Grand Central Pub

Grand Central is a rock/metal pub and venue positioned on Oxford Road, near to Oxford Road railway station and opposite The Palace Hotel in Manchester, England. It was widely accepted as meeting place for customers on their way to Jillys Rockworld (originally named Rafters), which was situated further up Oxford Street, but since Rockworld's closing in early 2010 there is no longer a widely-recognised alternative venue in Manchester.

Every Thursday night the pub works in partnership with Rocksector Records[1] to put live music on. There are usually 3 or 4 bands and the pub is strictly free entry.

Grand Central has also hosted the annual Battle For Bloodstock competition. The competition runs on Tuesday nights over a few months early on in the year, where 36 local bands compete over 6 heats, 2 semi finals and a Grand Final. The winners win a slot at the Bloodstock Open Air Festival in Derby, a well-respected British metal festival.

It was refurbished in 2004 and has since been host to Carved Photography's[2] exhibition featuring photos by Sabrina Ramdoyal of bands from Manchester's local rock/metal scene as well as more established bands from all over the world.

The pub presently offers a pool table, jukebox and two fruit machines.

There used to be a club open downstairs called Subway however this closed over ten years ago.

Contents

History

The oldest records found featuring Grand Central suggest that it was originally 8 separate residential properties. This is shown in the 1849 map of Oxford Road.

First hand accounts recall 80 Oxford Street being known as 'The Oxford Wine Bar' in 1953, and later in 1960 as simply 'The Oxford'. In 1970 it became the 'Beef & Barley' [3], a Steak House, and a year later in 1971 'A Schooner Inn' was added to the 'Beef and Barley' pub sign.[4]. Between 1977 and 1978 it was known as the 'Cork & Screw' and it became 'The Shady Lady'[5] in the late 1970s.

The Beer Scare of 1900

Peter Bostock was among several licensees in this area of Manchester who were suspected for unknowingly selling adulterated beer in 1900. The poisoned beer resulted in outbreaks of peripheral neuritis caused by arsenic poisoning that was traced by the Royal Commission[6] to the raw materials found in brewing sugars at a refiners in Liverpool called Bostock & Co. of Garston (not thought to be a relation to the licensee.) The company used a process involving sulphuric acid (made from arsenical iron pyrites) to manufacture their glucose. Upon these findings, the Royal Commission recommended that 'a legal maximum of not more than one-hundredth of a grain of arsenic per gallon of liquid per pound of solid food be enforced'.[7] By this point the damage had been done and up to four grains of arsenic were being found per pound of brewing sugar. The beer scare of 1900 has been mentioned in various articles on medical science, such as the Journal of the American Medical Association, where it was stated that over 2,000 people received medical treatment for peripheral neuritis.[8] It is widely believed that the scare affected 6,000 people and killed 70.[9]

Ghosts

Most residents of 80 Oxford Street are buried in Manchester's Southern Cemetery. There have only been two deaths recorded at this address; Peter Bostock in 1904 and Hannah Bostock in 1893, and one listed birth; Mabel Lewis in 1910. However, many customers and staff have reported apparent ghost sightings over the years at the pub.

Little Ireland

Grand Central exists on the periphery of what was once known as 'Little Ireland'[10]. Containing mainly poorly skilled Irish immigrants it became Manchester's oldest, smallest and most short lived Irish slum. In the 1820s the first immigrants moved there, however, by the mid 1840's they were moved on and the area was demolished to make way for the industrious Victorian capitalists in their attempts to build the world's first passenger railway line: the Liverpool Manchester line, which remains there to this day. In his book titled The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844 social scientist Freidrich Engels wrote unfavorably about his experience of Little Ireland in Manchester in his book, claiming it was a 'horrid little slum'.[11] Regardless of this, Little Ireland became world famous, and the term itself became a generic shorthand for Irish living in slum housing throughout the nineteenth century industrial world.

Residents and staff

Resident Description Year Source
William Derbyshire Eating Housekeeper 1855 1855 Directory
Benjamin Heap Cabinet Maker 1858 1858 Directory
William Blackburn Dining Rooms 1858 1858 Directory
Peter Bostock Landlord 1861–1904 1861 Census[12]
Hannah Bostock Landlady 1861–1893 1861 Census[12]
Ellen Salisbury Domestic Servant 1861 1861 Census
Theodore Kummant Boarder 1861 1861 Census
Henry William Herbert Robeson Clerk 1872 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Emily Taylor Spinster 1872 St Peter's Church Records[13]
James Cullen Clerk 1872 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Mary Wrigley Spinster 1872 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Vincent Newton Cowburn Engineer 1873 St Peter's Church Records[13]
John Hoyle Joiner 1873 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Emily Laurie Widow 1873 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Harry Thompson Engineer 1874 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Elizabeth Gilmour Spinster 1874 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Thomas Mellor Grocer 1875 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Julia Ann Woolley Spinster 1875 St Peter's Church Records[13]
George Jones Gardiner 1875 St Peter's Church Records[13]
William Perkins Plumber 1875 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Sarah Ann Thompson Seamstress 1875 St Peter's Church Records[13]
William Wood Labourer 1876 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Esther Hannah Bostock Servant 1876 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Samuel Jones Painter 1876 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Thomas Birks Sharples Cashier 1876 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Elizabeth Fawley Servant 1876 St Peter's Church Records[13]
John Ingham Joiner 1876 St Peter's Church Records[13]
John Crampton Holmes Clerk 1877 St Peter's Church Records[13]
William James Hall Milkman 1877 St Peter's Church Records[13]
Elizabeth Ann Steen Domestic Servant 1881 1881 Census[14]
Hannah Jervis Domestic Servant 1881 1881 Censuc[14]
Francis Holt Servant 1881 1881 Census[15]
Florrie Oliver Servant 1901 1901 Census[16]
Ida Paton Child 1901 1901 Census[16]
Fanny Stephenson Servant 1901 1901 Census[16]
Dafydd Lewis Wine and Beer Retailer 1911–1926
Annie Lewis Assistant 1911
Arthur Lewis Child 1911
Mabel Lewis Child 1911
Margaratta Browne Servant 1911
Mrs Margaret Barker Beer Retailer 1929
Thomas O'Donaghue Landlord Present

References

  1. ^ http://www.mwaweb.com/rocksector.html
  2. ^ http://www.carvedphotography.co.uk/
  3. ^ http://www.images.manchester.gov.uk/web/objects/common/webmedia.php?irn=74158
  4. ^ http://www.images.manchester.gov.uk/web/objects/common/webmedia.php?irn=74172
  5. ^ http://img818.imageshack.us/img818/7215/shadylady.jpg
  6. ^ Clark, Christine. The British Malting Industry Since 1830. The Hambledon Press 1998. P 77.
  7. ^ Burnet, John. Plenty and want: a social history of food in England from 1815 to the present day. Methuen & Co. Ltd. 1985. P.235.
  8. ^ JAMA: The journal of American Medical Association, Vol. 36. 1901. P. 45.
  9. ^ Blocker, Jack S.; Fahey, David M.; Tyrrel, Ian R. Alcohol and Temperance in Modern History: A Global Encyclopedia. P. 56.
  10. ^ http://www.prideofmanchester.com/mancirish/history.htm
  11. ^ Engels, Freidrich. The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844. P. 73
  12. ^ a b Source: RG10; Piece: 4039; Folio: 160; Page: 37; GSU roll: 846332.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v http://www.lan-opc.org.uk/Manchester/Manchester/stpeter/index.html
  14. ^ a b Source: RG11; Piece: 3990; Folio: 158; Page: 19; GSU roll: 1341952.
  15. ^ Source : RG12; Piece: 3238; Folio 10; Page 13; GSU roll: 6098348.
  16. ^ a b c Source: RG13; Piece: 3747; Folio: 8; Page: 7.

External links