Friday, 4 March 2016

In advance of International Women’s Week .................... a new set of records on those arrested for campaigning for the vote before 1914

Now as we head towards International Women’s Week it is fitting that a whole new set of records on those that participated in a range of activities that led to their imprisonment are now online.


Ancestry has made available a government data base of those women that had been arrested between 1906-1914.*

“Upon the outbreak of war in August 1914 some of the suffrage societies (but not all) declared a suspension to militant tactics. In response, the government granted an amnesty to all suffrage prisoners. The WSPU was one of the key societies to move away from suffrage campaigns to support Lloyd George’s government in the war effort, though they had fire bombed his house only months before.

At the outbreak of the amnesty the Home Office compiled a list of all suffrage campaigners they were providing amnesty to, and although the document is entitled ‘Amnesty of August 1914: index of women arrested 1906-1914’ it also includes the names of more than one hundred men. 

The Home Office actually began keeping indexes of suffrage supporters (male and female) prior to the amnesty, so that they could trace and link multiple convictions of the same person. 

Originally written on index cards, which were often out of order, in 1922 the records were copied into a book. Each record consists of the name of the person arrested, and the date and place of arrest. 

If a person was arrested more than once, the details of each arrest are documented. In the last half of the book were inserted letters, minutes, reports, and several news articles related to the activities of the suffragists and suffragettes. The value of the index was primarily for day to day office work in the Home Office. 

However, the clerk notes “should the history of the Suffragette Movement ever …. be written in detail, [it] would be a source of information not otherwise obtainable.”


The richness of this source is not in the story of the amnesty and the different reactions to war by many different suffrage societies. 

Instead, it is in the literal wealth of names to be found in the document - over 1000 male and female suffrage campaigners who were at some point arrested. It’s a document that moves away from viewing only the Pankhurst figureheads of the movement to look at the wealth of individuals who, for a cause they believed in, were prepared to risk their jobs, families, and sometimes their health by hunger striking.”*

So there you have it, but I can’t close without reflecting that all of this is only part of the story and in the preoccupation with the women who broke windows and set fire to the contents of pillar boxes another equally important story often gets over looked.

This is the history of those other working women who campaigned in their workplace, their trade union and within the Labour Party for the extension of the franchise to all women, but that is another story.


Pictures; Suffragettes, 1905, m48441, Annie Briggs, Lillian Forrester and Evelyn Manestra. who attacked pictures in Manchester City Art Gallery in April 1913. m08225, and Emmeline Pankhurst and Emily Wolstenholme, date unknown m08239 courtesy of Manchester Libraries, Information and Archives, Manchester City Council, http://images.manchester.gov.uk/index.php?session=pass


* About England, Suffragettes Arrested, 1906-1914, Ancestry.co.uk www.ancestry.co.uk


Thursday, 3 March 2016

A forgotten street ................ St Ann’s Alley

Now St Ann’s Alley is one of those little walk throughs that it is easy to miss.


Added to which it is not one that I often venture down.

In my case if I am on Police Street I am on my way to Waterstone’s from King Street and likewise if I have come out of St Anns’ Square the quickest way back is past the church and through the alley without wandering down that narrow space.

But having come across this picture I began to wonder about St Ann’s Alley.  It shows up on Casson and Berry’s 1751 map of Manchester and so has been offering up a short cut to Mancunians for centuries.

Location; St Ann’s Alley, off Police Street, Manchester

Picture; St Ann’s Alley, off Police Street, 2012, from the collection of Andrew Simpson

Doing the double in Frodsham ............. making a telephone call and posting a letter

Now this is a telephone box with a difference.

It is according to the blue plaque nearby a “Telephone Kiosk circa 1927 K4 style 'The Vermillion Giant'

Designed by Sir Giles Gilbert Scott, only fifty were made and this believed to be one of only four examples known to have survived Listed Grade II"*

I have Brian Robertson to thank for letting me use the image which comes from his excellent facebook site Greater Manchester History, Architecture, Faces and Places.

And that pretty much is all there is to say about it.

Except perhaps that I remain in awe of the variations on a simple telephone box.

Location; Frodsham, Cheshire

Picture; K4 Telephone Kiosk, circa 1927 from the collection of Brian Robertson

*Frodsham Heritage Economic Regeneration Scheme, 2005.

Wednesday, 2 March 2016

Sky lines I have seen ...................... Albert Square ...2007

Now I can do skylines, perhaps not as good as some but if you point the camera to the roof tops there is the picture.



This tall one was another that I missed.

For a big chunk of the 70s and early 80s I wandered the city centre but the kids came along, work became busy and suddenly three decades had gone by.

So while out and about on Friday evening on a warmish spring day around 2007 I passed through Albert Square, and yes I fully accept the second image is not really a skyline.

Location Albert Square, Manchester






Picture; Albert Square, 2007, from the collection of Andrew Simpson

Wishing I had a letter to post .............. waiting at the Airport for the plane from Milan

Now of all the bits of street furniture I have come across these two do not rank very highly.

At T3 waiting for the plane from Milan, 2016
They are not that old and are not even on a street.

If you wanted to use either of them it would involve a trip out to the airport and a wander across to the arrivals area of T3.

But they are nevertheless post boxes and deserve a place in the category of “post boxes I have known.”

That said they may at some point in the future be on the move as the future plans for the airport unfold.*

Which just leaves me to wonder if my old friend David Harrop will get involved given that he “arranged the installation of the George V1 boxes.”

Location; T3, Manchester Airport, Manchester

Picture; at Manchester Airport, 2016, from the collection of Andrew Simpson

*Manchester Airport Master Plan to 2030, file:///C:/Users/Andrew/Documents/Downloads/AirportMasterplan.pdf

£1bn Manchester Airport transformation: Super-sized terminal, faster security, more passengers, more routes, Charlotte Cox, Manchester Evening News, June 16 2015
http://www.manchestereveningnews.co.uk/news/greater-manchester-news/manchester-airport-expansion-plan-security-9370929

Tuesday, 1 March 2016

You can never get enough of Castlefield.

I can never get enough of Castlefield.

I remember it as a slightly shabby area waiting for something to happen.

Once it had been a thriving area of factories, warehouses and timber yards and a busy community, many of whom owed their livelihood to the railway goods yard on Liverpool Road and the nearby canal basin.

Now it is a world heritage site, full of smart new businesses and even smarter apartments but take a walk down to where the Duke’s Canal meets the Rochdale Canal and you can still get a sense of what was once there.

But even here with its relics of our industrial past the present pokes through.

I like the little amphitheatre just below that replica of the Roman fort and like others sat on deckchairs looking at the sand beside the towpath which marked a cheeky attempt to bring the seaside to Castlefield.

Location; Castlefield, Manchester

Picture, Castlefield circa 2007, from the collection of Andrew Simpson

Never pass up an opportunity to record a bit of history ............. down on Chester Road

Now St George’s House has fared much better than that other block of terraced houses a bit further down Chester Road.

St Georges House, 2016
So while St George's House looks neat and busy that other terrace on the corner with Great Jackson Street is empty and looking forlorn and shabby.

I can’t say I have ever thought about either group over much but prompted by Andy Robertson’s picture I went looking for their history.

Those fine  houses in 1849
In the early 20th century they were occupied by pretty up market people including two surgeons and an oil merchant.

Looking back into the previous century and they seem to have always attracted a “better class” of people.

I don’t yet know when the site was first developed but by 1849 there were three fine house on the site with views across open land to the Duke’s Canal.

But the writing was already on the wall for the future because had you looked across that open land and let your eye stray to the south there was Hulme Works and a Saw Mill running along Hulme Hall Lane.

In time these two would be joined by a complex of other industrial works one of which has featured frequently as Andy has maintained his continuing project to record the site from a fire last year to its eventual demolition.*

But that is another story.

Location; Chester Road, Manchester

Pictures; St Georg'e House, 2016 from the collection of Andy Robertson, Chester Road and those fine houses, fromthe OS of Manchester & Salford, 1842-49, courtesy of Digital Archives Association, http://digitalarchives.co.uk/

*Hulme, http://chorltonhistory.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/Hulme