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| The White Lion as was, 2018 |
Once of course it was just part of a long line of properties, stretching down from Great Ancoats Street to Dale Street.
Like Andy I have passed it over the years, and watched as some of its neighbours were demolished, the car parks on either side were upgraded, and it gained and lost a mural painted on the gable end.
It appears as the White Lion in the directory for 1822, and is lost as a pub sometime between 1909 and 1911.
In 1849, the landlady was Anne Gleave who first appears in the Rate Books as the landlady two years earlier and continues on the books till 1857, although there is strong evidence that she died in 1855.
Either way by 1858 the new landlady was Harriet Gleave, and in the fullness of time I go looking for her.
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| The White Lion with its traditional lamp, 1908 |
All of which is a bit odd, because the Rate books list a James Gleave living at the property which is described as a house.
Part of the answer may lie in the fact that Ann married James in 1847, both are listed as living in Newton Street and both James, and Ann’s father, described themselves as weavers.
But James does not appear on the 1851census with Ann on Newton Street, all of which is a bit of a mystery.
Still, I am content that we can give a name to the landlady which ran his mum back in the middle decades of the 19th century.
Location; Manchester
Pictures; the White Lion, 2018, from the collection of Andy Robertson, and in 1908, m04847, courtesy of Manchester Libraries, Information and Archives, Manchester City Council, http://images.manchester.gov.uk/index.php?session=pass



















