It is one of those things about city life that there is always someone who will sell you almost anything.
Just over a hundred years ago down by the Cathedral walls, the artist H.Tidmarsh recorded the old man selling newspapers, a woman selling potatoes and a boy polishing shoes, while up by the Infirmary at the top of Market Street he painted another street vendor selling food.
Not far away by Hunts Bank late at night young children plied the streets selling newspapers in the early hours of the morning.
And a century and a bit later, out on Market Street the crowd surged past the burger van, negotiated the balloon man, and stopped to buy a political paper.
Pictures; Manchester street sellers by H.E. Tidmarsh from Manchester Old and New, William Arthur Shaw, 1894 and from the collection of Andrew Simpson, June 2013
And over the next few weeks I shall focus on more of the street vendors who plied the streets of Manchester in the late 19th century and their counterparts who still do the same business today.
Just over a hundred years ago down by the Cathedral walls, the artist H.Tidmarsh recorded the old man selling newspapers, a woman selling potatoes and a boy polishing shoes, while up by the Infirmary at the top of Market Street he painted another street vendor selling food.
Not far away by Hunts Bank late at night young children plied the streets selling newspapers in the early hours of the morning.
And a century and a bit later, out on Market Street the crowd surged past the burger van, negotiated the balloon man, and stopped to buy a political paper.
Pictures; Manchester street sellers by H.E. Tidmarsh from Manchester Old and New, William Arthur Shaw, 1894 and from the collection of Andrew Simpson, June 2013
And over the next few weeks I shall focus on more of the street vendors who plied the streets of Manchester in the late 19th century and their counterparts who still do the same business today.
The building behind the lampost (now Cost Coffee) is the only building recognizable today
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