Now that is not so daft a question if you lived in a small rural community on the edge of Manchester in the summer of 1848.
For a start, most people earned their living from the land, and many of these would be agricultural labourers, who worked for local farmers and in some cases rented their homes from those same farmers.
Along with these there was a sizable group of small market gardeners, growing cash crops for the Manchester markets on one to nine acres of land which they rented from a handful of landowners.
Added to these were the tradesmen ranging from the blacksmith and wheelwright to shopkeepers, carpenters and dressmakers all of whom were dependent on both the farmers and the “people of plenty”.
And even some of the more prosperous, who after 1832 commanded a vote in General Elections, might think carefully about voting for an election candidate who was not the preferred and stated choice of the wealthy and powerful Egerton family who owned something like 67% of all the land in Chorlton.
So, the question of who you should be polite to in 1848 was a serious one which might cost your livelihood and your home.
And that will be the theme of this walk through Chorlton’s past which is part of Chorlton Book Festival, and this year coincides with Chorlton Arts Festival. *
Along the way there will be some tales of dark deeds, mixed with the everyday life of farmers, agricultural workers and their families, and a nod to the posh residents who must be treated with upmost politeness.
We were a small rural community of just 761 people, spread out in a number of hamlets.
On the northern boundary was Martledge, south of Chorlton Brook was Hardy and at the centre was Chorlton itself.
Smaller communities in some cases just a few houses were scattered in between. And as if to underline a dependence on the land, each of these small communities were separated by fields and orchards.
And so today we will take a walk down Chorlton Row, from Barlow Moore Lane, stopping to look at the big house, several cottages, some interesting fields and of course the smithy, the Wesleyan chapel and a beer house.
Along the way we may encounter a few people it would be prudent to be polite too, and plenty who are too busy to pass the time of day.
Having reached Chorlton Green there will be a brief stop to survey the old church, the two pubs, and three farmhouses, along with assorted wattle and daub cottages, and the village school.
After which we will head north, visiting another 18th century farm cottage before crossing the Rough Leech Gutter at High Lane, hard by Scotch Corner and that local beauty point known as Pits Brow, finishing at the site of the ancient Ash Tree “at the foot of which a certain man engaged in prayer each day.**
So, there will be plenty to see, and much that will tell us about what it was like to live in a small rural community, just 3½ miles from the smoke, noise and enterprise of Manchester.
Assemble at the corner of Beech Road and Barlow Moor Road at 2pm on Sunday September 22nd.***
The walk will conclude after much history and a degree of fun at the Edge for refreshments.
Pictures; ploughing on Beech Road, circa 1890, and harvesting on the meadows, courtesy of Mr. Higginbotham, from the Lloyd collection, and detail from the 1854 OS map for Lancashire by kind permission of Digital Archives Association, http://www.digitalarchives.co.uk/ old St Clement’s Church circa 1870s from the collection of Tony Walker
*Chorlton Book Festival September 20-28, 2019, https://www.chorltonbookfestival.co.uk/
**Ellwood, Thomas Chapter 4, History of Chorlton-cum-Hardy, South Manchester Gazette, November 28, 1885
*** Walking Chorlton’s Past Sunday 22 September 2019, £7.50 payable in advance at Chorlton Library. Assemble at the corner of Beech Road and Barlow Moor Road at 2pm.
Ploughing Row Acre, 1894 on Chorlton Row, now Beech Road |
Along with these there was a sizable group of small market gardeners, growing cash crops for the Manchester markets on one to nine acres of land which they rented from a handful of landowners.
Added to these were the tradesmen ranging from the blacksmith and wheelwright to shopkeepers, carpenters and dressmakers all of whom were dependent on both the farmers and the “people of plenty”.
Harvest on the meadows, circa, 1890s |
So, the question of who you should be polite to in 1848 was a serious one which might cost your livelihood and your home.
And that will be the theme of this walk through Chorlton’s past which is part of Chorlton Book Festival, and this year coincides with Chorlton Arts Festival. *
Along the way there will be some tales of dark deeds, mixed with the everyday life of farmers, agricultural workers and their families, and a nod to the posh residents who must be treated with upmost politeness.
We were a small rural community of just 761 people, spread out in a number of hamlets.
St Clement's Church on the green, circa 1870 |
Smaller communities in some cases just a few houses were scattered in between. And as if to underline a dependence on the land, each of these small communities were separated by fields and orchards.
And so today we will take a walk down Chorlton Row, from Barlow Moore Lane, stopping to look at the big house, several cottages, some interesting fields and of course the smithy, the Wesleyan chapel and a beer house.
Along the way we may encounter a few people it would be prudent to be polite too, and plenty who are too busy to pass the time of day.
Chorlton Row, now Beech Road, 1854 |
After which we will head north, visiting another 18th century farm cottage before crossing the Rough Leech Gutter at High Lane, hard by Scotch Corner and that local beauty point known as Pits Brow, finishing at the site of the ancient Ash Tree “at the foot of which a certain man engaged in prayer each day.**
So, there will be plenty to see, and much that will tell us about what it was like to live in a small rural community, just 3½ miles from the smoke, noise and enterprise of Manchester.
Assemble at the corner of Beech Road and Barlow Moor Road at 2pm on Sunday September 22nd.***
The walk will conclude after much history and a degree of fun at the Edge for refreshments.
Pictures; ploughing on Beech Road, circa 1890, and harvesting on the meadows, courtesy of Mr. Higginbotham, from the Lloyd collection, and detail from the 1854 OS map for Lancashire by kind permission of Digital Archives Association, http://www.digitalarchives.co.uk/ old St Clement’s Church circa 1870s from the collection of Tony Walker
*Chorlton Book Festival September 20-28, 2019, https://www.chorltonbookfestival.co.uk/
**Ellwood, Thomas Chapter 4, History of Chorlton-cum-Hardy, South Manchester Gazette, November 28, 1885
*** Walking Chorlton’s Past Sunday 22 September 2019, £7.50 payable in advance at Chorlton Library. Assemble at the corner of Beech Road and Barlow Moor Road at 2pm.
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