Sunday, 21 July 2024

Stories from Deansgate Castlefield ….no. 1 introducing the book

Deansgate Castlefield metro stop is the place where history tumbles out in all directions

Heaps of towers, 2023
You know you are arriving at somewhere special when the views of identical new residential properties give way to something much older and more interesting.

It begins with that network of waterways which make up the Castlefield Canal Basin, interspersed with the tall lattice structures that imitate medieval castle walls and takes in some fine 18th century warehouses, along with the spire of the old Congregational Chapel and that growing number of tower blocks which seemingly reach up to scrape the sky.

On arriving, 2022
And on arriving at Castlefield Deansgate just a minute’s walk away is the bold edifice of Deansgate Railway Station which as everyone knows and some constantly reiterate is really Knott Mill Railway Station gateway to Salford and beyond.

But for those whose interests are elsewhere beside the entrance to Deansgate/Knot Mill is the Atlas Bar which has its own claim to a bit of history, having opened in 1999 boasts that it serves 570 different gins from around the world.

Nor is it alone for just across the road there is Deansgate Locks, while nestling in the canal basin can be found Dukes 92, and the even longer established Barca Bar all of which are part of the renaissance of the area which has gone from a busy but grubby work a day corner of the city to an elegant residential and leisure centre.

Atlas, 2023

And not to out change Castlefield, in 1982 it became an “Urban Heritage Park” which is an unofficial designation for an inner-city area regarded as worthy of preservation because of its architectural and historic interest.

Fort in the sun, 2022
It was here that the Romans established one of their forts as part of the “pacification” of northern Britain.

The network of military establishments connected the big legionary bases of Chester and York, and like many of these forts it attracted a settlement which grew up outside its walls.  

Here could be found metal workers, bar owners, merchants and anyone attracted to the Roman army which offered a degree of safety and a ready market for pretty much everything your average Roman soldier might want.

Alas only a fragment of the original fort still exists, but a series of archaeological digs in the 1970s uncovered finds from the civilian settlement.

In turn the presence of that fort led to a City Council project to recreate two sections of wall and a gateway.  The construction was undertaken by apprentices from the Direct Works Department and included laying out a series of ditches which were the first line of defence.

Water, unlight and bridges, 2003

All of these are there to see along with part of the civilian village running from one of the walls by Beaufort Road out towards Liverpool Road, while the remaining section at Duke Street offers up views down in to Castlefield Bowl and one of the arms of the canal basin.

A rally at the Castlefield Bowl, 2024

The Bowl is a popular venue for a live entertainment and has a capacity for 8,000 and as well as music events is used for political rallies.

Canal Basin, 2003
I could go on but that would be to reveal all the stories from our second book in the series The History of Greater Manchester by Tram.*

The idea of telling the story of Greater Manchester by using the tram network has a lot going for it. 

You can catch a tram from the city centre and go south, east, north, and west and along the way each of the 99 stops will have a story to tell, and being the tram, you can just jump off, explore this little pocket of history and move on. 

Or skip to the end destinations and discover interesting historical things about Didsbury, Ashton-Under-Lyne, Rochdale, Oldham, Salford and bits of Trafford, Altrincham and Bury.


The first in the series …. Trafford Bar to East Didsbury was published earlier in the year and the next Cornbrook to Exchange Square will be out in August.

They are available from Chorlton Bookshop, and from us at www.pubbooks.co.uk, price £4.99

Location Deansgate Castlefield

Pictures; Castlefield and Knott Mill, 2003-2024, from the collection of Andrew Simpson

*A History of Greater Manchester by Tram, https://chorltonhistory.blogspot.com/search/label/A%20new%20book%20on%20the%20History%20of%20Greater%20Manchester%20by%20Tram

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