Saturday, 4 August 2018

At Ordsall Hall with a water trough from Pendleton and thank you to Eddie Smith

Now I have become interested in those water troughs which may well soon rival my obsession with ghost signs.

They were once a common feature of all our cities and towns and were usually positioned at crossroads or at the side of busy thoroughfares and did the business of providing drinking water for horses, cattle and other live stock.

The ones I remember best were still in use in the early 1950s although I suspect by then their best days were over, and during the next half century they became obsolete.

Some were carted off to Corporation yards and later broken up for hardcore, others became ornamental flower beds and a few have been stolen and no doubt now reside at the bottom of a posh garden somewhere.

In London by 1879 the Metropolitan Drinking Fountain and Cattle Trough Association had built 800 fountains and troughs.

Here in the twin cities it was the Manchester and Salford Cattle Trough Association who were engaged in the same work.

I can remember the one in Withington which for a time disappeared before reappearing and also the one in Audenshaw.

All of which is a lead into the one which Eddie Smith posted recently on the  facebook site Classic Salford Photos Group.

The water trough can be found in Ordsall Hall but was originally one of two outside the old Woolpack in Pendleton Square.

I was pleased he gave me permission to feature it and it will be a major new series.

Picture; water trough Ordsall Hall 2015 and in Pendleton circa 1904,  from the collection of Eddie Smith


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