Today I have started on the next book in the series, The History Of Greater Manchester By Tram*
So far, we have published four books which cover the route from East Didsbury into Manchester, across the city and out east towards New Islington.
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| Stretford in 1830 |
Now without being unfair some of the stops along the way might not shake the trees of historical promise but I am ready to be surprised.
That said others like Stretford and Altrincham bubble with stories that tell us much about Greater Manchester’s past.
And so it is with Stretford which was an important stop on the Duke’s Canal which arrived in the 1760s and was to be later eclipsed by the coming of the railway in 1849.
The canal had carried agricultural produce from Altrincham and Stretford into the city and brought night soil back. By 1849 this amounted to 873 tons of produce from Stretford, which climbed to 1,781 tons in the following year.**
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| Stretford in 2025 |
During the 1830s, between 800 and 1,000 pigs were slaughtered each week and sent into the city.
Most came from Ireland, via Liverpool and were transported into Stretford by barge. On arrival the pigs were kept in cotes kept by the local landlords.
The Trafford Arms charged one penny per pig a night and had cotes for 400 pigs. Not surprisingly in 1834 there were 31 pork butchers in Stretford compared to one in Chorlton and five in Urmston.
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| Stretford landscape, 2025 |
In Stretford in 1826 there were 302 looms providing employment for 780 workers supporting 151 families, and as late as the 1840s there were still seven.****
It was also home to John Rylands that great 19th century industrialist who had global business interests as well as being remembered as a prime mover in the construction of the Ship Canal.
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| The Essoldo, 1961 |
At the other end of the tram route Altrincham can also boast heaps of history.
In Chapel Street for instance there was a row of old Georgian terraced lodging houses which were home to some 400 Irish, English, Welsh and Italian lodgers.
From this tight-knit community of just sixty houses, 161 men volunteered for the First World War.
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| Altrincham, undated |
As a result King George V called Chapel Street "the Bravest Little Street in England”.
To this can be added its long history going back to the Middle Ages, the presence of the Linotype Company "which built 185 houses for its employees and provided two football grounds, four tennis courts, two bowling greens, a cricket ground, a playground for children and allotments”.*****
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| Altrincham Shaver and Repair Centre, 2015 |
Once upon a time shops like these were common, for who would want to go out and buy a new electrical product when it was possible to get that expensive and cherished item repaired?
And the chap in his brown overalls could pretty much be guaranteed to mend anything as long as the parts were available.
The one near us as I was growing up was magic.
Every corner of the shop was piled high with electrical goods and there was that dusty, musty smell which greeted you as you went through the door.
You offered up the broken thing, Mr Anson would scrutinise it, mumble a bit and if it was do able would retreat to the back room and work a bit of that magic.
Alternatively if parts were needed it was left in that back room until it was fixed at a fraction of what it would cost to buy new.
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| Altrincham, 1830 |
Things were repaired when they broke and while they might not have looked as elegant at least they worked.
These are shedloads more stories will appear in our book 5.
In the meantime the first four books will take you on a journey out of south Manchester, into the city centre and on to Victoria Railway Station in one direction and east via Piccadilly Gardens, Piccadilly Railway Station to terminate at New Islington.
The books are available at £4.99 from Chorlton Bookshop, the shop at Central Ref, St Peter's Square, or from us at www.pubbooks.co.uk
Location. Stretford, Altrincham
Pictures; Stretford & Altrincham1830, Hennet’s map of Lancashirecourtesy of Digital Archives, http://www.digitalarchives.co.uk/ Stretford on a March Day, 2025, the Essoldo in 1961, m09199, courtesy of Manchester Libraries, Information and Archives, Manchester City Council, http://images.manchester.gov.uk/index.php?session=pass, Altrincham, undated, Allan Brown, Altrincham Shaver and Repair Centre, Church Street, and Linotype Works, Altrincham, 2015, from the collection of Andy Robertson
| Linotype Works, 2015 |
Leech, Sir Bosdin, Old Stretford, Privately Printed 1910
**Scola, Roger, Scola, Roger, Feeding the Victorian City, Manchester University, Manchester, 1992
***Muir, Edwin, Lancashire Sketches, Simpkin Marshall, London & Manchester, 1869
****Leech, Sir Bosdin, Old Stretford, Privately Printed 1910
*****The Lynotype Estate, https://www.visitmanchester.com/things-to-see-and-do/the-linotype-estate-p252931

























