Bury, Market Place c.1955
Photo ref: B257019
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Photo ref: B257019
Photo of Bury, Market Place c.1955

More about this scene

About sixty years separate this view and photograph No 36783. During that time, the horse has given way to the internal combustion engine; trams have been and gone; the statue of Sir Robert Peel now stands guard over a gents' toilet; and a memorial commemorates Bury's suffering during the insanity of two world wars.

An extract from Greater Manchester Photographic Memories.

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Greater Manchester Photographic Memories

Greater Manchester Photographic Memories

The photo 'Bury, Market Place c1955' appears in this book.

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A Selection of Memories from Bury

For many years now, we've been inviting visitors to our website to add their own memories to share their experiences of life as it was, prompted by the photographs in our archive. Here are some from Bury

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My great grand parents were in service at walshaw hall, my great grandma Annie Armstrong married the gardener Jack Slater. My mum has fond memories of living at walshaw hall.
During World War Two I was evacuated from London to various locations three times, the last of these was Bury, in Lancashire. My older brother and I stayed with two families sharing a house at 16 Swallow Drive in what was referred to as 'the Dickie Bird Estate.' All the street names were named after birds. There was some consternation at the school because we were 'Church of England' and ...see more
We used to own Walshaw chippy, it was a garage made of asbestos. I had loads of friends who used to turn up hungry, Fri and Sat night after the pubs shut. My dad used to have a back room full of people eating fish and playing cards. (I even called my dog Chippy as it was chip coloured.) He used to pile food on to families who were skint at the time. He had a second job; he was a school dinner driver so I had 2 ...see more
My great grandparents met whilst working at Walshaw Hall. Margaret Eve was Welsh and had worked in a big house on Washway Road in Sale before coming to Walshaw Hall around 1911. There she became housekeeper and met Henry Hillier who was coachman. They got married in Wrexham in 1912.