Now here is a little piece of our past which makes me very happy.
The picture was taken in 1980 and confirms that I wasn’t imagining that once the Rec which new comers call Beech Road Park did indeed have its own hut.
I have no idea when it was built.
I know that it doesn’t appear on photographs from the 1900s but is there by the 1940s, because it shows up in a picture of our own barrage balloon.
Nor am I quite sure when it vanished.
All of which I suppose is indicative of the state of my memory.
But there it is, and for those now in the 40s who sat on its bench on long winter’s nights passing the time till they were old enough to visit a pub, here is a memory.
The picture was taken in 1980 and confirms that I wasn’t imagining that once the Rec which new comers call Beech Road Park did indeed have its own hut.
I have no idea when it was built.
I know that it doesn’t appear on photographs from the 1900s but is there by the 1940s, because it shows up in a picture of our own barrage balloon.
Nor am I quite sure when it vanished.
All of which I suppose is indicative of the state of my memory.
But there it is, and for those now in the 40s who sat on its bench on long winter’s nights passing the time till they were old enough to visit a pub, here is a memory.
And soon after the story was posted, Bruce Wemyss commented,
"Andrew Simpson I remember it well in the sixties and would guess it was removed in the early 70s
It was turned on by the Park Keeper each spring and back off again in the Autumn Chorlton Park and Longford park each had a couple
They we’re all the same design I suspect Manchester Corporation will have some pictures hidden away somewhere
As a footnote In the sixties and early seventies we local lads played football in the Rec most weekends and summer evenings sometimes with games going on all day and well into the evening breaking off to go home for lunch and tea it was not unusual for there to be 12 to 15 on each team Great times I feel very lucky to have grown up in Chorlton back in the day"
We even had a special box full of their friends football boots for the games, and my lads would exhaust shed loads of their friends which came and went.
Location; Chorlton.
Location; Chorlton.
Picture; the hut on the Rec and football games, 1980, from the collection of Andrew Simpson
Hut was probably for the crown green bowlers. The green was in front of it.
ReplyDeleteThe green was just to the right of the shelter as you look out. In the sixties there was also a drinking fountain with a tin mug attached just in front of the shelter. The building that was in front of the green was the parky's hut
ReplyDeleteThanks Lynda
ReplyDeleteThere were two bowling greens at one point side by side from the parky's hut towards Beech road. The shelter was great for us kids having somewhere to keep dry while we got up to no good back in the day! Pretty sure there were toilets at either end as well but that would have been in the early 70's?
ReplyDeleteIn the sixties St John's Primary on High Lane used the Rec as their playing fields, and this shelter was our changing room where we left our stuff when playing football. We had wooden skittles as goalposts.
ReplyDeleteI REMEMBER THIS WELL, ALSO GATHERING CONKERS FROM HUGE TREE CLOSETO THIS "shed"
DeleteWeird!, I don't remember that at all!, I was at St John's from 60 till 67..
DeleteI remember it and sat in it...it was to the right of the bowling greens. My Nan used to love on provis Road, so was our haunt in the 1970's
ReplyDeleteThere were toilets in the pavilion. If you look closely, you can see a “modesty screen” just to the left of the pavilion, in front of what would have been the toilet entrance.
ReplyDelete