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Bromley Cross

Bromley Cross maps (2 available)

Old map of Bromley Cross

Bromley Cross photos (none available)

We have no photos of Bromley Cross,although these nearby locations do:
  • Turton - 3 photo(s)
  • Bolton - 38 photo(s)
  • Tottington - 2 photo(s)
  • Belmont - 1 photo(s)
  • Holcombe - 2 photo(s)
  • Ramsbottom - 3 photo(s)
  • Farnworth - 3 photo(s)
  • Bury - 69 photo(s)
  • Bromley Cross books (6 available)

    Bromley Cross memories

    Windsor Road

    We moved to Bromley Cross about 1947 just before my sister Virginia was born, it was a lovely new prefab, but I don't remember much about the inside of it apart from the wood-burning stove, that sticks in my mind for some reason. When it was thundering and lightning Mum would sit with us children on the back step and we would watch as the lightning snaked through the sky. A couple of years later they started to build new houses across the road and my Mum knew the councillor Mr Dart, I think he asked her which one she would like and she told him the one on the corner. That is how we came to live at 32 Windsor ...read more here
    Contributed by julie christo

    Lancashire memories

    The Ormerod family.

    Burnley, Ormerod Hall 1895

    Ormerod House passed out of the Ormerod family when the male line died out and the three daughters of the last Ormerod married. Their husbands were John Hargreaves, a local coal mine owner, the Rev William Thursby who became vicar of the local church and General Scarlett who led the Charge of the Heavy Brigade to retake the field after the Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaclava. The family fortunes grew with the mines during the Industrial Revolution and the boom in the cotton industry but in their enthusiasm to mine more and more coal they managed to extend the mine workings from the pit head some four miles away, under the house which caused ...read more here
    A memory of Burnley contributed by I Ormerod

    Platers and Stampers

    I worked here as a Plater for about 1yr.Not a good memory.They sacked me for taking time off to join the RAF so I joined the RAF.Best move I ever made.
    A memory of Burnley contributed by Brian Brierley

    My Early Years

    On the 2nd September 1952 I was born at Manor Farm. I lived there with my parents, my maternal grandfather and two older brothers. I know my grandmother was alive when I was born but, unfortunately died soon after. My grandfather was called Seriah Butler and was the tenant of Manor Farm and when my mother Dorothy Butler married Albert Shorrock at the village church my father worked on the farm, in fact we all did.
    I remember travelling down the Dykes to bring the cattle home for milking. I would sit on the handlebars of my Dads bike to help with the cows.
    There was an orchard around the farmhouse and I can remember my mother making damsom jam ...read more here
    A memory of Yealand Conyers contributed by Sue Tomlinson

    Extracts From Bromley Cross & Lancashire books

    Blackburn, the Town Hall c1955

    Note the change of illumination outside the Town Hall. On the right is the Exchange Building in its incarnation as the Majestic Cinema. Davy Crockett is showing, and you could have had a seat in the stalls for one shil- ling (5p), or in the circle for one shilling and sixpence (7½p).
    An extract from from"Blackburn Town and City Memories".

    Blackburn, Exchange 1899

    The Exchange looks here much as it did when Charles Dickens ascended its steps to give his reading. The premises on the right advertising Whittle Springs Ales was W H Gregson’s brewers’ agents, later to become an office for Grant’s whisky, the only one they had outside Scotland - a tribute to Blackburn’s fondness for strong liquor. On the left was the Exchange Hotel.
    An extract from from"Blackburn Town and City Memories".

    Blackburn, the Town Hall c1955

    This is how local historian W A Abram described the Town Hall: ‘The west front, 120 feet wide, with an elevation of 63 feet, presents the main entrance in the centre, by three massive arched doorways. The front is emboldened by Corinthian columns resting upon a rusticated basement upholding a broad tablature surmounted by a perforated parapet’ - an impressive piece of architecture.
    An extract from from"Blackburn Town and City Memories".

    Burnley, St Peter's Church 1895

    This is an unusual photograph of Burnley’s parish church in that it is taken from the north, where the trees make photography difficult. The photographer has managed to get round this problem by making use of one of the upstairs windows of the Old Grammar School. St Peter’s occupies the original site of the community that eventually became Burnley, which perhaps dates from the Dark Ages. This was a relatively easy position to defend because the river almost surrounds the site. We can see the Church Street Road Bridge to the left, and the land upon which the church is built slopes down quite steeply to the river. To the right of the tower stands St Peter’s Church School, Burnley’s oldest school.
    An extract from from"Burnley Town and City Memories".

    Burnley, St Peter's Church 1895

    This photograph shows how the church was extended in the 1850s — at this time there was great demand for pews in St Peter’s. It would have been difficult to extend the building, because its site was constrained by the Brun, so the solution was to construct galleries. The Master window, in the middle, is dedicated to the memory of Robert Mosley Master: when he left Burnley after thirty years in 1855, he became Archdeacon of Manchester.
    An extract from from"Burnley Town and City Memories".