Drunkenness violence at the Royal Oak, October 1855 |
Alcohol related crimes posed a real problem, from both our own and the Sunday visitors who made their way from Hulme and Manchester to drink here.
More than anything it is the sheer numbers that might surprise us. These appear to have been organised outings and away from their own homes and filled with beer they can only be described as a mob.
Eye witnesses on one occasion talked of a group of six men playing pitch and toss in the road, vandalising the property of locals and turning to intimidation when they were asked to stop.
Thomas Johnson who lived close by was beaten up and perhaps only saved from worst treatment by the intervention of another group. To make matters worse the same gang reinforced by another twenty reappeared the following week and attacked property and threatened the inhabitants before fleeing when the police and a group of locals arrived.
The Royal Oak much the same 50 years after the outrage |
The level of drunkenness in Manchester was a regularly commented on by writers in the 1840s and there is no reason to believe the same was not true in rural communities.
There were plenty of pubs and beer shops in the township all of which stayed open all day and late into the night.
During 1846 and 1848 the farmer Higginbotham recorded many instances where his carters were too drunk to carry on working. Between April 6th and April 27th George Badcock was drunk on six occasions. On one of these he had been drinking all afternoon, and on another all day.
His replacement was Thomas Davis who fared little better, having been sent to town to collect dung he spent the day drinking and left the cart in Manchester. A decision which with hindsight may have been a wise decision, for only a few years previously and on the same road that Davis would have used a carter was killed in a road accident caused by the drunkenness of another driver.
There were similar problems with pubs and beer house in the township. The license of the Black Horse at Lane End was finally withdrawn for breaking the drinking laws as was William Brownhill’s. Nor should we forget the part played by alcohol in the death of Francis Deakin who had been drinking all day in a local beer shop.
Drunken gang at Stretford in the September of 1832 |
Pictures; The Manchester Guardian, October 29, 1855, the Royal Oak circa 1900 from the collection of Tony Walker, and Manchester Times & Gazette September 29 1832
You can read more about the crime in the township in The Story of Chorlton-cum-Hardy http://chorltonhistory.blogspot.co.uk/2011/11/the-story-of-chorlton-cum-hardy.html
Next; Burglaries, robberies and poaching in Chorlton and beyond
*Manchester Guardian October 29 1855
**Engels and others described the level of drunkenness amongst sections of the working classes in Manchester
I see the Threlfalls sign has been covered up at The Royal Oak. These new fangled breweries eh, who do they think they are?
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