Turn Moss Road is the one that runs off Edge Lane and down onto Turn Moss.
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| Turn Moss Road, 2023 |
That said it has some nice-looking properties and is marked by that giant sign which welcomes you to Trafford, with a smaller one announcing that you are about to enter Stretford which regularly attracts spray can enthusiasts and the odd individual unloading a ranger of stickers.
I doubt I would ever taken the road further if Ruth hadn’t posted “Do you know anything about Turn Moss Road?
I live in one of the black and white ones, built around 1992. I’d love to know more about what was there before. I think there was a large house and grounds on Edge Lane that was demolished”.
She was responding to a story I had written on walking into Stretford in 1847.
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| Turn Moss Road, 1892 |
The road shows up on all the old maps going back into the early 19th century and for most of its existence it was just a a lane leading to Turn Moss Farm.
There are pictures of the farm, and it also appears on the OS maps for the 1840s and 1880s and in the census returns as well as various books on the history of Stretford.
John Bailey in his book Old Stretford published in 1878 wrote that “Turf moss or Turn Moss in the low lying meadows or ees, is mentioned in one of the Mosley Wills in 1612".
It was and is likely always to be a lonely house and is yet surrounded by embankments to protect it from the floods.
In 1771, when the estate was on sale it contained "93 Lancashire acres”, but by the mid 20th century its size had shrunk so that when Samuel Massey in his book A History of Stretford, 1976 reported that
“Turn Moss Farm. Formerly Turfe Moss Farm. The fields, few in number, surrounded the far. The farm was approached from Edge Lane and from Hawthorn Road. The cellars of the farm house were subject to flooding. The occupiers were dependant for water on a shallow well and rainwater tank.”
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| Turn Moss from the Briscat with Turn Moss in the distance, 1950 |
He was one of the many young people who were encouraged to help out working on farms during the Second World War.
This was the period of “Dig for Victory” with food in short supply parks gardens and even the tops of air raid shelters were used to cultivate crops.
So, Allan did his bit walking from his home near the green down the old road, now more commonly known as Hawthorn Lane to the farm and a stint of voluntary war work.
I never asked Allan if he ever used Turn Moss Road but I suppose he will have done, and back then it was just a lane with the current development dating from the 1990s.
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| Westonby, Edge Lane, 1914 |
That house promises to be an interesting research project and in time may match Westonby that place still remembered as the Twilight Sleep Home for painless child birth.*
It still stands to the east of our road and is somewhere I am minded to return to.
And that is about it for now..
Picture; Turn Moss Road, 2023, courtesy of Google Maps, Turn Moss Road, 1892, from the OS mapd of Lancashire, 1892-94, Turn Moss,1950 from what was known as the Briscat which was a three acre piece of pasture which back in the 1840s had been part of the land George Whitelegg rented from the Egerton’s, W. Jackson from the Lloyd collection, Westonby and Edge Lane, 1914, courtesy of Manchester Libraries, Information and Archives, Manchester City Council, m17757 courtesy of Manchester Libraries, Information and Archives, Manchester City Council, http://images.manchester.gov.uk/index.php?session=pass.
*Westonby, https://chorltonhistory.blogspot.com/search?q=westonby


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