Paradise Walk ought to be one of those twisty little byways which to misquote the poem is “half as old as time”.
Store Street, 1920 looking for Paradise Walk |
It was a place I had never come across despite many happy hours wandering the area between Ducie Street and Store Street.
It was Sean Kelly who alerted me to its presence today, with “Could I suggest Paradise Walk, off Ducie Street, Andrew? It’s a sort of short cut and I suspect a lot of history......”, adding “it's been well poshed up, relatively, since around 2000. Wonder whether the Central Library archives have a photo”.
On a warm summer’s day with little else to do, I can see its attractions, because it starts as a narrow pathway sandwiched between a tall building, before joining the towpath of the Ashton Canal and exiting by a set of steps onto Store Street.
But as delightful as the walk can be, you do have to look for it, and it’s easy to miss both starting points.
The area in 1894 |
The Ducie Street entrance is almost opposite where Ducie Street joins Aqueduct Street, while access from Store Street is up a flight of stone steps beside the arch of the aqueduct which carries the canal over the road.
Still I thought I was dealing with one of those very old routes, and mused that here could be all that was left of a closed court which long ago had lost its houses.
But not so, it does not appear on the OS map for 1849, Adshead’s map of 1851, or subsequent ordinance survey maps into the 1950s.
In 1951 at the Ducie Street end there was a Whittles Croft, which sixty years earlier had been Whittles Croft Wharf.
And yes, once a long time ago that stretch of Ducie Street which twists away up to Pigeon Street was Whittles Croft and Mather Street.
So I await those in possession of more recent maps to pinpoint when Paradise Walk emerged.
The area in 1851 |
If I had to guess, I reckon it will be sometime at the turn of the century when work was undertaken on the canal ….. but I could be wrong …… probably am wrong.
Sorry Sean.
Location; Ducie Street/Store Street
Pictures; Store Street, 1920 looking for Paradise Walk, T Brooks, m10640,courtesy of Manchester Libraries, Information and Archives, Manchester City Council, http://images.manchester.gov.uk/index.php?session=pass Ducie Street/Store Street, 1894, from the OS map of South Lancashire, courtesy of Digital Archives Association, http://digitalarchives.co.uk/
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