Bury
Bury maps (2 available)
Map of Lancashire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
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Personalised maps
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Bury books (4 available)
Did You Know? Bury - A Miscellany
Hardback
Manchester Photographic Memories
Paperback
- 9 photos on Bury appear in 1 Frith books - View photos of Bury
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Bury and Lancashire
Bury memories
Education and Health
By the 1940s the Grammar School had been rebuilt in Tenterden Street. The building in the photograph became The Wylde Clinic which was the centre for mothers and babies and of course housed the 'dreaded' school dentist. My younger brother went to the Wylde Clinic for 'sunray treatment' where all the children had to wear goggles to protect their eyes.
The Wylde Clinic was still operating in the 1960s for mothers and babies, ante-natal care and school health referrals.
Contributed by Janet Robinson
Childhood
Walmersley Road Recreation ground was later renamed Clarence Park. This is the bandstand where on summer Sunday afternoons there would be a band concert and deck chairs (strictly for the older generation of course). The house in the distance was the park keeper's residence, and woe betide any child who was caught walking on the flower beds. There was a large rock near the park entrance which carried a metal plaque. The plaque said that the rock had been carried down by glaciers from the ice age. Was that true? As children, we used the rock as a miniature slide. The park was our playground throughout the 1940s and 50s.
Contributed by Janet Robinson
The best market in Lancashire
Bury market was famous and its modern version, though not as interesting, still is. We used to go to the market and buy one of Thompson's black puddings, piping hot in a grease-proof paper, The man would split it and put plenty of mustard on. There was the roast potato man, vegetable stalls, fish stalls and the famous Cheap Jack. He used to gather crowds round his stall with his patter and his household goods at 'knockdown prices'. He must have done well - he retired to St. Annes on Sea - a sure mark of success. In the late sixties a fire destroyed the old market hall and the market was relocated. Everyone agreed that the atmosphere was never the ...read more here
Contributed by Janet Robinson
A Focal Point
Kay Gardens was the terminus for all bus services from surrounding districts and towns. On this photograph, the large building at the back of the picture was the Co-op, which was at that time a department store, but also housed a restaurant on the first floor, widely used by office workers at lunch times, and of course for funeral parties. At the far right of the picture is the dome for the old indoor market. Kay Gardens was a popular place for local workers to sit at lunchtime to eat packed lunches.
Contributed by Janet Robinson
The rock in the 1950s
The awnings on the left of this picture show the location of Woolworths, whilst Marks and Spencers was a little further up on the right hand side. The building immediately before Woolworths was a bank and over the top was Joseph, Thompson and Marsdens Acountants.
Contributed by Janet Robinson
Extracts From Bury & Lancashire books
It was from the Old Boar’s Head in Fleet Street that travellers could take a coach to Colne or Manchester. The town’s other coaching inns were the Grey Mare Inn in the Market Place for services to Leeds, York, Liverpool, Manchester and Clitheroe; the Eagle & Child in Silver Street for Manchester and Skipton via Burnley and Colne; and the White Lion in Millgate for Manchester.
An extract from from"Greater Manchester Photographic Memories".
A church existed on this site at the time of William the Conqueror, and the Domesday survey lists its patron as Roger de Poictou. The church of St Mary, which stood here in c1773, was demolished except for its tower and spire, and then rebuilt. In 1843 the tower and spire were dismantled, and subsequently rebuilt during 1844-45. By 1869-70 the body of the church was found to be suffering from wood rot and was declared unsafe. Demolition began in 1870, but once again the tower and spire were spared. A new chancel and nave were erected between 1872 and 1876.
An extract from from"Greater Manchester Photographic Memories".
Designed by Maxwell & Tuke and completed in 1894, the Technical School, Broad Street, was built to fulfil the requirements of the Technical Instruction Act (1890). Technical education had received a boost during the 1880s when towns like Bradford committed funds to build specialist colleges. They believed such places were essential if their industry was to keep abreast of foreign competition and innovation.
An extract from from"Greater Manchester Photographic Memories".
Situated on a hill overlooking the town, Christ Church, or the Jesse Haworth Memorial Church, was designed by Lawrence Booth and built in the late 1880s. A large church with fine Gothic windows, it was paid for by the Haworth family, who had made their money from cotton spinning and fustian making.
An extract from from"Greater Manchester Photographic Memories".
One of the principal roads from the south into the Forest of Rossendale was from Bury to Clitheroe, the route skirting the edge of Holcombe Hill and Haslingden. The Peel Tower on Holcombe Hill was erected in 1852 to the memory of Sir Robert Peel.
An extract from from"Greater Manchester Photographic Memories".






