You won’t find Hatter’s Court.
Hatter's Court, 1850 |
It consisted of eleven houses facing into a court which was enclosed on three sides, with just an entrance on Addington Street and a dark and narrow passage which led out onto Marshall Street.
It was there by 1819 but just when an enterprising speculative builder chose to build some, or all of the houses is lost.
Five of the eleven were back-to-back and a search of the Directories has revealed the place didn’t warrant a listing.
Not that I am surprised, because Hatter’s Court and countless others were homes to the poor and as such didn’t get a mention.
Eight of the occupants are listed in the rate books for 1851, but despite having those eight names none have so far turned up on the census records for that year.
And it maybe they belong to those census records which were damaged and are now unreadable.
So, while I have the names of John Weston and Patrick Dowling both of whom were shoemakers it has been impossible find out anymore about either man or the families.
Growing old in Hatter's Court, 1841 |
There were 42 people recorded as living in ten of the properties, with some examples of overcrowding.
Most of the households consisted of three or four people, but in one there were seven and in another eight occupants. Added to which there is evidence of some subletting. In houses which at best consisted of 4 rooms and in the case of the back to backs just two rooms.
That said the 1841 census lacks the detail which comes on later census records.
So, it is impossible from these entries to determine the relationship of the head of the household and the other residents. And while in some cases it is possible to infer a couple are married with young children, in other cases the names are not ranked by age making it difficult to know who was who.
Added to which the census is silent on exactly where people were born, preferring to list them as either from or not from Lancashire and providing a supplementary column to be ticked if they were born in “Scotland, Ireland or Foreign Parts”.
Of these “supplementaries” there were 15, which when combined with nine who were not from Lancashire means that in the June of 1841 our court rang out with accents which were not Mancunian and were the majority of the residents.
The census also offers up a snapshot of the jobs they did.
Working for a living, Hatter's Court, 1841 |
What is certain is that almost half of the 42 were under the age of twenty and the eldest were Patrick and Margaret Lannigan who were both 60.
In time I will go looking for all of our 42, tracking them as best we can back from 1841, and forward through the 19th century.
All that's left the line of the entry into the court, 2023 |
I doubt their stay in our court lasted long, looking at the tenure of stay in other courts I can be confident most moved on within a few years.
Nor did Hatter’s Court survive long after the 1890s, because while it is still there on the 1894 OS it looks to have disappeared sometime in the early 20th century, although even that bold statement may yet be qualified.
Location; Addington and Marshall Street, Manchester
Pictures; Pictures; the street with no name and little history, 2023, from the collection of Andrew Simpson, and in 1850 from Adshead’s map of Manchester, courtesy of Digital Archives Association, http://www.digitalarchives.co.uk/
No comments:
Post a Comment