Newton Heath
Newton Heath maps
Historic maps of Newton Heath and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Newton Heath maps
Newton Heath photos
We have no photos of Newton Heath, although we do have photos of these nearby places:
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Newton Heath area books
Displaying 1 of 17 books about Newton Heath and the local area. View all books for this area
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Newton Heath
Displaying a selection of personal
memories of Newton Heath.
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Newton Heath Childhood 1950s.
Hi, I was born in Harpurhey but moved to Newton Heath in about 1949. I went to Hague Street School till I was 11, then on to St Mary's Road Secondary Modern. Hague Street was a nice school, we all seemed to get on very well, our head teacher was Mr Sowerbutts, quite a genial chap as I remember. If you got a merit award in class, you would go to Mr Sowerbutt's office on a Friday, and you and the other merit pupils would get a small Walls ice cream as a reward. Mr Jackson was my teacher, I think he trained as a teacher after the war. We would play on Mather & Platts big open field alongside the canal, and on the 'rec on Tenacres Lane, we were always out playing, in the local streets, Pearson Street /Elvey Street and across the road in Robert Street and Pilling Street. I remember going to the Loco football matches, and going to the Ceylon picture house on Thorpe Road,... Read more
Gorton Lane, Manchester
I lived on Gorton Lane and I rememeber the shops and the pub which is the Gardeners now, I lived a few doors away. I used to go to the shops and I remember the corner shop, I forget what it was called but the owners were Mrs Middleton and Audrey who ran it and there was the chippie and record shop further down near Peacock School, I went to St Francis School and the church, I was upset when the church got smashed up but it looks good now, I am glad they saved it. Gorton was a nice place when I was growing up. I do have some happy memories. I used to walk to school every day there and back.
LOCAL HISTORY PROJECT About COLLYHURST - VOLUNTEERS NEEDED!!
Dear all,
I've just been reading all of your posts about Collyhurst and am astounded at how vivid your memories of the area are! It really is fantastic to see. From working in the area I've never before met a group of people more proud about the area they live in. I am part of a small steering group that is working on a project called "Once Upon a Time" which is specifically about Collyhurst. The posts you have put are exactly the types of memoreis we are looking for...memories of school, memories of clubs and societies etc... If you would like any more information at all about this then please don't hesitate to get on touch with me. My contact details are as follows:
Tel: 0161 655 7822
Email: s.anderson2@manchester.gov.uk
The project is well worth getting involved with. I look forward to hearing from you soon.
Simon Anderson.
Newtonheath Loco Football CCub
I remember sneaking into the match by going past the lodging house on Warden Lane and going by the railwayside and through a hole in the fence that the railway men had made so that they could watch the match on their break. If the football was boring, me and my brothers would watch the trains and the freight wagons being shunted back and forth.
SCHOOL DAYS
I REMEMBER GOING TO HAUGE STREET SCHOOL AND LIVING IN ROBERT STREET JUST A STREET AWAY AND ONE MORNING I HAD FORGOTTEN TO TAKE MY LUNCH SO I STOOD AT THE SCHOOL GATES AND WATCHED FOR MR MERGAROIDE WHO WAS THE LANDLORD OF THE GREYHOUND PUB AFACING OU R HOUSE AND WHEN I SEEN HIM I ASKED HIM WOULD HE GET MY MOTHER TO BRING MY SCHOOL LUNCH FOR ME AND HE DID I WAS WELL CHUFFED
Lancashire memories
Love my Roots
I was born in 11 Higher Duke to Alice & Fred Musgrave in 1939. My early memories are being rushed out to the back entry into the shelter when the bombs were dropping, I don't remember being that scared it must have been the good humour and attitude of all the neighbours sharing the shelter, I remember lots of singing. Dad worked at West Gas I think, or it could have been AVRO. I went to Corpus Christie School until I was 8 then moved to the Crumpsall Open Air after one of those medicals where the doctors came round the school. I remember my life in Hr Duke St as very happy with lots of friends Ray Blears, the Kendal family Joan & Louise Hayles the Ashbrooks, the Sunderland girls, Maureen & Tommy Hitchen, I often wonder where they are now. Right at the top of our street accessed by the back entry near the Hitchens was Morans the bookies. My Dad bought... Read more
My First Memories of Harpurhey
Let me amend my memories of Harpurhey, after looking at some old photos of Manchester I can now remember and recollect other things, like for example holding on to the rails outside St Edmund's Junior School on the first day and my poor mother having to take me home, only to bring me back one week later, I think that was 1951. My first clear memory of Harpurhey was the Coronation in 1953. I expected the Queen to walk down the very street I lived in which was Mitford Street, just off Conran Street, it had a greengrocer's on one corner and an ironmonger's on the other. I remember that the street was concrete because it had to take heavy loads on oit during the war years, transport etc, it was excellent for roller skating on as most other streets were cobblestones, and we had a large Back Street which had no traffic on it, this was where all the children played in safety. Dewhurst's the meat factory was situated... Read more
