Now I have Lee Hutchings to thank for this image.
He posted it today on a Chorlton Facebook site and it invites intriguing questions of just where we are, and the identity of the three individuals.
I doubt we will ever know their names but with a location we might be able to check on the occupants of the house and make a guess using the historical records.
Which of course just leaves the hunt for that location. We are looking out on a well-established front garden with a lane and fields beyond, with just a suggestion of open water in the distance and a date of 1898. There is furthermore a reflection of another house in the windows of the front door, which must have been opposite ours.The lamp would perhaps indicate that the lane was well used or important enough to have public lighting at a time when this was not common in Chorlton.
The first four street gas lights date from 1875 and a trawl of the records of the Withington Local Health Board and its successor the Withington Urban District Council might reveal the onward march of lighting provision and in turn reveal possible locations which match our picture and the date.
And I rather think our house might be one of a pair, which could narrow the hunt slightly.
So, with an address we could hit lucky and find occupants who resemble the people in the photograph.
The three look as if they are posing with that uncomfortable attempt to “look natural” which is rather negated by the artificial pose of the dog on the chap’s shoulder.
Already and rightly so there has been some speculation on where we are. The consensus so far is Beech Road with the Rec directly opposite.
It is plausible. The Recreation Ground was opened in 1896, and our picture is dated two years later, but I think not.This stretch of Beech Road facing what is now Beech Road Park down to Ivy Farm was undeveloped and remained so until Joe Scott built the row of terraced houses in 1915.
Wilton Road could be an alternative but there were no houses matching that reflected building nearby.
All of which leaves Cross Road, its houses are all in situ by the late 1880s and just maybe that reflected building has a mirror in the tall mid 1870s buildings on the corner of Cross Road and Beech Road.
But I am unconvinced, leaving me to think we still have a mystery.
And of mysteries I am fascinated by the thumb print on the picture. It is fruitless to wonder how we could identify it but it is one of those exciting but intangible bits of history which march alongside speculation on the identity of the last person to handle the grave goods of Tutankhamun or the strand of hair placed in a locket beside the ancient burial of a young bride.
But enough of such romantic tosh ….. bring on the debate on the location of our house.
But answers will only be judged worthy of consideration if like John Anthony Hewitt you make out a compelling case.
It maybe just be that we should be looking elsewhere and that open land in the distance is not the Rec but open fields yet to be built on.
Location; as yet unknown
Picture; the mystery house the unidentified people and a street gas lamp, courtesy of Lee Hutchings, 1896, restored and colourised 2026









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