Showing posts with label Antony Mills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Antony Mills. Show all posts

Saturday, 28 January 2023

Bandstands ........... Nu 1 Victoria Park Swinton, 1897

Now anyone old enough to remember municipal bandstands in their hey day will have watched their slow decline.

It was a combination of things from that war time push to recycle old iron which robbed the stands of their ornate pillars and roof, to successive budget cuts and finally that simple fact that they fell out of fashion.

So when I was growing up our band stand which had long ago had become just a brick stand was just somewhere that on rainy days you played.

No one sat in deck chairs enjoying a selection of music as the sun was reflected on the shiny brass instruments and park authorities looked upon them as old unfashionable blots on the landscape.

But not so Victoria Park.  Here as Antony’s photograph reveals is a fine example of what many of us will remember.

Built around 1897 when the park was laid out it embodies all that civic pride which said there was more to life than work, mean streets, and dark horizons.

According to one new book on public parks, the bandstand owed much to the 19th century’s fascination with the Orient.  The basic design may have been copied from “the raised –platform kiosks seen in Turkey and across the Ottoman empire” but was overlaid with influences from Indian palaces and temples.*

The French had shown one of these Turkish stands off at the International Exhibition in Paris in 1855 and what followed was a succession of developments over here with the first unveiled at the Royal Horticultural

Show in South Kensington and later moved out to parks in Southwark and Peckham where I came across them as a young boy in the 1950s.

All of which leaves me to thank Anthony for the picture and renew my acquaintance with Victoria Park which was made up of the grounds of Swinton Old Hall and opened for business in 1897.

And of course will be the start of a new series on Bandstands.

Location; Swinton

Picture; the bandstand Victoria Park, 2016, from the collection of Antony Mills.

*A Walk in the Park, Travis Elborough 2016, pages 155-56

Wednesday, 29 September 2021

In Brooklands Cemetry with Samuel Edgar Walker of the 67th Pioneer Battalion

Now I know there is much more to discover about Samuel Edgar Walker who is recorded on the family’s gravestone in Brooklands Cemetery.

He was the youngest son of Samuel and Margaret Walker of Sale, and was born in 1889 and was killed in action during the Great War.

What marks him out as a little different from other the young soldiers commemorated in the cemetery is that he served with the 67th Pioneer Battalion of the Canadian Expeditionary Force.

According to his Attestation Papers he enlisted in Vancouver on September 28 1915 giving his occupation as “musician” which may suggest he was on a tour of Canada at the time but could equally mean he was a resident.*

At the moment his full military records have not yet been digitalized but I do know that he was 5 ft 7 in height had a “ruddy” complexion, with blue eyes and dark hair and was judged “fit for the Canadian over Seas Expeditionary Force.”

And that for now is it.

I am indebted to Antony Mills who came across the gravestone and has also photographed those of other Canadian soldiers who in due course I will research.

Location; Brooklands Cemetery






Picture, from the collection of Antony Miller, 2017

*Library and Archives Canada, Personnel Records of the First World War, http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/military-heritage/first-world-war/personnel-records/Pages/item.aspx?IdNumber=293490

Monday, 7 January 2019

Another Salford Bandstand

Now I don't know the story of the bandstand in Parr Fold Park. but I am pretty sure someone will.



And so having been sent these pictures by Antony I will await developments.

Location; Salford



Picture; the bandstand Parr Fold Park, 2016, from the collection of Antony Mills.

Monday, 15 May 2017

Ghost signs in Liverpool

Now the blog hasn’t featured a ghost sign for a while so when Antony sent me this one yesterday I fell on it.

It is, Anthony tells me on a street opposite Everton’s ground and I am intrigued by the sign.

I had hoped that I might find a reference to the company but have drawn a blank.

That said I am convinced someone will be able to offer up some information.

Location; Liverpool





Picture; ghost sign, Liverpool from the collection of Antony Mills, 2017

Friday, 7 April 2017

Two who died in the Great War ....... remembered in Brooklands Cemetery

Now when you start on a search for the story of one person’s life you are never quite sure where it will take you.

I knew from the inscription on the family gravestone that Willy Whipp had been born in 1890 and was killed in the September of 1916 just months after his elder brother also died while serving with the Royal Flying Corps.

I cannot begin to imagine how their parents coped with the double tragedy.

But with the detachment that comes with being a century away from their loss I was curious about the two young men.

Willy was serving with the Canadian Expeditionary Force and had enlisted in the October of 1914.*

He was a farmer and had been in Canada since 1909 and that is about all we know but more will come to light.

His father had been the managing director of company specializing in leather and the family moved from Ardwick via Hulme to Ashton-on-Mersey.

Given his father’s status and falling into the trap of making gross assumptions I had assumed that Willy’s brother would have been a pilot, but not so he was an Air Mechanic.

Now before any one bridles at my assumption I am fully aware of the importance of air mechanics, this was the profession of my uncle when he joined the RAF in 1938 and without them the planes stay on the ground.

What puzzles me slightly is that he is buried in Sale suggesting either he died in hospital of wounds or while on leave.

But that is a bit of research for another time.

Location; Brooklands Cemetry

Picture; the family gravestone of Mr and Mrs Whipp, 2017, from the collection of Antony Mills

*Canadian Expeditionary Force, Library and Archives Canada, http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/military-heritage/first-world-war/Pages/introduction.aspx#g

Wednesday, 5 April 2017

James Guy from Leigh who served in the Canadian Expeditionary Force and died on the Western Front

There is a real sense of satisfaction at finding out something about a young man who would otherwise just be a name in a cemetery.

And so it is with James Guy who was born in 1891 and died in May 1917.

His name appears on the family gravestone in Leigh Cemetery and it is another of those recorded by Antony Mills.

James was just 13 when his father died and as his mother was also dead it appears he went to stay with his aunt.

He was a baker by trade and some between 1911 when he was living with his aunt and four years later he settled in Canada where he enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force on 13 December 1915.

He died on May 3rd 1917 and is buried in La Chaudiere Military Cemetery, Vimy.

Now given the date and the place I suspect he was part of the Battle of Vimy Ridge which lasted from April 9 through to April 12.

In the course of the battle, 3, 598 Canadian soldiers were killed and it seems likely that he died of wounds sustained in the fighting,

On his Attestation papers he gave his sister Mrs Forbes who lived in Bolton as his next of kin and he was living in Brantford which is a town in south western Ontario.*

It isn’t much but at least when I go to Leigh Cemetery I will have a little knowledge of this young man.

Location; Leigh, Brantford and Vimy

Picture; the gravestone of the Guy Family, Leigh Cemetery from the collection of Antony Mills

*Library and Archives Canada, Personnel Records of the First World War, http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/discover/military-heritage/first-world-war/personnel-records/Pages/item.aspx?IdNumber=293490

Sunday, 22 May 2016

The Islington Mill

In 2016
Now the Islington Mill has fared better than most.

It is according to one source, “the name commonly used to refer to the collection of nineteenth and early twentieth century buildings that reside at 1 James St, Salford".*

Bits date back to the early 19th century and a cursory glance on the net reveals its rich and varied use today.

In 1849
I was reminded of the place when Antony Mills sent me a collection of pictures of the place.

And armed with them I couldn’t resist going looking for the place when it was still relatively brand new.

So here from the 1849 OS for Manchester and Salford is the mill which in 1911 was the property of H W Lee and Company.

And that is about all I want to say.  The wiki site has a nice introduction and I suggest you take a walk down there.

Location; Salford

Pictures; the Islington Mill, 2016, from the collection of Antony Mills and in 1849 from the OS, Manchester & Salford, 1844-49, courtesy of Digital Archives Association, http://digitalarchives.co.uk/

*Islington Mill, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islington_Mill


Saturday, 21 May 2016

Looking for the story of the Casablanca Mill

I pretty much took the textile mill for granted.

When I first came up to Manchester in 1969 they were still a big part of the landscape especially on the east side of the city and in Ashton-Under-Lyne where we spent a big chunk of the 70s.

And when we left that was where we left them, in clumps at the bottom of street after street and standing proud in a ring around the town and beyond.

But a little over a decade and a bit later there were few of them left and those that still existed faced an uncertain future or had become home to a shed load of small business's most of which had nothing to do with textiles.

Today the most attractive have been converted into smart residents or hotels and the odd one now boasts designer retail outlet.

But what of the Casablanca Mill in Sherborne Street West?

A trawl of the net provides the names of a host of companies that trade from the place ranging from a bedding firm to a set of accountants and an MOT centre.

So far I have drawn a blank on its past.  I can’t find it on the 1911 street directory and it doesn’t appear on Grace’s Guide to British Industrial History.*

Of course there will be someone out there with access to the later directories or will have the knowledge.  I hope so

It caught the interest of Antony Mills who sent me the images and commented “it's still standing in all its glory but never gets a mention.” So here as a starter is the first of what I hope could be a series of stories.

He has offered to send me more of which I will be happy to receive having been very impressed with those he has been posting on that facebook site, Classic Salford Photos Group.

Location; Salford

Pictures; the Casablanca Mill, Sherborne Street West, 2016, from the collection of Antony Mills

* Grace’s Guide to British Industrial History, http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/Main_Page