It was a chance conversation outside the Horse Jockey.
Lloyd Street, 1854 marked in red |
To be exact the question ran What do l know about Whitelow Road?
The short answer was not a lot other than part of it was once called Lloyd Street.*
This was in 1854 and instantly challenges that tired and well rehersed observation that "there are no streets in Chorlton".
Now, Lloyd owned a big chunk of Chorlton cum Hardy having bought into the township in the 18th century.
Back then Lloyd Street was a far more modest stretch terminating just beyond the Beech Inn where it ran into the 2 acre field called Row Acre which was owned by the Lloyd estate and farmed by Mary White. In total she rented 77 acres stretched out across Chorlton and she lived at the southern end of Chorlton Green.
Whitelow Road, 2022 |
Alas there is no date but the name Lloyd Terrace which is a nice connection to Mr. Lloyd.
In1891 my friend's house was occupied by a Joseph Miller who was 23 married to Emma and shared the house with three children, two brothers and a lodger.
He was from Didsbury, she was from West Gorton and their eldest son, aged 5 had been born in Cheadle. Within the year after he was born they moved to Chorlton and took up residence in the property by 1889.
Lloyd Terrace, 2022 |
What is striking is the variety of birth places. Along with Didsbury, West Gorton, and Cheadle, we can add three different parts of Shropshire as well as Chorlton.
I haven’t as yet got a date for when the terrace was built but a Frederick Fuller occupied another one of the houses in 1886 and by 1893 Whitelow Road extended all the way to Wilbraham Road and all the buildings we now know and a few more had all been constructed.
So that just leaves a search of the rate books to push back to the moment when our terrace was built.
All the evidence would suggest a date after 1881, when the land upon which the terraced is situated is shown up as Bowling Green.
This must be the lost Bowling Green which had been connected to the Horse and Jockey where according to the historian Thomas Ellwood was “a number of gentlemen used to play bowls on the green then adjoining the Horse and Jockey. For exclusive use of the green was reserved one afternoon in each week, in return for a small annual subscription, and the players generally partook of tea afterwards, and spent the evening together over a friendly game of cards."***
The lost bowling green 1881 |
In the 1840s the plot was owned by John Brundrett who rented it out to Thomas Cookson.
This may have precipitated the bowling green's change of use into residential because by 1885 Frederick Fuller was renting from the Brundrett estate in Lloyd Terrace.
As for those with a wider interest in Whitelow Road, it would appear that the stretch from High Lane had also not been cut by 1881, instead much of it is marked as a wooded area held by the Methodists.
So, from being a mystery road, Whitelow has started to give up its secrets.
Picture; map showing Lloyd Street from the OS map of Lancashire 1841-53, courtesy of Digital Archives, http://www.digitalarchives.co.uk/ Whitelow Road, 2022, courtesy of Google Mapsthe map of Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Withington Health Board, 1881, courtesy of Trafford Local Studies
* It was still Lloyd Street in 1871
**Ellwood, Thomas Bowling Greens, History of Chorlton-cum-Hardy, number 26, South Manchester Gazette, May 15, 1886
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