Released from Strangeways |
He was recently talking about them at the Post Box Cafe and I picked up on his interesting conclusion that it was the development of the Lads’ Clubs which drew potential members away from the gangs.
These clubs were started up in some of the strongest centres of Scuttler activity and it occurred to me that there were other groups which also have helped provided alternatives for these lads of which the Manchester & Salford Boys’ & Girls Refuges was an obvious candidate.
And as ever the archivist of the Together Trust which is the successor of the charity had thought of it first, so here are her thoughts, which can be read by following the link, Preventing Scuttling, http://togethertrustarchive.blogspot.co.uk/2013/10/preventing-scuttling.html
Picture; courtesy of the Together Trust
*Davis, Andrew, Gangs of Manchester, 2008
Andrew will be speaking on the Gangs of Manchester at Post Box Cafe on November 7th at 7.30
When “poverty busied itself”....... a little bit of the grim side of Manchester & Salford in the 19th century, tonight at the Post Box Cafe, with historian Andrew Davies, http://chorltonhistory.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/Manchester%20in%20the%201890s
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