Patricroft
Patricroft maps (2 available)
Map of Lancashire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of Lancashire
Personalised maps
Create an historic map centred directly on any postcode!
Patricroft books (6 available)
- 2 photos on Patricroft appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Patricroft
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Patricroft and Lancashire
Patricroft memories
Tommy Cocker
Yes I remember Tommy Cocker, I was born in Patricroft in 1941 and lived in Mellor St. After school I used to go to Tommy's shop to do odd jobs for spending money. One of the jobs I did was to pluck chickens, he used to keep them live in his celler, he would take me down there where the chickens were running around, he would then screw there necks and give them to me to pluck still warm, apart from the little cash I received I also finished covered in fowl lice. Some job. I now live in Australia. Just interested, do any of you remember a Barry Wilson from 1940/50?
Contributed by Barry Wilson
Patricroft , Liverpool Road
There was a fish shop named Tommy Cockers' I think and old Tommy used to come out and chase us with a wet, slimy fish.
Contributed by Chris Reid
Patricroft shops
There was an ironmonger's shop on Patricroft Bridge ( the Eccles side) owned by a man called Richmond, whose daughter May attended Eccles Grammar School - though she was too nice a girl to have anything to do with a yob like me! Over the other side of the bridge was the Majestic Cinema (later the "Talk of the North" club). St. Joseph's Home was not always the happy place your correspondent remembers - my mother used to threaten to "...have you kids put away in there" if we misbehaved, so we were much in awe of that big green front door with the big brass knocker.
Contributed by Robert DALE.
St Joseph's Home, Worsley Road
I was at St Joseph's Home from November 1947 to july 1953, and had many happy times.
Contributed by james sullivan
Extracts From Patricroft & Lancashire books
We are in Liverpool Road. The bridge was built over the Bridgewater Canal in 1778, but it has been widened and strengthened many times since. The pubs on the corners of this cross-roads reflect the canal, with names like the Packet Boat, the Bridgewater, and the Navigation. Most of the buildings in this picture were swept away in the late 1960s and 1970s.
An extract from from"Manchester Photographic Memories".
This is a wonderful piece of social history from the 1950s caught on film. Liverpool Road was a long road running from Church Street, Eccles to the airport out at Barton. For much of its length it was all shops, and every kind of shop under the sun was to be found along this road. There were pork butchers’, egg shops, pawn shops, bric-a-brac and second-hand shops, and of course a public house on nearly every corner. Sir John Moore, the pools tycoon, who built the Littlewoods empire, was born in a pub on Liverpool Road.
An extract from from"Manchester Photographic Memories".
It was the opening of James Nasmyth’s engineering works that led to the growth of Eccles and Patricroft. Nasmyth chose Patricroft because of ‘the benefit of breathing pure air during the greater part of the year’; being no fool, he was one of many industrialists who had grasped the fact that a healthy workforce is a more efficient workforce. Nasmyth’s manufactured steam hammers; one even appears on the armorial bearings of the borough. They later developed the steam-powered pile-driver as well as building railway locomotives. Other industries included coal mines, a silk mill, a magnesium works, and a mining equipment manufacturer.
An extract from from"Greater Manchester Photographic Memories".
Monton had been a separate
village until the incorporation of
Eccles, when it was taken under
the new council’s wing. Monton
Green is also the name of the
road in our photograph. Behind
the photographer is the very
large Broadoak Park, home of
the Worsley Golf Club; the short
road leading to the clubhouse is
called Stableford Avenue. Like
the other areas of Eccles and
Salford, Monton likes to keep
its own identity.
An extract from from"Manchester Pocket Album".
The dome of the Infirmary is on the left, and Lewis’s tower is in the centre. On
Tuesday 1 September 1908, a large crowd gathered here to watch about one
hundred patients being moved out of the Infirmary. Horse-drawn ambulances,
taxi cabs, flat wagons, and even a horse bus were used to convey the patients
down to the new Royal Infirmary on Oxford Road. Only one patient was
left behind because he was too ill to move. The main buildings were soon
demolished, but the Wash House remained, as did part of the Asylum, which
was used as a reference library before the Central Library was built.
An extract from from"Manchester Pocket Album".






