It ran from Hardy Lane down past the Brook into the village by the church and then off across Turn Moss to Stretford.
Over the years it has had many names and bits of it have been renamed from time to time.
Strictly speaking it was never known as the old road for there are equally old roads, lanes and track ways which ran out of the township.
But unlike the others it has retained much of its rural character. True if you start at Hardy Lane you are presented with a modern road followed by the “stumps” which lead into the ville and the stretch past the school, round the church and along Ivygreen Road is pretty urban, but where it becomes Hawthorn Lane it still has the power to transport you back to the early 19th century.
Here it becomes a narrow twisty lane with the remains of hedges along its path, the 18th century weir clearly visible through the trees and finally the raised platform underneath the canal built to protect travellers from the farm wagons passing on their way to Stretford.
All of which makes this picture and those to follow over the next few weeks rather special. They capture something of the charm and magic of the old road. This one is from around 1890. Despite the fashions of the couple staring at the camera which dates it to the late 19th century it could be any time over the last few hundred years.
The horse and cart add to the almost timelessness of the image, but hard by where the road ran into Stretford was a modern railway line, and just over a mile and a bit in the other direction was new Chorlton with its rows of recently built houses catering for the middling people who travelled into town from the newly opened Chorlton train station but still lacked the idea of living on the edge of the countryside.
Location;Chorlton
Picture; from the Lloyd collection
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