centre - Health & Social Care Cohort Profile December 2019 Page 1 Introduction to MHCC Neighbourhood & Cohort Profile Reports The Locality Plan developed by Health & Social Care commissioners in Manchester sets an ambition that those sections of the population most at risk of needing care will have access to more proactive care, available in their local communities. The key transformation is the establishment of 12 Integrated Neighbourhood Teams across the City based on geographical area as opposed to organisation. The teams focus on the place and people that they serve, centred around the ethos that ‘The best bed is your own bed’ wherever possible and care should be closer to home rather than delivered within a hospital or care home. The ambition of this model is to place primary care (GP) services at the heart of an integrated neighbourhood model of care in which they are co-located with community teams. These teams could include Community Pharmacists, Allied Health Professionals (AHPs), Community Nursing, Social Care Officers, Intermediate Care teams, Leisure and health promotion teams, Ambulance teams and 3rd sector teams, with a link to educational and employment teams. All services are based upon a 12/3/1 model of provision, where most services should be delivered at the neighbourhood* level (12) unless they require economies of scale at a specialist local level (3), or a single City-wide level
    [Show full text]
  • MANCHESTER, St Augustine [Formerly Granby Row, Later York
    MM MAGHULL, St George; Archdiocese of Liverpool C 1887-1941 M 1880-1941 Copy reg Microfilm MF 9/126 MANCHESTER, All Saints see St Augustine MANCHESTER, St Augustine [formerly Granby Row, later York Street, now Grosvenor Square, All Saints]; Diocese of Salford C 1820-1826, 1856-1879 M 1837-1922 Orig reg RCMA 1889-1920 C 1820-1826, 1856-1900 M 1837-1900 Copy reg Microfilm MF 9/248-251 C 1870-1900 Copy reg Microfilm MF 1/203 C 1838-1900 Copy Microfilm MF 9/251 index C 1947-1962 M 1947-1954, 1961-1962 Reg rets RCSF 2 MANCHESTER, St Casimir (Oldham Road) see MANCHESTER, Collyhurst MANCHESTER, St Joseph (Goulden Street); Diocese of Salford [closed] C 1852-1903 M 1856-1904 Orig reg RCMJ C 1852-1903 M 1856-1904 Copy reg Microfilm MF 9/253-254 C 1873-1887 M 1885-1904 Copy reg Microfilm MF 1/243 C 1856-1903 Copy Microfilm MF 9/254 index For references in bold e.g. RCLN, please consult catalogues for individual register details and the full reference. For records in the Searchroom held on microfiche, microfilm or in printed or CRS format, please help yourself or consult a member of the Searchroom Team. 1 MM MANCHESTER, St Mary (Mulberry Street) [The Hidden Gem]; Diocese of Salford C 1794-1932 M 1837-1965 Orig reg RCMM C 1794-1922 M 1831-1903 B 1816-1825,1832-1837 Copy reg Microfilm MF 9/21-25 C 1947-1962 M 1947-1954, 1961-1962 Reg rets RCSF 2 C 1794-1819 B 1816-1825 Copy reg Microfilm DDX 241/24 C 1820-1831 Transcript CD Behind “Issue desk” in Searchroom C 1870-1941 M 1871-1941 Copy reg Microfilm MF 1/240-241 C 1850-1949 M 1837-1938 Copy Microfilm MF 9/25 index C 1870-1941 Index Microfilm MF 1/241 MANCHESTER, Livesey Street, see MANCHESTER, Collyhurst MANCHESTER, Ancoats, St Alban; Diocese of Salford [closed] C 1863-1960 M 1865-1959 D 1948-1960 Orig reg RCMN C 1863-1960 M 1865-1959 D 1948-1960 Copy reg MF 9/218-219 C 1947-1953, 1955-1960 M 1947-1954 Reg rets RCSF 2 C 1870-1941 M 1865-1941 Copy reg Microfilm MF 1/228-229 For references in bold e.g.
    [Show full text]
  • Butterworth Family Genealogy
    EXCERPT Butterworth Family Genealogy BUTTERWORTH And Allied Families of Chadderton & Scholes September 17, 2004 Copyright © 2004, Mosaic Research and Project Management BUTTERWORTH Butterworth is a fairly common name in 19th century Lancashire. This made identifying the appropriate families challenging. Fortunately, the most recent generations of Butterworths were given compound names which made the search easier. Hannah Jane Butterworth (pictured to left, 3rd row, 3rd person in)1 was the only child of Daniel Richard Butterworth and Rachel Fletcher Chadderton and was born 20 November 1881 at 2 Stockwell St, Oldham2. On August 29, 1908 she married John Frederick Fountain (see FOUNTAIN for more info on Hannah Jane) according to the rights and ceremonies of the Church of England3. Daniel Richard and Rachel were married in September 1880 in Oldham4. Between 1880 and his death by acute rheumatism in 18855, Daniel appears to have worked as a grocer's assistant6. The 1881 census has them at 1Group Photo – probably taken c. 1950 – 1st row has Neil Taylor Fountain (4th from left), Ian David Fountain (5th from left), 3rd row has Hannah Jane Butterworth Fountain (3rd from left), Margaret Joyce Fountain (5th from left), 4th row has Elsie Taylor Fountain (1st on left) 2Birth Certificate – Oldham Registration District, 20 November 1881, 2 Stockwell Street U.S.D., Hannah Jane, girl, Daniel Richard Butterworth, Rachel Butterworth formerly Chadderton, Assistant Grocer, reported by Elizabeth Butterworth, present at the birth, 315 Ashton Road (signed with
    [Show full text]
  • Manchester Migration a Profile of Manchester’S Migration Patterns
    Manchester Migration A Profile of Manchester’s migration patterns Elisa Bullen Public Intelligence Performance and Intelligence Chief Executive’s Department Date: March 2015 Version 2015/v1.3 www.manchester.gov.uk Introduction ...................................................................................................................................................3 Manchester’s Migration History ..................................................................................................................... 3 International migration trends ................................................................................................................ 3 Internal migration trends ........................................................................................................................4 Household movement ...................................................................................................................................5 Households moving within a ward ......................................................................................................... 8 Households moving from one Manchester ward to another ................................................................... 9 Long-term International Migration ............................................................................................................... 11 Wards popular with recent movers from abroad .................................................................................. 13 Country of birth ...................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Manchester Urban Historic Landscape
    8. Photographic images of Manchester Plate 1 Hasty Lane, Hale. Wet pasture Plate 2 Wilmslow Old Road, Hale. Vernacular cottages with airport buildings to rear 166 Plate 3 Far Lane, Gorton. Late 18 th century terraced houses Plate 4 Wythenshawe Hall, south elevation. Post medieval double cross wing hall 167 Plate 5 Hough End Hall, Chorlton-cum-Hardy. Tudor hall in incongruous modern surroundings Plate 6 Didsbury historic core and site of village green 168 Plate 7 Kelvin Street, Northern Quarter. Late 18 th century workshop dwellings Plate 8 George Leigh and Sherrat Street. 19 th century terraced houses 169 Plate 9 Fletcher Moss, Didsbury. Converted 19 th century villa Plate 10 Oblique aerial view over Hulme 170 Plate 11 Victoria Square, Oldham Road. Late 19 th century municipal housing Plate 12 Nicholas Road, Chorlton-cum-Hardy. Late 19 th to early 20 th century higher status terraced houses 171 Plate 13 Nearcroft Road Area, Wythenshawe. Early 20 th century ‘garden city’ housing Plate 14 Ryebank Road, Chorlton-cum-Hardy. Late 20 th century private housing development 172 Plate 15 New Islington, Ancoats. Post-1999 private housing development Plate 16 Edge Lane, Chorlton-cum-Hardy. Late 20 th century infill development 173 Plate 17 Heaton Park. Historic parkland Plate 18 Gorton Road (northern side), West Gorton. Industrial waste ground with surviving World War II air raid shelters 174 Plate 19 Old Mill Street, Ancoats. Views across to Ancoats mills Plate 20 Ancoats mills and Rochdale Canal 175 Plate 21 Gas holders, Bradford Road Plate 22 Chetham’s College and Library 176 Plate 23 Church of St Francis, Gorton Lane, Gorton.
    [Show full text]
  • Astley Arms/Paganini Tavern, 78 Great Ancoats Street 36-40 Dean
    An Archaeological Excavation was undertaken by Pre-Construct Archaeology Ltd in April 2016 at Nos 74-88 Great Ancoats Street. The work was completed in advance of the redevelopment of the site, under the auspices of the Greater Manchester Archaeological Advisory Service. The excavation trench was located in the southern part of the site on the corner of Dean Street and Houldsworth Street, where a series of late 18th- and early 19th- century brick cellars and a paved courtyard were revealed. Until the 1770s Ancoats was a rural area to the east of Manchester, but during the last quarter of the 18th century it became the town’s first industrial suburb with the construction of cotton factories, weavers and other workers cottages. The population of Manchester grew dramatically from 76,000 in 1801 to 316,000 in 1851 with more people being crammed into Late 19th and early 20th-century glass bottles embossed with the names of Greater smaller and smaller houses. A significant proportion of these people were Irish who made Manchester mineral water manufacturers and a Blackburn brewery up a tenth of the city’s population by 1841, concentrated in the slum area of Ancoats and (left to right) J. Pratt/& Son, Leigh Street; J & B/Jewbury Brown, Ardwick Green North; T. W. Lawson Limited, Napoleon Works, Rochdale Road; Thomas Whewell, Victoria Brewery, Blackburn; John Dyson, Temperance often living in conditions of abject poverty in windowless cellars. The buildings revealed Site view looking south-west towards Houldsworth Street on site were a mixture of residential and commercial, with small workers houses and a Street and Clayton; M.
    [Show full text]
  • Dear Old Dirty Stalybridge’, C.1830-1875
    Leisure and Masculinity in ‘Dear Old Dirty Stalybridge’, c.1830-1875. A thesis submitted to the University of Manchester for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Humanities 2014 Nathan Booth School of Arts, Languages and Cultures 2 Table of Contents List of Illustrations .................................................................................................................................................. 3 Abbreviations ............................................................................................................................................................ 5 Abstract ....................................................................................................................................................................... 6 Declaration ................................................................................................................................................................. 7 Copyright Statement ............................................................................................................................................................. 8 Acknowledgements ............................................................................................................................................... 9 Introduction ............................................................................................................................................................. 10 The Provinces in Urban History ......................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • The Manchester Observer: Biography of a Radical Newspaper
    i i i i The Manchester Observer: Biography of a Radical Newspaper ROBERT POOLE, UNIVERSITY OF CENTRAL LANCASHIRE Abstract The newly digitised Manchester Observer (1818–22) was England’s leading rad- ical newspaper at the time of the Peterloo meeting of August 1819, in which it played a central role. For a time it enjoyed the highest circulation of any provincial newspaper, holding a position comparable to that of the Chartist Northern Star twenty years later and pioneering dual publication in Manchester and London. Its columns provide insights into Manchester’s notoriously secretive local government and policing and into the labour and radical movements of its turbulent times. Rich materials in the Home Oce papers in the National Archives reveal much about the relationship between radicals in London and in the provinces, and show how local magistrates conspired with government to hound the radical press in the north as prosecutions in London ran into trouble. This article also sheds new light on the founding of the Manchester Guardian, which endured as the Observer’s successor more by avoiding its disasters than by following its example. Despite the imprisonment of four of its main editors and proprietors the Manchester Observer battled on for ve years before sinking in calmer water for lack of news. Keywords: Peterloo; press; newspapers; radicalism; Manchester; Guardian London has been called the strong hold of the liberty of the press; but Manchester is assuredly the centre and strong hold of the Parliamentary Reformers. (Manchester Observer, 1 September 1821) Early in 2017 the John Rylands Library accepted into its collections two bound volumes: the only complete set of the Manchester Observer (1818–22), the radical predecessor of the more famous Manchester Guardian.
    [Show full text]
  • Politic and Party Organisation in Oldham
    Durham E-Theses Politic and party organisation in Oldham Bickerstae, Derek How to cite: Bickerstae, Derek (1964) Politic and party organisation in Oldham, Durham theses, Durham University. Available at Durham E-Theses Online: http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/9701/ Use policy The full-text may be used and/or reproduced, and given to third parties in any format or medium, without prior permission or charge, for personal research or study, educational, or not-for-prot purposes provided that: • a full bibliographic reference is made to the original source • a link is made to the metadata record in Durham E-Theses • the full-text is not changed in any way The full-text must not be sold in any format or medium without the formal permission of the copyright holders. Please consult the full Durham E-Theses policy for further details. Academic Support Oce, Durham University, University Oce, Old Elvet, Durham DH1 3HP e-mail: [email protected] Tel: +44 0191 334 6107 http://etheses.dur.ac.uk POLITICS AND PARTY ORGANISATION IN OLDHAM 1852 - 1914 DEREK BICKERSTAPPE DISSERTATION PRESENTED FOR THE DEGREE OP MASTER OP ARTS The copyright of this thesis rests with the author. No quotation from it should be published without his prior written consent and information derived from it should be acknowledged. JANUARY 1964 In one sense all politics are provincial politicso What Peely Melbourne and Russell could do in the Houses of Parliament depended primarily on what happened in the constituencies. It is true that provincial politics were not immune from central influence» it is equally true that national politics were given their peculiar colour and flavour largely by provincial representatives and provincial interests and opinion.
    [Show full text]
  • Ancoats and New Islington Neighbourhood Development Framework – Final Draft
    Manchester City Council Item 5 Executive 29 October 2014 Manchester City Council Report for Resolution Report to: Executive - 29 October 2014 Subject: Ancoats and New Islington Neighbourhood Development Framework – Final Draft Report of: The Chief Executive Summary The April 2014 meeting of the Executive received a draft version of an updated Neighbourhood Development Framework for Ancoats and New Islington. This covering report accompanies a final draft of the Framework for consideration and approval. The final draft of the document has been concluded following a public consultation process involving local residents, businesses, public services and the voluntary & community sectors. The Ancoats and New Islington Neighbourhood Development Framework seeks to update the existing frameworks developed and encapsulated in the 2008 – 2018 East Manchester Strategic Regeneration Framework. Recommendations The Executive is asked to: 1. Note the comments received from residents, businesses and services contained within the report; 2. Approve the final draft Ancoats and New Islington Neighbourhood Development Framework to guide the future development of the area, with the intention that it will also be a material consideration in the Council’s decision making as a Local Planning Authority. Wards Affected: Ancoats and Clayton, Bradford Community Strategy Summary of the contribution to the strategy Spine Performance of the The proposals for Ancoats and New Islington offer the economy of the region potential for, amongst other things, residential and and sub region commercial development to be brought forward enabling the area to add to the performance of the sub- regional and regional economy; increasing housing supply to support economic growth objectives and creating new employment opportunities.
    [Show full text]
  • The Four Meres of Saddleworth
    Saddleworth Historical Society Bulletin Volume 39 Number 4 Winter 2009 Bulletin of the Saddleworth Historical Society Volume 39 Number 4 Winter 2009 Chairman's Report to the Annual General Meeting 2009 85 Mike Buckley Recollections of Saddleworth Workhouse 89 Norah Brown as told to Roy Bardsley Early Saddleworth Records - 3 93 Mike Buckley Benjamin Howard on the Titanic 99 James Bancroft Book Reviews 100 Neil Barrow & Terry Wyke Letters 103 Index to Volume 39 104 Alan Schofield Cover Illustration: Privy Seal of the Abbot of Roche Abbey. (The Historyof Roche Abbey, J.A.Aveling, Worksop, 1870, Plate X) ©2010 Saddleworth Historical Society and individual contributors i ii SHS Bulletin vol39 n04 Winter 2009 CHAIRMAN'S REPORT TO THE ANNUAL GENERAL MEETING 2009 Mike Buckley As with last year, 2009 has been a very active one for the Society. Once again my thanks are due to the members of the committee for their continued hard work during the year and the support they have given me. In the summer, sadly, Roger Ivens, our Bulletin editor, had to give up this role due to pressure of work. Roger has done a first class job over the last three years and our grateful thanks are due to him for achieving such a high standard of publication, also for his own articles which have added to our knowledge of Saddleworth’s past. Also, for health reasons Stanley Broadbent has handed the job of newsletter editor to Michael Fox. Once again sincere thanks go to Stanley for his contributions to the newsletter over many years and thanks to Michael for taking on this important job.
    [Show full text]