Looking across Manchester Road towards the station, 1880 Aaron Booth |
Now I have been writing about walks I would have liked to
have taken in the Chorlton of the past, and so today I want to restage just
such a walk.
At the start of Chorlton Arts Festival we walked down Beech Road in an effort to
recreate a little of the township in 1847
And as the Festival drew to a close we staged a second walk exploring how Chorlton had changed in just fifty or so years.
And as the Festival drew to a close we staged a second walk exploring how Chorlton had changed in just fifty or so years.
It was a gentle stroll down past the Library and on via
Longford and Oswald Road to the Lloyds. the sun shone and lots of people turned up.
Looking across the Isles, 1880, Aaron Booth |
In the course of which we will take in Kemp’s Corner, Sedge Lynn, the Temperance Hall and Redgate Farm as well as the Carnegie Library an ice rink, brick works and our own Public Hall.
This was once Martledge but the housing boom of the last two
decades of the 19th century all but obliterated its rural character
and as if to mark it off from what it had once been it became commonly called
New Chorlton. It was a name which was still used as late as the 1970s.
Redgates Farm, 1900, now the site of the Library |
This is part of the GLAD TO BE IN CHORLTON, contribution to
Chorlton Arts Festival.
Chorlton-cum-Hardy past, present and touch of tassology is collaboration between me and local artist Peter Topping with photographs and stories of the past and paintings of the present and a hint of the future.
Chorlton-cum-Hardy past, present and touch of tassology is collaboration between me and local artist Peter Topping with photographs and stories of the past and paintings of the present and a hint of the future.
Now given that most attempts at predicting the future are
usually wrong and that the best we can ever hope to do is guess the outcomes
using the present as a template, Peter decided we might as well fall back on
tassology which is the art of divination using tea leaves.
It is an old practice which some sources have traced back to
medieval European fortune tellers who developed their readings from splatters
of wax, lead, and other molten substances and evolved into tea-leaf reading in
the seventeenth century.
And coincided with the introduction of tea by Dutch
merchants in to Europe. Not to be
outdone my source also suggests that in the Middle East the practice is carried
out using left-over coffee grounds.
This may work for Peter, but as a crusty old historian I
rely on the past and present to suggest the things to come but tassology does
have the added benefit that you get to drink a cup of tea.
The Lloyds Hotel, 2013, © Peter Topping |
Moreover at all three along with another nine venues you can
read excerpts from our History Trail.*
Pictures; from the photographs of Aaron Booth are in the
Lloyd Collection, Redgate Farm by courtesy of Carolyn Willitts and Glad to be in Chorlton
poster and pianting of the Lloyds ©Peter Topping
* The History Trail can be viewed at The Horse & Jockey,
Franny & Filer, St Clements’s Church, The Lloyd's, The Library (occasions),
Fosters Cycles, Unicorn, The Bar, Chorlton Eatery, Morrisons, Chorlton High School,
The Post Box Cafe
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