Tyldesley

For other uses, see Tyldesley (disambiguation).
Tyldesley

Marklands Buildings and Elliott Street
Tyldesley
 Tyldesley shown within Greater Manchester
Population 34,022 (2001 Census)
OS grid referenceSD690023
    London  170 mi (274 km) SE 
Metropolitan boroughWigan
Metropolitan county Greater Manchester
RegionNorth West
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town MANCHESTER
Postcode district M29
Dialling code 01942
Police Greater Manchester
Fire Greater Manchester
Ambulance North West
EU Parliament North West England
UK ParliamentLeigh
List of places
UK
England
Greater Manchester

Coordinates: 53°31′00″N 2°28′00″W / 53.5166°N 2.4667°W

Tyldesley (/ˈtɪlzl/ or /ˈtɪlsl/) is a town within the Metropolitan Borough of Wigan, in Greater Manchester, England.[1] It occupies an area north of Chat Moss near the foothills of the West Pennine Moors, 7.7 miles (12.4 km) east-southeast of Wigan and 8.9 miles (14.3 km) west-northwest of the city of Manchester. At the time of the United Kingdom Census 2001, Tyldesley, which includes the outlying areas of Astley, Shakerley, Mosley Common and New Manchester, had a population of 34,000.

Historically a part of Lancashire, Tyldesley and its surroundings have provided evidence for the remains of a Roman road passing through the area on the ancient course between Coccium (Wigan) and Mamucium (Manchester).[2] Following the Anglo-Saxon invasion of Britain, Tyldesley was part of the manor of Warrington, until the Norman conquest of England, when Tyldesley constituted a township called Tyldesley-with-Shakerley in the ancient parish of Leigh.[3]

The factory system, and textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution, triggered a process of population growth and urbanisation in the area, such that by the early 20th century it was said that the newly emerged mill town was "eminently characteristic of an industrial district whose natural features have been almost entirely swept away to give place to factories, iron foundries, and collieries".[4] Although industrial activity declined in the late 20th century, land reclamation and post-war residential developments have continued to alter Tyldesley's landscape, and have encouraged renewed economic activity, particularly along Elliott Street—Tyldesley's central commercial area and its main thoroughfare.[2]

History

Toponymy

Tyldesley meaning "Tilwald's clearing" is derived from the Old English (OE) personal name Tilwald (or Tīlwald) and leăh a "wood, clearing", suggesting what is now open land was once covered with forest.[5] The name was recorded as Tildesleiha in 1210. Alternative spellings include Tildeslei, Tildeslege, Tildeslegh and Tildesley.[4] Tyldesley is situated at the edge of the Lancashire Plain north of Chat Moss and the Banks is a sandstone ridge where the foothills of the Pennines begin and gave the town its early name of Tildsley Banks. The land rises from 100 feet (30 m) at the foot of the banks to 250 feet (76 m) at the highest point. Tyldesley is pronounced "Til-slee", and locally known as "Bongs". In local pronunciation "Banks" was corrupted to "Bongs". The old name for Mosley Common was the "Hurst" or "Tyldesleyhurst", the suffix "hyrst" means a wooded hill (OE).[6]

Earliest history

The remains of a Roman road ran through the area, serving the camps at Coccium (Wigan) and Mamucium (Manchester).[2] It ran from Keeper Delph in Boothstown crossing Mort Lane north west of Cleworth Hall and south of Shakerley Old Hall.[7] The road continued towards the Valley at Atherton where coins have been found, and on towards Gibfield and Wigan.[8]

In 1947, two urns containing about 550 Roman bronze coins, minted between AD 259 and AD 278, were found near the old Tyldesley–Worsley border.[9] The coins are in the British Museum.[10] After the end of Roman rule in Britain and into the history of Anglo-Saxon England, nothing was written about Tyldesley. Evidence for the presence of Saxons is provided by place names incorporating the Old English suffix leah, such as Tyldesley,[5] Shakerley, and Astley.[11]

Manor houses

The manor house was Astley Hall which, in 1212, was home to Hugh Tyldesley, Lord of the Manors of Astley and Tyldesley.[12] It is just inside the Tyldesley boundary but has been associated with Astley since the death of Henry Tyldesley in 1301, when the manor was divided among three sons. The Tyldesleys had a "reputation for lawlessness and who had frequent disputes with their neighbours".[12] One exception was Hugh Tyldesley, Hugh the Pious,[13] who endowed Cockersand Abbey with land in Shakerley before his death in 1226. The moated New Hall in the Park of Tyldesley, close to the old manor house was in existence before 1422 when it belonged to Thomas Tyldesley.[14]

Garrett Hall is now a farmhouse

The new manor, known as the Garrett, was owned by John Tyldesley in 1505. The timber-framed Garrett Hall remained with the Tyldesleys until 1652 when Lambert Tyldesley died leaving no heir. The new owners, the Stanleys, leased it to tenant farmers. In 1732 it was sold to Thomas Clowes who also leased the property to tenants. In 1829 the estate was bought by the Bridgewater Trustees.[15][16]

The township had several other significant houses. Generations of Shakerleys lived in Shakerley Old Hall, close to the Shakerley Brook and Roman road paying rent to Cockersand Abbey and dues of "one pair of white gloves at the feast of Easter" to Adam Tyldesley.[17] Chaddock Hall was home to a family of yeomen farmers.[18] Its name variously recorded as Chaydok, Chaidoke and Chaidok, the last syllable probably meaning "oak".[13] It was surrounded by a hamlet in the east of the township. The Chaddocks, like the Tyldesleys and Shakerleys, had a reputation for lawlessness.[19]

The tenants of the Tyldesley, Shakerley and Chaddock lands were summoned for military service. Archers from Chaddock fought at Crécy in 1346 and at the Battle of Agincourt in 1415.[20] In 1360, William Chaddock was described as an archer on foot, "potens de corpore et bonis".[lower-alpha 1] A muster roll described Hugh Tyldesley as an archer on horseback and Hugh Chaddock and Richard Tyldesley were foot-archers drawing daily pay for service from 22 July to 21 October 1391.[21]

Cleworth Hall, recorded as Cluworth in 1333, was part of the Tyldesley lands on higher ground north of the high road.[4] It passed to Nicholas Starkie of Huntroyde by his marriage to Anne Parr in 1578 and in 1594 was associated with witchcraft.[22] Two children, John and Anne Starkie became "possessed of evil spirits". A well-known "conjurer" or wise man, Edmund Hartley, was asked to cure them, which he apparently did before demanding money which was refused. Hartley threatened trouble and Starkie denounced him and Hartley was taken for trial to Lancaster Castle in 1597 where he was tried and found guilty of witchcraft. He was hanged, twice, as the rope broke at the first attempt.[23]

Banks Estate

In the early 18th century Tyldesley was a collection of cottages and farms around the halls scattered across the township with no church or inn. Thomas Johnson, a Bolton merchant bought the Banks Estate in 1728, land from the Stanleys of Garrett Hall in 1742 and Davenports in the west of the township in 1752. He died in 1764 leaving his estate to his grandson with the same name.[24] Thomas "Squire" Johnson developed the town of Tildsley Banks. His name lives on in Squires Lane and Johnson Street. The last quarter of the 18th century marked the beginning of a building boom and the grid plan of the town centre is from this date.[25]

John Aikin described the area in 1795 in his book A Description of the Countryside from 30 to 40 Miles around Manchester:

The Banks of Tildesley, in the Parish of Leigh, are about one mile and a half in length, and command a most beautiful prospect into seven counties: the springs remarkably clear and most excellently adapted to the purposes of bleaching. The land is rich, but mostly in meadow and pastures, for milk, butter, and the noted Leigh cheese. The estate had, in the year 1780, only two farm houses and eight or nine cottages, but now contains 162 houses, a neat chapel, and 976 inhabitants, who employ 325 looms in the cotton Manufactories ...[26]

Tyldesley's first inns were the Flaming Castle built in 1778 and the Green Dragon of 1781.[27] Fulwell House in Squires Lane was built in 1792 and occupied by local industrialists but was demolished in 1935.[28] Towards the end of the 18th century rows of two-storey brick terraced houses were built at the west end of the town to house workers who had migrated there to work in the new factories.

Industrial Revolution

Until the Industrial Revolution, Tyldesley was rural, agriculture and cottage spinning and weaving, mainly muslin and fustian,[29] were the chief occupations before 1800. Silk weaving became an important cottage industry after 1827 when silk was brought from Manchester.[30]

In 1772 Thomas Johnson opened the "Little Factory" for carding and spinning cotton. "The Great Leviathon" powered a steam-driven mill for woollen spinning on Factory Street in 1792. More cotton mills were built close to the Hindsford and Shakerley Brooks which provided water for steam power. In 1823, after a strike for increased wages and lockout by the millowners at New Mills, owned by J & G Jones in Factory Street, the workforce was sacked and new hands hired to replace them. The scab labourers, knobsticks had to be protected from assault by the dismissed workers.[31] Joseph Wilson built Hope Mill in James Street.[32] By 1838 James Burton owned most of the town's mills. He lived in Charles Street surrounded by his workers' houses.[33] His company owned 74 cottages and 57 cellars, a house in Elliot Street and the King's Arms public house. Burton died in 1868. In 1883 a fire at Burton's mills caused £15,000 damage (equivalent to £1.3 million in 2015)[34] and by 1920 his mills were demolished.[33] Caleb Wright owned Barnfield Mills which had a workforce of about 800. The last of his mills, Barnfield No 6 on Shuttle Street, was built in 1894 on the site of Resolution Mill which was destroyed by fire in 1891. Barnfield No 6 was a concrete-floored multi-storey mill for spinning, powered by an external engine house via a rope race.[35] The mill was demolished in the 1990s and the site is occupied by a supermarket.

Coal had been got in Shakerley since at least 1429 when a dispute was recorded between the Shakerleys and the Tyldesleys over the stealing of "seacoals".[36] Shakerley Colliery on Shakerley Common was in existence in 1798.[37] Shakerley was a centre for making nails,[37] but was in decline by 1800.

Miners outside the Miners Hall during the 1926 General Strike

After the railway was completed in 1864, coal mining became the dominant industry and the town was surrounded by collieries for over 100 years until the industry declined after the Second World War.[38] Bridgewater Collieries, Tyldesley Coal Company, Shakerley Collieries and Astley and Tyldesley Collieries were among the local mine owners. Gin Pit Colliery closed in 1955, Cleworth Hall in 1963, Nook two years later, and Mosley Common in 1968. Tyldesley Miners Association, established in 1862,[39] built the Miner's Hall in 1893 and the Astley and Tyldesley Miner's Club opened at Gin Pit in 1927.

The worst mining disaster occurred at Yew Tree Colliery on 11 December 1858 when an explosion of firedamp caused by a safety lamp cost 25 lives, the youngest victim was 11, and the oldest, 35 years of age. Some of the victims are buried in the churchyard at St George's Church.[40][41] Another explosion on 6 March 1877 at Great Boys Colliery cost eight lives[42] and on 2 October 1883, six men died when the cage rope broke at Nelson Colliery in Shakerley.[43] On 1 October 1895 five men including the colliery manager and undermanager died at Shakerley Colliery after an explosion of firedamp.[44]

Grundy's Foundry was another important employer. Its founder, John Grundy invented a warm air heating system that was used in churches and halls. He built the foundry close to the railway in Lower Elliot Street.[45][46]

Industry declined after the Second World War and subsequent land reclamation and new housing developments have changed the face of the town, but its centre still retains the atmosphere of a bustling market town,[47] with a refurbished market square. The steep terraces branching off the main streets give the town a distinctive character.

Governance

Tyldesley Town Hall, from 1924 the headquarters of the former Tyldesley Urban District Council. It was built as the Liberal Club in 1881.

Tyldesley is an electoral ward of the Metropolitan Borough of Wigan electing three councillors to the 75-member metropolitan borough council, Wigan's local authority. As of 2014, one ward councillor is a member of the Liberal Democrats, one represents the Labour Party and one is an Independent.[48]

Historically, Tyldesley formed part of the Hundred of West Derby, a judicial division of southwest Lancashire.[49] Tyldesley cum Shakerley was one of the six townships or vills that made up and predated the ancient parish of Leigh.[50] It was the largest of the townships at 2,610 acres (10.6 km2): Tyldesley having an area of 1,970 acres (8.0 km2) and Shakerley 520 acres (2.1 km2).[4]

Under the terms of the Poor Law Amendment Act 1834 the townships formed part of the Leigh Poor Law Union comprising an area covering the whole of the ancient parish of Leigh and part of Winwick, established on 26 January 1837. There was a workhouse in Tyldesley but Leigh Union workhouse at Atherleigh replaced it in the 1850s.[51] Tyldesley was constituted a civil parish in 1866.[52] In 1863 the Local Government Act 1858 was adopted and the township was governed by a local board of health. The first Tyldesley Local Board was formed after elections on 24 October 1863. Of those elected were mill owners, Caleb Wright and Oliver Burton, and colliery owners, William Ramsden and George Green, a mixture of Tories and Liberals.[53] The Local Board took over the gas works in 1865, built the first swimming baths and opened Tyldesley Cemetery in 1876 and built sewage works at Morleys Hall in Astley in 1884. The local board offices were in Lower Elliot Street, where it had a fire station and depot.[54] Under the Public Health Act 1875 the local board gained additional powers as an urban sanitary district and under the Local Government Act 1894 Tyldesley-with-Shakerley became an urban district with an elected council. Tyldesley Town Hall, originally the township's Liberal Club, opened in 1881, and was taken over by Tyldesley Urban District Council as its headquarters in 1924.[55] Tyldesley UDC opened Tyldesley Park in 1902, the Carnegie Library officially opened in 1909, and after World War I council housing was built at Sale Lane and Mosley Common and after World War II in Shakerley.[56]

In 1933, Lancashire County Council reorganised districts in the county, with reference to the Local Government Act 1929. A new Tyldesley Urban District was formed by amalgamating Tyldesley with Shakerley Urban District and the civil parish of Astley from the abolished Leigh Rural District.[57] The urban district was abolished in 1974 under the Local Government Act 1972, when the area became part of the Metropolitan Borough of Wigan, a local government district of the metropolitan county of Greater Manchester.

The Boundary Commission recommended Tyldesley should be part of the Leigh constituency at the 2010 general election.[58] At the 2010 General Election Andy Burnham retained the Leigh seat for the Labour party with 24,295 votes and a majority of 15,011, representing 51.3% of the vote. The Conservatives took 19.6% of the vote, the Liberal Democrats 17.0%, the UKIP 3.2%, the BNP 5.8%, the Christian Party 0.3% and Independents 2.8%.[59]

Geography

Further information: Geography of Greater Manchester
Tyldesley
Climate chart (explanation)
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Average max. and min. temperatures in °C
Precipitation totals in mm
Source: [60]

At 53°30′59″N 2°28′0″W / 53.51639°N 2.46667°W (53.5166°, −2.4668°), and 170 miles (274 km) northwest of central London, Tyldesley is situated 7.7 miles (12.4 km) east-southeast of Wigan and 8.9 miles (14.3 km) west-northwest of the city of Manchester, and at the eastern end of the Metropolitan Borough of Wigan. Tyldesley and Shakerley cover 2,490-acre (1,010 ha) Topographically Tyldesley is situated the edge of the Lancashire Plain just to the north of Chat Moss and the Banks of Tyldesley are where the foothills of the Pennines begin. The land rises from about 100 ft (30 m) at the foot of the banks to 250 ft (76 m) at the highest point. The banks are about one and a half miles long, a sandstone escarpment with the scarp slope facing south and the gentler dip to the north. The underlying rocks are the coal measures of the Manchester Coalfield covered with boulder clay. Streams drain the area including the Shakerley and Hindsford brooks which flow towards the Glaze Brook a tributary of the River Mersey.[4]

Heavily industrialised during the 19th century, Tyldesley has become a residential area since the demise of the coal industry and closure of its cotton mills. The main road through Tyldesley is the A577 which runs on the high ground along the ridge on which the town centre is situated.

Demography

Tyldesley compared
2001 UK censusTyldesley[61]Wigan (borough)[62]England
Total population34,022301,41549,138,831
White97.7%98.7%91.0%
Asian0.7%0.4%4.6%
Black0.3%0.2%2.3%

At the 2001 UK census, Tyldesley had a population of 34,022 and a population density of 13,789 inhabitants per square mile (5,324/km2), with a female-to-male ratio of 100 to 97.4.[63] Of those over 16 years old, 27.3% were single (never married), 47.8% married and 8.2% divorced.[64] Although the proportion of divorced people was similar to that of Wigan and England, the rates of those who were single and married were significantly different from the national and Wigan averages (Wigan: 42.4% single, 36.6% married; England: 44.3% single, 34.7% married).[65] Tyldesley's 13,621 households included 24.0% one-person, 46.1% married couples living together, 10.2% were co-habiting couples, and 9.0% single parents with their children.[66] Of those aged 16–74, 27.0% had no academic qualifications, lower than 28.9% in all of England and much lower than the 35.3% for the Wigan borough.[67][68]

Population change

Population growth in Tyldesley 1881–1961
Year 1881 1891 1901 1911 1921 1931 1939 1951 1961
Population 9,954 12,891 14,843 15,582 15,650 14,846 17,851 18,101 16,813

Tyldesley Cum Shakerley CP/Tn [69]

Economy

Tyldesley compared
2001 UK CensusTyldesley[70]Wigan (borough)[71]England
Population of working age25,021220,19635,532,091
Full-time employment46.8%41.7%40.8%
Part-time employment11.9%11.9%11.8%
Self-employed7.9%6.2%8.3%
Unemployed2.7%3.2%3.3%
Retired11.5%13.7%13.5%

According to the United Kingdom Census 2001, the industry of employment of residents aged 16–74 was 18.1% retail and wholesale, 16.5% manufacturing, 12.1% property and business services, 10.9% health and social work, 7.4% education, 7.1% transport and communications, 7.6% construction, 5.8% public administration, 5.0% finance, 4.1% hotels and restaurants, 0.8% energy and water supply, 0.5% agriculture, 0.1% mining, and 4.2% other. Compared with national figures, the town had a relatively low percentage working in agriculture.[72] The census recorded the economic activity of residents aged 16–74, 2.6% students were with jobs, 3.2% students without jobs, 4.7% looking after home or family, 6.7% permanently sick or disabled, and 2.1% economically inactive for other reasons.[70]

The main concentrations of employment are at Chaddock Lane between Astley and Mosley Common and at Parr Brow to the north of Mosley Common.[73]

Landmarks

West end and spire of St George's Church

For many years Tyldesley's landscape was dominated by factory chimneys and pit headgear. Since the closure of the mines and demolition of the factories, St George's Church—one of the few structures in the town built of stone, with a spire rising to 150 feet (46 m) in height—and Top Chapel in the Market Square have become the chief landmarks; both are Grade II listed buildings.[74][75] Tyldesley's built environment is almost uniformly constructed of brick.[76]

Among the listed buildings in Tyldesley are Chaddock Hall and Damhouse, both Grade II listed.[77][78][79] Chaddock Hall is a private residence and Damhouse or Astley Hall is a heritage centre having previously been used as the office block for Astley Hospital.[12]

Transport

Edward Entwistle, the driver of the first inter-city scheduled passenger train in the world, was born in Tyldesley in 1815. He drove the passenger service on the Liverpool to Manchester railway.[80]

In 1861 the London and North Western Railway revived powers granted to the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway to build a railway from Eccles to Wigan through the town.[54] Tyldesley railway station was to the east of the junction of the branch to Kenyon Junction[81] on the Liverpool to Manchester Line via Leigh and Pennington.[82] The Earl of Ellesmere cut the first sod at Worsley on 11 September 1861 and the line opened to traffic on 1 September 1864.[83] The Tyldesley Loopline closed on 3 May 1969 as a result of the Beeching Axe.[84]

Elliott Street is part of Tyldesley's one-way system.

In 1900, a Bill authorising South Lancashire Tramways to construct more than 62 miles (100 km) of tramway in southern Lancashire was given Royal Assent.[85] However, by November 1900 the South Lancashire Electric Traction and Power Company had acquired the shares. The first section of tramway opened on 20 October 1902 between Lowton and Four Lanes Ends via Leigh and Atherton and on 25 October 1902 a branch from Atherton to Tyldesley was opened and Tyldesley got its first tram. The company got into financial difficulty and in turn became Lancashire United Tramways later Lancashire United Transport. In August 1931 trams were replaced by trolley buses.[86] Because of Tyldesley's narrow streets trams and trolley buses had to follow a one-way system; eastbound trams ran along Shuttle Street and Milk Street and westbound used Elliot Street and Castle Street, a system now used by all traffic. Tyldesley is connected to neighbouring towns by bus services operated by South Lancs Travel of Atherton and First Greater Manchester.

The former trackbed of the Tyldesley Loopline route to the A580,[87]within the Wigan MBC area was reserved in the Unitary Development Plan in case the rail route could be reinstated. A guided busway[88] is being built on the former trackbed but the scheme is not universally popular.[89] After consultations work started on the 4.5-mile busway from Leigh to Ellenbrook in 2013. It will have seven stops and one of its three park and ride sites is in Tyldesley. A pathway for walkers, cyclists and horse riders will run alongside it when it opens in 2015.[90]

Education

Further information: List of schools in Wigan
Plaque on the Old St George's School

George Ormerod gave a site for a national school near St George's Church, it catered for all age groups when it opened in 1827.[91] A day school was opened in the old Wesley Chapel in 1856 and in 1864 was replaced by new school which lasted until 1912.[92] A church school opened in Johnson St in 1872 and closed the 1960s.[92] The British School in Upper George Street opened in 1902.[86] Its premises are now the Community Life Centre.[93] The Mission School or Central C of E School in Darlington Street opened in 1892.[94] A board school opened in Lower Elliott Street in 1913 which was used for girls' secondary education after 1935.[95] Garrett Hall Boys Secondary School opened in 1935.[96]

St George's Central Primary School, built in the late 1990s is an amalgamation of the historical St George's C of E and Central C of E School. Other primary schools are Tyldesley Primary School and Garrett Hall Primary. Until 2007 there was a school in Shakerley but this has closed.[97] Kingshill Special School occupying the old girls' secondary school, has closed.[98]

The main school for secondary education in Tyldesley is Fred Longworth High School, which was awarded Arts College status in 1998. Children in Tyldesley also attend other high schools in the area including, St Mary's Catholic High School in Astley, the only Catholic high school and sixth form in the area.

Religion

Tyldesley Top Chapel faces the Market Square

John Wesley preached in Shakerley four times, between 1748 and 1752, laying the foundations for a place of worship. In the 1780s George Whitfield who worked with Wesley early in his ministry also preached there. Tyldesley's first place of worship, Top Chapel was built in the Square in 1789 for the Countess of Huntingdon's Connexion which had broken from the Church of England. Thomas Johnson, gifted the site on the highest point of Tyldesley and Lady Huntingdon, a supporter of Wesley supplied money for building materials. The chapel became known as Top Chapel from its geographical location.[99]

Before 1825 Tyldesley had no established church, and lay within the ancient parish of Leigh in the Diocese of Chester.[100] The diocese divided in 1847, when the present Diocese of Manchester was created.[101] For ritual baptisms, marriages and burials, the population, had to travel to churches outside of the township's boundaries, Leigh Parish Church or its daughter churches, Astley Chapel or Atherton Chapel or to Deane or Eccles.

The St George's Church a chapel of ease to Leigh, St Mary's, was built in 1825 on land donated by Thomas Johnson. It was a Commissioners' Church, paid for by money from the parliament of the United Kingdom raised by the Church Building Act 1818, said to be a celebration of Britain's victory in the Battle of Waterloo. Robert Smirke an official architect to the Office of Works, advised the Parliamentary Commissioners on the building of new churches from 1818 onwards, including St George's. The chapel was consecrated on 19 September 1825, dedicated to England's patron saint.[100] The church could seat 1,100 people, it is 112 feet (34 m) in length, 60 feet (18 m) in width and its spire, a local landmark is 150 feet (46 m) in height. George Ormerod gave the land for the churchyard and also six bells which were cast at Downham Market.[102]

There were chapels of the Congregational, Primitive Methodist, Wesleyan Methodist, Baptist, Welsh Congregational, Welsh Calvinistic and Independent Methodist connexions.[4] Welsh chapels served the Welsh people who migrated toto the town after the opening of the railway in 1864.[76]

Sport

The idea for a public swimming baths came from Caleb Wright. The Local Board built Tyldesley Baths in Union Street at a cost of £1,300 (£110,000 in 2015)[34] and opened to great celebrations in 1876. Tyldesley Swimming Club was formed as soon as the baths opened. They closed on health grounds in 1960 and the closed Majestic Cinema on Castle Street was converted into public baths in 1964.[103] The pool is now the Pelican Centre.[104]

Before the 1895 schism in English rugby, John Berry played rugby union for England, and Tyldesley FC, founded in 1881. After the schism, the club was a founder member of the Northern Rugby Football Union (now Rugby League) and played for five seasons from 1895–96 to 1899–1900 finishing 6th of 22 in the initial combined league. The club rejoined the Rugby Football Union in 1911 playing at Well Street for many years before moving to St George's Park, Astley Street in November 2001. In 2008/09 season the 1st XV lost 8–7 to Cullompton in the Senior Vase Final at Twickenham.[105]

Olympian Fred Norris worked underground at Cleworth Hall Colliery and was a long-distance runner who competed in the 1952 Helsinki and 1956 Melbourne Olympics.[106]

Culture

Tyldesley's wealth as an industrial town resulted in outlets for the entertainment of its population, including cinemas and public houses. Three cinemas were built in the town, the Theatre Royal in John Street opened in 1909,[107] the Carlton on Johnson Street in 1911,[108] and the Majestic in Castle Street in 1923. Films were also shown in Tyldesley Miner's Hall from 1908.[109] In 1902 the council acquired land for a public park on Astley Street.[110] A public library was built in 1908 with the aid of an Andrew Carnegie grant,[111] on the site of the old Temperance Hall and Mechanics Institute on Stanley Street built in 1851.

Founded in 1877, Tyldesley Good Templars Band was the town's first brass band. Tyldesley Band is a member of the North West Brass Band Association and meets in the chapel on Milk Street.[112] Tyldesley Little Theatre in Lemon Street is home to an amateur dramatic society, members of the Greater Manchester Drama Federation. The auditorium is a small 150-seat theatre with a traditional proscenium arch stage, stalls and balcony seating.[113] The town's industrial landscape was recorded in the 1960s and 1970s in the paintings and prints of artist Roger Hampson.[114]

Public services

Tyldesley is policed by the Greater Manchester Police force from Atherton Police Station, which covers Atherton, Tyldesley, Astley and Mosley Common.[115] The statutory emergency fire and rescue service is provided by the Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service, from Leigh and Atherton fire stations.[116] Health services in the Wigan borough are provided by the Wigan Borough Clinical Commissioning Group.[117] Hospital services are provided by the Wrightington, Wigan and Leigh NHS Foundation Trust, which provides an Accident and Emergency service at Wigan Hospital and outpatient clinics at Leigh Infirmary.[118]

Waste management is co-ordinated by Wigan Metropolitan Council, which is a statutory waste disposal authority in its own right.[119] Tyldesley's Distribution Network Operator for electricity is Electricity North West.[120] United Utilities manage Tyldesley's drinking and waste water.[121]

See also

References

Notes

  1. fit for active service in body and equipment

Footnotes

  1. Greater Manchester Gazetteer, Greater Manchester County Record Office, archived from the original on 18 July 2011, retrieved 3 June 2010
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Wigan Metropolitan Borough Council, Tyldesley, wigan.gov.uk, retrieved 13 July 2009
  3. Tyldesley with Shakerley Township Boundaries, genuki.org.uk, retrieved 9 August 2009
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 Farrer, William; Brownbill, J (editors) (1907), "Tyldesley with Shakerley", A History of the County of Lancaster, Volume 3, Victoria County History, pp. 439–445, retrieved 18 June 2009
  5. 5.0 5.1 Mills 1998, p. 355
  6. Mills 1998, p. 404
  7. Newsletter 71, wiganarchsoc.co.uk, retrieved 7 September 2009
  8. Roman Road, lancashire.gov.uk, retrieved 13 December 2009
  9. Historic England, "Monument no. 44272 (44272 )", PastScape, retrieved 17 September 2012
  10. Lunn 1953, p. 7
  11. Mills 1998, p. 17
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Tonge 2002, p. 5
  13. 13.0 13.1 Lunn 1953, p. 5
  14. Lunn 1953, pp. 26–327
  15. Bond, Ackers & Ward 1979, p. 28
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Bibliography

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External links

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