Author Archives: drm

View from the Finds Hut

Kerry Beeston gave over twenty members of Middleton Archaeological Society a detailed insight into what it is like working in the finds hut of excavations. She gave practtical advice on the different types of finds and how to clean and date them. She brought different types of finds and tools for the audience to handle…

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BBC comes to Long Street Arts & Crafts Church…

Yesterday was one of those special days…. With just a few hours notice, BBC Radio and TV turned up to film the church and school. Why? Because English Heritage has just added the Long Street buildings to the national Heritage at Risk register, which is updated and published every year. First off, was BBC Radio…

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Edgar Wood’s Independent Labour Party Club Listed!

Great news for Middleton’s heritage – the Government and English Heritage have listed the Independent Labour Party Club on Milton Street as Grade II. This followed the submission of a scheme to convert it into flats. The listing specifically protects the inside as well as the outside of the building as being of special historic…

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September Golden Cluster Month ends with ‘Enlightenment’

Golden Cluster Month has had another successful year with hundreds of people enjoying four heritage buildings open to the public and various events laid on. Things were brought to a close by Middleton Heritage Film Group’s ‘Enlightenment Middleton’ film, directed by Anthony Dolan. Over 80 people came to the premiere. This is a great documentary…

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‘Arts & Crafts Awakening’ for Long Street Methodist Church – Give us your views…

A new social enterprise may be formed to help save Edgar Wood’s Arts & Crafts Church at Long Street. Christine Grime, Lee Wolf, Nick Baker and David Morris, two Middletonians and two ‘Wood-ies’ from further afield, have temporarily called it Arts & Crafts Awakening while they consult local people and visitors on the best way…

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Enlightenment Middleton Film – Tuesday 30th September 7.30pm – Long Street Methodist Church – Free Admission

Middleton Heritage Film Group have worked all year on their fourth film about Middleton’s impressive heritage. Don’t miss the premiere coming up next Tuesday! Admission is free, thanks to money from the Heritage Lottery funded Edgar Wood and Middleton Heritage Initiative. Enlightenment Middleton covers the area’s history of the 1700s and early 1800s. You will…

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Edgar Wood’s Independent Labour Party Club Under Threat?

Middleton’s Milton Street Family Centre was closed and sold a few years ago but not before it was lovingly restored by Middleton Township and Rochdale Council’s building repairs team. New owners want to convert it into ten flats, something which would destroy the interior spaces, replace the lovely windows and install rooflights into the prominent…

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Alexander Nowell

From https://www.britannica.com/ Alexander Nowell, (born c. 1507, Whalley, Lancashire, England—died February 13, 1602, London), English scholar, Anglican priest, and dean of St. Paul’s Cathedral in London whose tactless preaching brought him into disfavour with Queen Elizabeth I. He was the author of the catechism still used by the Church of England. He is famous in…

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Ashton Lever

From  https://www.wikipedia.org/ Ashton Lever was born in 1729 at Alkrington Hall. In 1735, Sir James Darcy Lever, his father, had served as High Sheriff of Lancashire.[1] Perspective interior view of Sir Ashton Lever’s Museum in Leicester Square, London 30 March 1785 Lever began by collecting seashells in about 1760, and gradually accumulated one of the…

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George Cayley

From  https://en.wikipedia.org/ George Caley (10 June 1770 – 23 May 1829) was an English botanist and explorer, active in Australia for the majority of his career. Caley lived much of his life in Middleton and was president of the Middleton Botanical Society which met at The White Hart Public House on Rochdale Road. He corresponded…

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James William Booth

From https://www.artnet.com James William Booth (1867-1953) Booth was a leading member of the Staithes Group. He studied at Manchester School of Art under Elias Bancroft. He was a friend of Fred Jackson. Bancroft and Jackson visited Whitby and Hinderwell to paint and Booth followed. He initially shared a studio with Laura and Harold Knight in…

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Frederick Jackson

From https://www.fwjackson.co.uk/ Frederick William Jackson was born in 1859 at Middleton Junction. He was one of three children, and his father worked as a photographer in Oldham. His two brothers were Vincent Jackson, a musician trained at Leipzig Conservatoire, and Charles Arthur Jackson, who was an art dealer and owned a gallery at 7 Police…

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Thomas Langley

From https://en.wikipedia.org/ Thomas Langley (c.1363 – 20 November 1437) was an English prelate who held high ecclesiastical and political offices in the early to mid-1400s. He was Dean of York, Bishop of Durham, twice Lord Chancellor of England to three kings, and a Cardinal. In turn Keeper of the King’s signet and Keeper of the…

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Samuel Bamford

Samuel Bamford (28 February 1788 – 13 April 1872) was an English radical and writer, who was born and lived in Middleton, Lancashire. Bamford was one of five children born to Daniel Bamford, a muslin weaver, part-time teacher, and later master of the Salford workhouse, and his wife, Hannah. After his father withdrew him from…

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Film – Enlightenment Middleton – watch now

Middleton in the Industrial Revolution and Georgian England – how science and reason took hold – and how individualism and reform came about in South Lancashire through the extraordinary lives of Ashton Lever, George Cayley and Sam Bamford…

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Hopwood Hall

Check out Andy Marshall’s photos of Hopwood Hall Hopwood Hall is one of the truly great buildings of Middleton and Manchester but one which has sadly been abandoned and left to decline for many years.  In recent years, the Council has tried to make amends by providing security and undertaking urgent repairs. There is always…

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