It is often the ordinary picture you take and discard as boring that comes back and shows a place as it was a long time ago.
I was reminded of that almost banal observation when I came across a picture of St Ann’s Square from 1983, posted by the historian Brian Groom.*It was taken by Anthony O'Neill and appeared in the Manchester Evening News as the Square was going through one of its makeovers.
It’s an untidy and messy scene and perfectly captured the place on a day when it was full of shoppers and piles of construction stuff.
Now I can remember a time when the square was not a pedestrian haven, and crossing from the bookshop to the Lufthansa office meant picking your way through parked cars and watching for passing traffic.
Sadly, my collection of pictures from the late 1970s and 80s doesn’t include any of the place when the car was still king in the square, but I did find some from 1980 when it was on the cusp of change.
Or so I thought because amongst the images is one of a chap taking in the sun which might postdate 1980.
And that is pretty much it, other than to say it is hard to think that on a summer’s day in the 1980s, shoppers and seekers after the sun had to contend with “meter maids” busy taxis and vans dropping off.
Location; St Ann’s Square
Pictures; St Ann’s Square, 1980 and perhaps 1984, from the collection of Andrew Simpson
*Brian Groom, Northerners: A History, from the Ice Age to the Present Day HarperNorth, 2022
Made in Manchester: A people’s history of the city that shaped the modern world HarperNorth, 2024















