This is Sally’s Yard and it sounds like it should have been here for ever.
Or at least from when Hulme Street was cut sometime in the early 19th century.Near by there was Frank Street, Mary Street and James Leigh
Street, and plenty more, all reminders of a time when speculative builders and
developers threw up small properties to house a local population who worked in
the surrounding mills, timber yards and metal works.
And with a sense of their own importance named them after
themselves or close family members.
So having passed Sally’s Yard a few days ago I pondered on
its origins and whether I could find Sally in her alley.
I had hoped for one of those narrow dismal streets occupied
by small residential dwellings in the shadow of dark and grimy textile mills,
but which courtesy of the census returns would offer up a heap of life stories
and maybe even our Sally.
It was a forlorn hope, for moving back through the 20th
century into the middle decades of the century before our alley was just a passageway
into an enclosed area which served as a storage spot for a tin works, and later
a glass bottle merchants and “fancy box manufacturer”.
Of course, a Sally might have worked there but I don’t think
we will ever find her.
And equally frustrating it appears the name Sally’s Yard may
only date from 1995 when “Urban Splash completed their first ever
transformation of an old Victorian Mill in Manchester, renovating Sally’s Yard
on Hulme Street, just off Oxford Road”.*
Ah well history doesn’t always turn out the way you expect
or want.
Location; Hulme Street
Picture; Sally’s Yard, 2026 from the collection of Andrew
Simpson
*Manchester's newest New York style loft apartments - 25
years in the making...By Ben Brown, November 2020, 30th Manchester's Finest, https://www.manchestersfinest.com/news/manchesters-newest-new-york-style-loft-apartments-25-years-in-the-making/











