It’s just one of those age things that if
you can remember cars in St Ann’s Square, you will have had plenty of birthdays.
Today, you can take your pick from a pleasant
amble across the square, take in the market stalls which are a frequent feature,
or just sit and watch everyone else going about their business.
Just over 40 years ago much of the square
was given over to cars, lorries and coaches, and while the pavements were wide
this was still a place where you had to be mindful of parked and passing traffic.
There had been moves to pedestrianize the
square, and introduce open air cafes in 1962.
But the plans were shelved because of
concerns that “congestion would be caused on Market Street and St Mary’s Gate
if the square was closed to traffic”.* Four years later the Civic Trust of the
North West which had advanced the original plan, tried again with a “New Plan
for main squares”.
This proposed “new pedestrian area in four
main squares in Manchester, [suggesting] extra traffic restrictions, so that a
new pedestrian route could wind through part of the central shopping area”.
The scheme would have involved changes in
St Peter’s Square, Albert Square, St James Square and St Ann’s Square.
In St Peter’s Square, the Cenotaph and cross
could be moved and re positioned directly in front of Central Ref, while in
Albert Square, the Albert Memorial would “remain in its present place, but
other statues would be moved slightly and the lavatories in the square would be
removed”.
A pedestrian route would run from Brazenose
Street to connect with St Ann’s Square which would see the church “sit in a
pedestrian area as it was originally intended and the whole atmosphere of the
square would be changed by the removal of the clutter of cars and parked
vehicles and the continuous discordant effect of the traffic slowly meandering
through the Square”.
Leaving the pavements to be widened on St
James Square and “parts of South King Street and King Street would be closed to
normal traffic [and] opened only for part of the day for service traffic”.
All of which looked a bold plan, but would
be a long time coming.
King Street was pedestrianized in1976, and
St Ann’s Square in the early 1980s, leaving St Peter’s Square to be transformed
in part by the coming of the Metro in the 1990s and fully transformed by the
Second City Crossing, which resulted in an enlarged square, the loss of the Peace
Garden and the removal of the Cenotaph to a spot outside the entrance to the Town
Hall.
And for those wondering where St James Square can be found, it is the narrow street which connects John Dalton Street with South King Street.
With the passage of time it is difficult now
to remember that there was a time when
you had to dodge cars.
Location; Manchester
Picture; St Ann’s Square,2016, from the collection of Andrew Simpson, and in 1960, 1960 – 3107.3, 3107.4, 3107.1, courtesy of Manchester Libraries, Information and Archives, Manchester City Council, http://images.manchester.gov.uk/index.php?session=pass
*Manchester shelves plan for St Ann’s
Square, Manchester Guardian, December 1962.
**New Plan for main squares, Manchester
Guardian, August 17th, 1966.