For nearly two decades I have tried to discover the life story of Mr. Derrick Lea who painted and drew some fine pictures of Manchester, including Chorlton.
| Greetings from Manchester, undated |
The search had turned up a conversation with some one who vaguely remembered him and an address of a property on Ryebank Road in Chorlton and because Chorlton featured in many of the pictures he produced I reasoned that he may have lived here, but that was it.
So, I used the images gave full credit to Mr. Lea and hoped that in the fulness of time I would discover more.
And that more came in the form of a series of messages from his son and daughter in law which in turn led to a meeting.
In the course of an hour and half Jon Lea shared three folders full of his dad’s work and gave me an insight into his dad’s life.
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| Derrick and Dorothy Lea, undated |
This he followed up with a heap of scanned images of Mr. Lea’s work and this short biography.
“Derrick was an accomplished artist born in Manchester 1920 on Guy Fawkes night. His career began in the Second World War where he served n the RAF as a wireless operator in Africa.
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| RAF Tabora circa 1944-46 |
On returning, Derrick married his true love and embarked on illustration for advertising.
Unfortunately, Derrick suffered from a brain tumour which thanks to brilliant neurosurgery, he survived and found his passion for recording his convalescence by illustrating the staff and patients at Barnes hospital and the Christie hospital.
Although ill health persisted, Derrick homed in on his commercial illustration skills and produced many fine pen and ink works mainly in the Chorlton area, these were often produced as Christmas cards as well as sold in card shops and travel outlets.
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| Troops, undated |
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| Young patient at the MRI, date unknown |
All too often you come across images posted on social media, which offer no date, no location and no indication of the source. The images are often accompanied by some vacuous comment along the lines of “Chorlton in the olden days” or “When we lived here it was different” and most banal of all, observations about how few cars there were back then.
None of which helps with understanding the image in front of you, but with the help of Jon and his wife Hazel I can now view the pictures of the Horse and Jockey, the Lloyds and the Rylands Library on Deansgate with a greater understanding of when and why the images were made.
Added to which I now have a record of Mr. Lea'a travels across Africa, his time in hospitals in the 1950s and some fine illustrations of people he encountered.
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| Abdul, Billet Boy, Madagascar, 1945 |
Added to which I now have a greater knowledge of the man who produced them.
| St Peter's Square and Cenotaph, Manchester, undated |
And that can’t be bad.
Location, Manchester, Africa,
Pictures; the work of Derrick Lea, 1943-1959, courtesy of Jon and Hazel Lea



















