You give us a glimpse into our past and that is so very important, for once its gone its gone forever, I enjoy your videos very much, having first set foot in Manchester way back in 1978, i stayed.
@TheKwambus5 жыл бұрын
Hi, I am a relatively new sub so only saw this video tonight. Hambley's - Funnily enough I worked for this guy for two days before he "let me go" I was 16 or 17 so it was 34 years ago or thereabouts. They did indeed wash drums and containers and it was pretty dirty work (hence my relief at being fired). The building itself I have been inside when it was active and to my recollection the downstairs was used for washing drums with a small office on the second floor. It was pretty rough even then; from memory I think his father set up the business way back. The whole yard area you showed on the video was piled high with mainly blue plastic containers. He was a nice enough guy actually, just I was never cut out for that sort of job. Only mentioned this because I was amazed when it appeared in the video. Love your work mate, keep it up.
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Wow thats brilliant. You actually worked there. Albeit a short time 😀
@l30njam3s6 жыл бұрын
The dug up ruins were houses for poor people.. I watched it on Time team. Builders were digging up an old mill site and came across them... youtube time team manchester its fascinating
@cubicinches185 жыл бұрын
I think the authenticity of Martins' vids are better
@soulfabuk Жыл бұрын
@MartinZero caught an episode of Corrie last night and Roy Cropper was talking about Angel Meadow. Thought of you while watching...sure Weatherfield Historical Society would love to have you as a member 😉
@andrewpearson33655 жыл бұрын
The building on Potato Wharf used to fascinate me when I saw it from the train and I assume that it was late to the demolition party because of some listing status. There was a similar situation when buildings off Swan Street (where I had an office) were demolished for car parking. One small block remained which, the car park attendant told me, was an old toilet block that was listed. I think that may have been part of the Rising Sun Inn, but that's a guess. The archaeological site you show is on the 1849 New Cross O.S. sheet. On the corner of Ludgate Hill and Baptist Street (south-east corner of the block) was the Grey Hound Tavern whilst the opening off Ludgate Street was Hunt's Court. As you and many of your correspondents suggest, the bulk of this area seems to have been residential but there were several larger buildings. By the way, I picked this map up from Waterstones only last week for £3.00. It's Manchester Sheet 24 in the Godfrey Editions. Keep up the valuable work.
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah they are good maps those
@tonymurray52636 жыл бұрын
Another great video. The houses look the same as the ones excavated when the NOMA (Co-op) building was built. I went to an open day, they had the same stone floors and were divided up in a similar manor to house more families. These were the cellars of the houses and would be the poorest accommodation. Often there would be up to 10 people living in the one room, in some of the worst they would flood and fill with sewage. The ones at NOMA mostly had fire places/ovens in at least one of the rooms these look to be even poorer than those. Keep up the good work with the vids
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Hi Tony, I saw a similar dig in a car park near NOMA about 2011. These do look very much the same. But I couldnt assert anything as I wasn't sure. But definitely look like poor quality slum housing. Thanks Tony
@justincasey59756 жыл бұрын
Fascinating, I csnt believe that I’ve not heard of your channel before, I love Manchester, especially the history.
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Hi Justin, thats half the battle on KZbin, getting discovered. Thanks for commenting 👍
@alanvaughan65316 жыл бұрын
Hi Martin, thanks for fleeting glimpses of the Manchester i was brought up in!! Not the same place today! I love your work. Perhaps i should explain i was born in 1946 and lived in MCR 20 & 14 for the first 19 years of my life. Many places you have visited i remember such as the boat that was moored at Pomana in Hulme. I had many a good time there!! My Nana was born in Higher Openshaw in 1884. I recently tried to establish the house she was born in, much to my disappointment it was now a children's playground. I might add that my "Nanna" was a victim of the "Gin house" days. My great grandmother (her mother) was the victim and was brought up by a stepmother. I have lived overseas for many a decade now, and as a proud Manc i regularly visit my place of birth!! ("you can take the man out of Manchester but NOT Manchester out of the man)! Having served a 5 year apprentiship at AEI/GEC in the Iron Foundry i worked in Trafford Park from 1962 onward. In those days 26000 were employed in that factory alone. Buses used to be lined up to enter and exit Trafford Park in those days . To day wherever i travel in the MCR i used to know i see vast wastelands, eg Pomona , Beswick, Openshaw Collyhurst, ect ect.So many pubs have gone!. I regularly used to meet my mates at a Burtonwood house on Corporation St before going to see my beloved "Reds" at OT . Of coarse that pub is no longer there. I have so many more experiences i could dwell on and should you choose to communicate with me that would be great! Keep up the good work, you are a true Manc. Regards, Alan.
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Hello Alan, great memories there. Glad the videos are helping to re kindle. Ive seen photographs of the buses lined up at Trafford park brilliant stuff. So many changes and so many buildings disappearing. Lets try to capture them before we forget. Thank you again for commenting 👌
@cubicinches185 жыл бұрын
"you can take the man out of Manchester but NOT Manchester out of the man" Ditto I'd love to tell you the story of how I became a Man U supporter when the family tradition was to support City
@Mr.Grimsdale5 жыл бұрын
@@cubicinches18 Touche, my Dad and two brothers are blue but i became a Red. In fact my Dad was a bitter blue and he gave me a whack across my head when i told him i was going to be a United supporter, a year later he took me to my first game (in '77) and thats only because i was stood there when the milkman was selling an Adult and child spare tickets for a F.A 1/4 final at OT. Over the years he mellowed and even ended up working for the United Development Fund, two-faced git.
@Mr.Grimsdale5 жыл бұрын
Did Your Nanna live anywhere near Edge Lane, i was born in a street just of it in the '60's ? I did an engineering course at GEC in Trafford Park in the early 80's, and i'm also a Red, small world.
@cubicinches185 жыл бұрын
@@Mr.Grimsdale I used to live near Edge Lane Chorlton
@EnglishmaninMalta5 жыл бұрын
Love your videos, been binge watching, I am a brummie living out in Malta, love adventure myself, so much lost history in this world
@leeetchells6095 жыл бұрын
Hi Martin , I'm a bricklayer and they just look like cellars of Victorian terraced houses. Single skin brick walls are very common on partition wall between poor mill workers houses. Many still exist . An over enthusiastic d.i.yer with a drill can discover this when the drill pops through nextdoors living room wall!!
@RiojaRoj4 жыл бұрын
Martin, saw the angle meadow vid a while ago, very interesting as always. The reason for the comment just now is to say, Thanks for what you do, for the history of the NW especially Manchester. Interesting too, you said things were about to disappear Any Minute ! How right you were ! Just watched a documentary, Billion Pound Manucopia, no doubt youve seen it, of the classic old building adjacent to angel meadow, ( now, was ! A shelter for the Homeless ) soon to be yet another pile of concrete and glass..... diabolical ! Cheers Roj
@MartinZero4 жыл бұрын
Yes true its already began. Thanks very much
@ianfrench15775 жыл бұрын
P.H on that street map means Public House. An old pub. Situated within a row of houses and outbuildings / yards to the rear
@janbertenshaw85974 жыл бұрын
One of the most interesting places in manchester is below Victoria station I tried to get permission on a number of occasions to go down in the 80s but without success. From what l remember the station was built on top of older buildings and l think there are some remains still there.
@MarkVanVasey5 жыл бұрын
im glad i found this channel, asks great questions and the comment section is always good too.
@phillnick56646 жыл бұрын
Angel medow dig was the basements of the slumbs that where there ...mainly for the Irish workers of the mill on the river facing...had the highest mortality rate in the UK...over 100 homes shared one lavertory..must have been hard times...excellent vidio ..love your stuff..keep up the good work
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Thanks Phill. One hell of a place that Angel Meadow
@philcooper96235 жыл бұрын
Thank's for all these vlog's...bloody fascinating stuff, whenever I get back home to Lancashire I can't believe now much it's changing.Although there are still little bits of the old towns left, Keep up the good work pal.
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Thanks Phil
@barryuk6765 жыл бұрын
I like what you're doing there looking at what's left of the old city before it's lost forever, I wished that I had taken pictures of these sorts of building's over the last 50 or so years but back then we had to buy film for cameras and pay to have the pictures developed, digital film makes it so much more affordable now. As for the city slums I discovered that my great grandma was brought up a Gypsy and so I have been reading up on Gypsy life hundreds of years ago, and found that over the years many attempts were made to make the Gypsy way of life illegal mainly by rich landowners and the church, one of the biggest fears of the Gypsies was that they would lose their freedom to roam and would have to live in the squalor of the city slums where they couldn't make a living. It appears that they would rather live in the harshness of the countryside living with just a tent as shelter where they knew how to find food and firewood than to be forced into the disease ridden slums of the city.
@HenrysAdventures4 жыл бұрын
Interesting video! Thank you for documenting this before the go forever!
@MartinZero4 жыл бұрын
Thanks very much
@gingerbread66145 жыл бұрын
Another great video. Thank you.
@rogerscottcathey5 жыл бұрын
Developers look at the Sistine Chapel and wonder at how many units they could fit on the razed land.
@ChurchOfTheHolyMho5 жыл бұрын
We have a legislator in Congress who has proposed rebuilding or retrofitting every single building in the US within 10 years (along with other nonsense). Obviously the proposal includes every historic landmark in the country. Insane.
@VelvetMetrolink5 жыл бұрын
@@ChurchOfTheHolyMho Retrofitting buildings for energy efficiency is neither insane nor comparable to demolition. These things happen anyway, just on a different timescale. You think the Whitehouse is running on original wiring and plumbing?
@ChurchOfTheHolyMho5 жыл бұрын
@@VelvetMetrolink So you believe that there are enough qualified retrofitters in the US to complete every single structure in the US within 10 years? And since there won't be a shortage of labor, the price to perform a retrofit will not increase?
@laszlofyre8456 жыл бұрын
The white building on't tater wharf had gone by September 18, when I last went by it while working. I always thought it could have made a desirable house in a sea of mere hives......but not enough profit in that, obviously. Maybe I'm feeling what others did when Manchester started to get developed away from pastures green, lol! Nowt new under't sun, lad. Top marks for getting out to Angel Meadow at the drop of a hat. Time team were indeed there but they sometimes are so full of it!
@ElzevereBlock4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this Martin, a man after my own heart where old buildings and history are concerned. Here in Portsmouth we still have literally hundreds of streets of old fashioned terraced housing that cannot be knocked down. The reason being? We're the most densely populated city in Britain with a severe lack of new housing. Over 5000 people per hectare when London is only 2,500. Gives you some idea of how many live on Portsea Island (the city itself). Nearly a quarter of a million people within a space of 12sq miles. Your videos are so interesting Martin and when I see what has replaced even the most basic housing in Manchester, the concrete and glass crap, I weep for the future. Who passes the plans of such dreadful looking buildings? I'm 65 now and I do wonder what they teach these kids about architecture in the modern open plan colleges? Certainly not taste that's for sure!
@davidsedlickas82225 жыл бұрын
Out of sight out of mind. Lots of degradation in and around the city. Your work gives a clear insight into the poverty and slum living conditions many lived in I grew up in a slum part of Manchester Cheetham Hill late 60's.
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Thank you David
@AidanORourke6 жыл бұрын
Another very interesting exploration of a familiar corner of Manchester I thought I knew well!
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Thanks Aidan 👍
@RingwayManchester6 жыл бұрын
Love the little white building looks like it could have been a pub a long time ago. Shame about the burnt boat too. Get yer dinghy out and get down that tunnel! Good vid as always mate.
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
That Tunnel is scary, too low and I think its blocked in places. But a Dinghy is a good idea
@karaloca6 жыл бұрын
Martin Zero I read some time back in doesn’t go very far anyway, just enough to fit a few barges in so they could be unloaded.
@colinlothlorian5 жыл бұрын
Some 20 years ago I regularly moored my boat in Potato Wharf, in those days the whole area was a boatyard and hire boat base and a vibrant floating community. Sad to see the area derelict and the bridge we used to walk the dog over all fenced off.
@CEng-ge6sw5 жыл бұрын
Hi Martin. Just to sort out the general misconception in wall thickness. Nowadays, clay bricks are usually 215mm long x 102mm wide x 65mm high and a 'one brick' wall would be 215mm thick and a 'half-brick' wall would be 102mm thick. In say Victorian times, bricks were slightly bigger in all dimensions. For dwelling houses they usually built external walls one- brick thick and internal walls half-brick thick.
@kohedunn5 жыл бұрын
I hope I find an update on the houses or slums on the site you visited Martin .. Love your videos...xx
@carlb10565 жыл бұрын
Looking back at what you call houses.. this the lower floor of the buildings. (Cellar).. there is floor drains built into one of the rooms. The single brick is common on cellar floors as the internal walls are not load bearing but more a divide in between sections.. possibly a cold store (no fridges in them days). Ph is also public house so what I've mentioned would tally up with what your looking at. Keep up the good work 👍 Pps could the site of been similar to the blue bell pub in moston.. just a thought..
@andrewdaley30815 жыл бұрын
Martin there are these amazing things called gloves also another clever invention called a hat. Andy England 😉
@berylfairchild5915 жыл бұрын
love the videos,love english history,would love to join you on your adventures,not much history in canada,miss home very much
@andrewschmitz97076 жыл бұрын
This reminds me of a documentary I saw on Manchester at the height of rapid industrialization. Even then there was an attempt to study the living conditions,and one entry was as you say families huddling in a room,often a basement ,trying to survive. What was so ironic was the often well off landlord, today you hear the term slumlord. I love these videos,so looking forward to meeting you someday.
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Hello Andrew thanks, yeah give us a shout when you over
@georgeedwardscott71595 жыл бұрын
Martin, you are such an incredible and knowledgeable young man, I love watching your vids. Sooo interesting. Any bunkers around Manchester you can show? Fantastic channel, thanks for all you do. Love it.
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Thank you 😊
@crazycatlady22716 жыл бұрын
Martin Zero..thank you for your videos; enjoy them so much.
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much, for watching
@gablia20025 жыл бұрын
Good work for documentation 👌
@MrKiwi19605 жыл бұрын
Sad to see all that garbage in the canal (or river)! People of Manchester, that is your own you're crapping on... show some respect. :(
@munterboy92985 жыл бұрын
Manchester is a dump. There's trash everywhere
@Raffles6665 жыл бұрын
@@munterboy9298 not everywhere!!!!!!
@davekauffman87275 жыл бұрын
There are many areas here in the USA that are full of litter, it's awful.
@7th.trumpet6 жыл бұрын
As a fellow manc, im Fascinated with Manchester's "urban neglect" and its history. Would love to come on one of your adventures. Keep up the great effort/work 👍🏻
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Hello, thanks very much. Me too love to find the pockets of undeveloped Manchester 👍
@panspermiahunter75975 жыл бұрын
I love your video's, excellent to see all this stuff.
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Thank you
@allanbuttery52974 жыл бұрын
They are doing the same in Birmingham, Apartments are the new guise for Blocks of Flats and instead of using concrete they use glass.
@MartinZero4 жыл бұрын
Everything looks the same doesnt it Allan
@pukkah696 жыл бұрын
another great vid martin keep it up mate 👍an time team done a dig on an old mill\factory near there and also dug up the old slum houses looked alot like that dig were u was
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Yeah its definitely some structured dig isn't it. Good video that time team dig
@ICBMPIRATE26 жыл бұрын
Sad to see all that plastic
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
ICBM.PIRATE Id love to see it cleaned
@themediaman1005 жыл бұрын
Yeah but it's trendy. You can't walk the streets without a bottle. Wouldn't be cool, even for the environment bashers who apparently have a hydration problem.
@munterboy92985 жыл бұрын
That's England for you
@jeffreyquinn38205 жыл бұрын
@@munterboy9298 Here in Canada where minimum wage is something like £6 an hour that many bottles with deposits would never lie around in a ditch like that. There's at least a day's pay in that canal. Nothing like complete & abject poverty to solve that pesky recycling problem.
@andrewfield2725 жыл бұрын
I used to work in that yard in the early 80s cleaning and painting the Steel drums and our brew room was in that building and it was in a very dangerous state back then.
@Seat1AJoe4 жыл бұрын
Love your shows, Martin!
@oddwad62905 жыл бұрын
There was a time when life was dirt floors , sewage , constant conflict and domestic violence , poor inadequate nutrition , civil wars , social instability , disease , grinding poverty , very short lifespans , ignorance of the world beyond local boundaries , etc. , etc. That was life's norm for eons . We thank our antecedents for enduring and each generation for sometimes figuring a better way forward . These videos show how important to preserve the layers of this rich history of the early industrial age .
@oo0Spyder0oo5 жыл бұрын
Looking at the area of Angels Park just to the north of that digging and an 1801 maps shows vacant fields with a proposed 'new burial ground', an 1890 maps shows it as 'St Michael's burial ground' and now it's St Michael's Flags and Angels Meadows, as a park. Presumably all graves were moved elsewhere or they still sit under it!
@oo0Spyder0oo5 жыл бұрын
Crikey's, just dug deeper and found it was the biggest cemetery around, with all the poor and nameless that ended up in there. The 'Flags' part of the name is due to cement paving being put down to stop all the digging up of the earth and corpses used for fertilizer back when it got to having thousands interred there. So the playground that kids play today on has plenty of bodies just underneath still! Amazing stuff.
@miriamnewbury10442 жыл бұрын
40000 still under it mainly children
@malbancroft19325 жыл бұрын
another great video Martin keep up the good work
@sherlockholmes66325 жыл бұрын
Love your stuff man from Birmingham
@oddwad62905 жыл бұрын
It's time for Birmingham , Leeds , Glasgow and Liverpool to step up with some wonderful videos of Britain's rich industrial , economic history . Move over Ken Burns .
@nomdeplume798 Жыл бұрын
I've been watching your videos for about 3 years now and it amazes me I'm finding ones I've never seen. I was wondering if the single row walls were internal or possibly party walls rather than outside.
@holdfast76575 жыл бұрын
They're cellars for the houses. The single walls are the supporting walls for floors and partition walls above. If you look you can see where the chimneys were. The cellars had Yorkshire Stone Flags floors.
@peterharris59275 жыл бұрын
Hambley's Drum's now on Dale St, Stalybridge, Tameside, Paul Hambley is top dog in there now, I'm sure I have seen old photographs of their old Manchester unit on their office walls.
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Right so they moved to Stalybridge 👍
@briancooper60686 жыл бұрын
Another cracking video Martin,av also watched the time team dig at angel st where the factory was covered by a car park.the angel pub used to be called the weaver's.
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Cheers Brian. That whole area has a grim History doesn't it.
@briancooper60686 жыл бұрын
Martin Zero ye Martin the film Angelas ashes springs to mind?
@briancooper60686 жыл бұрын
You know my family originate from that area tuff people mate?
@BugRacer19556 жыл бұрын
Hello Martin really enjoying the Channel, on the old map at Baptist st I think PH was possibly public house
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Hi Glyn thank you and yes your probably correct thanks 👌
@trevortrevortsr26 жыл бұрын
Lived in an early Victorian terrace as a kid with a bedroom above what was called the wash house (dads workshop?) - single brick, single glazed no insulation - was very cold and damp in winter
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Hi Trev, yeah same here. Although I dont think it was single brick. My god that would have been condemned ??
@trevortrevortsr26 жыл бұрын
The house was two bricks thick I think but the wash-house was like the outside loo single brick - loved your post about Hopwood Hall - that was a different place all together : )
@martinfitzpatrick15516 жыл бұрын
Hi Martin. there are videos on youtube from when experts documented the dig and they had a tour. Its all documented as ive seen the videos . It inspired me to buy a book on Angel Meadow by Dean Kirby Angel meadows is one of my favourite places !!!.
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Yeah I love Angel meadow. I think those digs were earlier and down off Aspin lane, this dig was in January this year just off Rochdale rd, although probably similar old houses they uncovered. But I will do another search on youtube 👍
@johnrooney17495 жыл бұрын
Just watched again many thanks Martin. John Rooney
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Thanks John
@simonkirkbright51976 жыл бұрын
In the 80's the area around Potato Wharf was home to several house boats and a small community lived there. I think they were all evicted when they started to upgrade the area.
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Typical Simon. Small people being walked all over
@justmadeit25 жыл бұрын
Like you said, no central heating or double glazing, and single brick build properties. It must have been freexing in winter. Honestly if people from 2019 had to go back to those days none of us could cope. Really depressing, although thats all they knew, so its all relative so to speak.
@McMieke6 жыл бұрын
Great video again Martin. Thank you. And please, someone do something about the plastic.
@mirage40146 жыл бұрын
Hi john, i live in Germany for the last ten years, and not a plastic or glass bottle in sight! every shop has a machine where you pop your glass milk bottle /can or plastic pop bottle into a hole! and in the bottom is a conveyer belt for crates! it counts the bottles and Crates and even how many bottles in the crate, then at the end it spews out a ticker tape, which you can redeem in the shop against your shopping or cash back! 25 cents a bottle, no idea what for a crate! and even if you are lazy and drop a bottle in the rubbish bin in town, some old guy will appear on a bike at night and go around all the bins and make a fortune , ;-) why the heck we not do that back home in Britain i have no idea! we used to have deposit when i was a kid
@McMieke6 жыл бұрын
Thanx Julian. I live in New Zealand although I was born in Wirral. We are finally starting to do something here about plastic although it needs much more effort. I went to Bali in August for a holiday and was horrified at the plastic there. You certainly wouldn't want to swim in the ocean despite its beautiful beaches.
@emmsue105320 күн бұрын
Thank you for this, I am Manchester bred and born, my Great Grands lived here.. I have seen these buildings but never really known the history.. Please tell me the St. Michaels Flags park is not being built over? I was under the impression it was to be saved? There is a volunteer group meets there the first Wednesday of every month, trying to keep it tidy and plant bulbs etc.. Help always appreciated!! Very interesting stuff.
@kazswift19845 жыл бұрын
All these sparkley new flats and shops will be a huge slum in the next 20 years
@English_Dawn5 жыл бұрын
It's funny but the area round Angel Meadow or St. Michael's Flags was for well-heeled people originally until sadly it became a slum. I think St. Michael's Church was a late survivor only being demolished in the 1930's? Did you see the Time Team dig on Angel Street concerning Richard Arkwright's Mill? It was the progenitor of all later steam powered mills. They went into cellars like you filmed. Must have been absolutely appalling for people living like troglodytes. The area south of Oxford Road was known as you might know, Little Ireland and typhoid and cholera were rife probably like around Angel Meadow. Other churches that have gone are of course the classical St. Peter's in St. Peter's Square, a cross now Mark's the site. One I remember as a kid on Tib Street hence the name Church Street street and the end of Thomas Street was were the multi storey car-park was built. I think it was called St. Paul's. There was the famous All Saints sadly this was bombed in WWII. It's on Oxford Road and marked by a park next to Mcr. Met. University. The church opposite, Holy Name thankfully survived. All Saints is immortalised by Impressionist paintings by Adoplhe Valette (L.S.Lowry's teacher). St. Clements was demolished to build Stevenson Square. On Liverpool Road the Church of St. Matthew existed next to the Cast Iron City Market building and MOSI. The Sunday School still exits I think and the Primary School is a bijou hotel! Thankfully St. Mary's Mulberry Street (The Hidden Gem) survives and is supposed to be the first Roman Catholic Church built after the Reformation. The new area of St. John's (Granada) housed another lost Church. This was demolished in the 1920's ☹ but not before some of It's stained-glass was saved and transferred to St. Ann's Church. There was St. Mary's that you often see on old paintings with a very distinctive tower and steeple near St. Mary's Parsonage West of Deansgate. Going down John Dalton Street from Albert Square on your right is St. James's Square now being developed into apartments (previously only offices). This was the site of a Church dedicated to St. James. There was another Church of St. James at the western end of Portland Street (near Chinatown). The B of England gold vaults were built on it. A curiosity is the white "Portland"? Stone confection now owned by Bruntwood called St. James's Building that was built for the Callico Ascociation next to the Palace Theatre. Thankfully the Cathedral exists. Have you heard of Hyde's Cross? The remains of it are preserved in Chethams Hospital. Corporation Street was a relatively new street being built circa 1848? Until then Millgate was the route out up to Scotland Bridge. Shudehill was a rabbit-warren of tudor and Jacobean streets. There is an old map of Mcr, Green's Map and curiously Todd Street then known as Toad lane survives. When Corp. St. was constructed Hyde's Cross which I think was opposite the Printworks on Withy Grove, was removed to it's present location. I presume that is why Cross St. Is called that. As a kid I remember a half-timbered (medieval/Tudor-looking) building where Withy Grove turns into Nicholas Croft. All went when the Arndale came and it's near where the access incline for vehicles is. 👍
@GLK-London6 жыл бұрын
I agree with you about our industrial architecture being a link to the past. So sad to see it all go.
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Yes Broderick specially as todays buildings seem to be glass and steel and all the same 👍
@alexalexander9994 жыл бұрын
Hi Martin , would like for you to see some photographs I had taken of a Old Chain Works I worked at in the mid 80s not far from the Hacienda
@danieltoth-nagy50974 жыл бұрын
Looking on google maps and thinking about my memories of Rochdale road (daily commute, I worked across the street for a year; home in Harpurhey) it's so sad they destroy history with overbuilding it. Of course, you can't keep every ruin of every house, but at least you should keep one or two and make museums, exhibitions of them, not? Watching this video more than 2 years later, all of these things are really gone. New hotel and a pile of dust in the place of that tiny white building. (if not started to build since then). Regarding Grocers warehouse tunnel, because it ran under the Rochdale canal, I'd expect that water there to be deep, But if that is shallow, that means it is filled in sadly. @Martin would you come down with me there to explore it more? About the Potato wharf, it's exactly next to the River Medlock last part coming from the culvert going to the River Irwell, so in the final episode of the Medlock story you may be able to revisit the place of the former little white house.
@MartinZero4 жыл бұрын
Cheers Daniel, last part of Medlock coming soon
@karaloca6 жыл бұрын
I want to go over that bridge too. It was very useful like bridges are. However it’s now been closed for about 10 years and it still hasn’t opened.
@Iazzaboyce4 жыл бұрын
A trick I have used is to place a sheet of thin A4 paper over an old map on the laptop screen and use a felt tip to outline the main roads and x mark points of interest. Then place this outline over Google satellite image and use rotate and zoom to match up orientation and scale. This is a simple low tech and accurate method for finding the location of demolished buildings.
@CatherineBurke-z1gАй бұрын
My GGG Grandparents lived at 35 Angel Street, Manchester in the year 1850 and my GG Grandfather was born there in 1855. I'd love to know how it looked or where exactly on the map it was.
@andrewwells33675 жыл бұрын
There is still a good picture of the old building at Castlefield on Google Maps street view if you go further along Potato Wharf. You can take a screenshot of it if you wish.
@RiojaRoj5 жыл бұрын
Someone mentioned, Why don't they clean it up. Well at the risk of being totally politically incorrect ( Non- PC ) . In the U.S. they'd probably get convicts on a Day Out to do it ? .... : S PS : Great Vid as always Martin 👍 ..... . . . and by the way, that red rock is all Manchester and Stockport . you must have heard of the tunnels around Petersgate and Chestergate, the old Air Raid Shelters etc
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Yeah I know of the tunnels in the sandstone 👍
@karaloca6 жыл бұрын
Have you done any exploration of the old Granada site, to see if any of the canals in the basement have been uncovered?
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
I would love to do that 👍
@kevinredbadgerwalls69955 жыл бұрын
I've dug holes into that sandstone with a machine, we had to use a rockwheel, it went soft when water touched it, but was solid otherwise, off chester rd, near key 103, I've mentioned it before m8
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Ahh ok cheers Kevin, its very flaky isnt it
@kevinredbadgerwalls69955 жыл бұрын
@@MartinZero Yeah mate, great videos aswell
@Nathan.Manchester6 жыл бұрын
Loving these videos keep up the good work 👋👋
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Thanks Nathan 😃👍
@hovermotion5 жыл бұрын
Just went past Angle medow...and they have started the construction site right next to it
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Yeah, gutted
@RB-qg1qx5 жыл бұрын
If it makes you feel any better, I crashed my first Mavic Pro into a bridge over a river.....tried to find it without success. Bought a replacement and (fingers crossed) still got this one. BTW, I think the majority of drone losses are due to user error.
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Yes mine was definitely user error
@TVsez5 жыл бұрын
You need to get yourself a Drone that has a camera on it... It would be a game changer and the footage you'd catch would be unreal people would love watching that!
@kevlandy Жыл бұрын
Sometimes, early on a quiet Sunday morning, you gotta jump a fence.😉
@daverigby565 жыл бұрын
I'm sure there was a cement factory here until recently. Castlefield that is.
@ontheflyby2705 жыл бұрын
The map of 1848 map showing Baptist Street shows this block containing 'The Balloon Public House' and 'Daikin Court'. 'The Balloon' may have been renamed 'The Balloon Vaults' later, however I can't find an image.
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Ahh great stuff. Wonder if its after the guy that flew the Balloon to Radcliffe ?
@ontheflyby2705 жыл бұрын
@@MartinZero I'm not sure TBH... Could have been worse though... He could have landed in Rochdale!
@thomaswilliams2049 Жыл бұрын
What is the song playing? Great nostalgic feel ..great video too :)
@emielvanderwel52005 жыл бұрын
Interesting, thank you Martin.
@tonyhumphreys91276 жыл бұрын
The developers of Potato Wharf are building two more apartment blocks on the land in Castlefield by the railway bridge.
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
I suspected so Tony. More samey apartments
@lurkingurkin60705 жыл бұрын
Good video as usual Martin, just a little piece of constructive criticism.... see if you can get a mic for your back bedroom intros, little bit too much echo!! Thank you again for the video! 👍
@brizeys31286 жыл бұрын
Another great video. For further info on Angel Meadow I recommend a book by Dean Kirby entitled Angel Meadow-Victorian Britain’s most savage slum. Keep up the good work
@tomhickson83135 жыл бұрын
Have you ever been under the royal exchange building another world roads and turn pikes loads of interesting stuff for a guy like you 👍
@neeelix4 жыл бұрын
It’s scandalous how run down parts of Manchester are, such amazing heritage and it’s mostly left to rot then swept away by shiny glass apartments
@momoline37945 жыл бұрын
Love that music :)
@karaloca6 жыл бұрын
It’s worth remembering that the offshoot to the canal at Grocers Warehouse used to have a water level much lower. Much of that stretch of the canal was once the same level as the canal in Castlefield Basin. It was also covered too, it was only later when the locks were being built that they opened up the canal to the daylight.
@Piggyjuice5 жыл бұрын
They are the basement dwellings of the terraced houses, would have had families living in them, no running water, no sanitation one toilet shared by 50-100 people. Hell on earth basically
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Yep thats what they are James 👍
@brianfox19806 жыл бұрын
another great film martin on baptes st is that old building the old pot of beer pub i used to go in there about 16 years ago about ten years ago it was all boarded up
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
I think I went in The Pot o Beer as well years ago. Wasn't it a real ale pub or something ?
@shaungowler89096 жыл бұрын
Theses are the old slum housing that was situated near angel meadow I seen this first hand being excavated back in 2005 Tony Robinson and the time team were there got to meet him wile I was working on angel meadow renovating the single large wall situated inside the excuvated grounds became the new Cis building the history of Manchester is vast all the buildings from our industrial past long gone apart from few mills now fancy apartments we should preserve these buildings to pass on to the next generation to be proud of our city of Manchester 🐝
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Hi Shaun yep it would be good to keep one of these digs layed out to see so people can visit. Its awful that they get teared up after the dig
@shaungowler89096 жыл бұрын
Martin Zero yes i agree would be great to see has such a shame to lose Thease gems of our industrial past great videos hopefully post more in future a joy to watch also educational to our future generations to come. 👍🏻🐝
@l30njam3s6 жыл бұрын
Ahhh beat me to it lol. I watched the time team episode the other day.. Im proper jealous you got to see it
@chuckemmorll28214 жыл бұрын
Cellar dwellings. The brick walls separated neighbours, sometimes just a curtain would be used. Each 'room' represents a family. Read; Fred Egnels, The condition of the working class.
@MartinZero4 жыл бұрын
Yup, I did and it was good 👍
@mikekelly42756 жыл бұрын
Martin the Uni of Manchester have a set of Adsheads Maps on their website , a couple are of the Castlefield Area (St Johns Ward) they date from 1851 you might be be able to gather what that building was from them, hope this helps.
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Hi Mike, right I will look. If you have a link can you drop it in thanks
I think Hambleys were to do with used 45gallon drums. The "CO" could be the start of "CONTAINERS".
@MartinZero6 жыл бұрын
Ahh ok, was it a sheet metal factory then ? maybe
@alanthedrum6 жыл бұрын
No idea. The 45 gallon drums could be a faulty memory, I'm only 51%sure.
@gazzaka5 жыл бұрын
I think many houses today are one brick thick walls, interior ones anyhow, and a lot are worse than that, you try to install a wall light and make a bloody big hole lol...
@MartinZero5 жыл бұрын
Yep thats true from experience 😀
@neilbain87365 жыл бұрын
People have to deposit plans somewhere for objections or consultation. Can't you check them up to see what's being demolished and put in its place.
@kollusion14 жыл бұрын
"The Mcr ship canal co" 4:23, need to look into that one.
@strangboww5 жыл бұрын
Great vid, 👍
@jackson60272 жыл бұрын
My Grandparents the Tevnans had the Exile of Erin pub,
@depleteduraniumcowboy35165 жыл бұрын
Cool idea of photograph old things not long for this world. Guard rail to guard rail will get around that "fence" or a drone.
@supersean49985 жыл бұрын
Do you know anything about the old hospital near the football pitches down drinkwater park? Nothing there now i remember as a kid we used to play around the foundations and around the ammunitions dump.
@BestUserNameUK5 жыл бұрын
That was Irwell House isolation hospital.
@mikeede495 жыл бұрын
Peter Drinkwater a Manchester mill owner bought it in 1794 and used it as his summer residence. It became a smallpox isolation hospital in 1902 due to its location. I moved to Carr Clough overlooking the house as a kid in 1952 and a family were still living in outbuildings close to the house.The fields that are now football pitches had cattle grazing on them. I've read somewhere that the house was accidently set on fire in a civil defence exercise in 1958, but I distinctly remember a gang of us local kids having a nosey to see what was going on, we were told to go and find some laths to help get the fire going, so it was purposely set alight and although I'm not 100% certain after all these years I'm pretty sure it was a fire brigade exercise.