Fallowfield

For other uses, see Fallowfield (disambiguation).
For the village in Canada, see Fallowfield, Ottawa.
Fallowfield

Wilmslow Road, Fallowfield (part of the east side between Moseley Road and Egerton Road)
Fallowfield
 Fallowfield shown within Greater Manchester
Population 15,211 (2011 census)
OS grid referenceSJ855935
Metropolitan boroughManchester
Metropolitan county Greater Manchester
RegionNorth West
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town MANCHESTER
Postcode district M14
Dialling code 0161
Police Greater Manchester
Fire Greater Manchester
Ambulance North West
EU Parliament North West England
UK ParliamentManchester Gorton
List of places
UK
England
Greater Manchester

Coordinates: 53°26′33″N 2°13′07″W / 53.4425°N 2.2186°W / 53.4425; -2.2186

Fallowfield is a suburb of the city of Manchester, England. The population of the ward at the 2011 census was 15,211.[1] Historically in Lancashire, it lies roughly 3 miles (5 km) south of Manchester city centre and is bisected eastwest by Wilmslow Road and northsouth by Moseley Road and Wilbraham Road. The former Fallowfield Loop railway line, now a cycle path, follows a route nearly parallel with the eastwest main road (Moseley Road/Wilbraham Road).

The area has a very large student population. The University of Manchester's main accommodation complex – the Fallowfield Campus – occupies a large area in the north; these are adjacent to the university's Owens Park halls of residence and the Firs Botanical Grounds. In the north-west of the suburb is Platt Fields Park. This is formed from part of the land which once belonged to the Platts of Platt Hall.

History

Further information: History of Manchester

The early medieval linear earthwork Nico Ditch passes through Platt Fields Park in Fallowfield and dates from the 8th or 9th century.[2]

Early Fallowfield was an ill-defined area north of Withington until the mid-19th century. The first mention of Fallowfield is in a deed of 1317 (as "Fallafeld"). During the 14th century at least part of the land in Fallowfield was held by Jordan de Fallafeld. In 1530 it was mentioned as "Falowfelde". Withington formed a sub-manor within the large Manor of Manchester. The Platt Estate in the north was first owned by the Platts and later by the Worsleys. The building of Wilbraham Road to connect Fallowfield with Edge Lane in Chorlton-cum-Hardy in 1869 enabled development west of the Wilmslow Road crossing. Some wealthy people (e.g. Joseph Whitworth, "The Firs", and the Behrens family, "The Oaks") built mansions in the area and in the early 20th century the university began to establish halls of residence (the earliest being Ashburne Hall, 1910, in a house donated by the family of Behrens) which have since become very extensive. There was a second period of building houses by members of the prosperous middle class in the 1850s: these included Egerton Lodge, Norton House and Oak House, while the Manchester architect Alfred Waterhouse built Barcombe Cottage as his own home on Oak Drive.[3]

Under the Poor Law Fallowfield formed part of the Chorlton Poor Law Union (administered from Chorlton-on-Medlock). From 1876 to 1894 Fallowfield was included in the area of the Withington Local Board of Health which was replaced by the Withington Urban District Council in 1894. (In 1895 Rusholme and the northern part of Fallowfield were incorporated into the city of Manchester. In 1904 the whole of the urban district was absorbed into the city of Manchester, though until 1914 there was a separate Withington Committee of the Corporation and rates were lower than in the rest of the city.

In 1891 Fallowfield railway station on the Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway's line from Chorlton-cum-Hardy to Fairfield was opened. During the first half of the 20th century the Manchester Corporation tramway on Moseley and Wilbraham Roads provided access to other southern suburbs and via Princess Road to the city centre.[4] In 1986 the UK's first drive-through McDonald's opened in Fallowfield[5] and more recently a Sainsbury's supermarket has been opened on the site of the railway station.

Governance

Fallowfield ward (which does not coincide with the area popularly known as Fallowfield) is represented on Manchester City Council by three Labour councillors, David Royle, Grace Fletcher-Hackwood and Michael Lee Amesbury (with former Fallowfield Councillor Peter Morrison serving as an Honorary Alderman for the City).[6] It is part of the Manchester Gorton Parliamentary Constituency held by Sir Gerald Kaufman. Included in the Fallowfield ward is Platt Fields Park and the Gita Bhavan Hindu Temple in Withington Road, Whalley Range, as well as William Hulme's Grammar School and Whalley Range High School.

Geography

Ladybarn is the part of Fallowfield to the south-east. Chancellors Hotel & Conference Centre is used by the University of Manchester: it was built by Edward Walters for Sir Joseph Whitworth,[7] as were the Firs Botanical Grounds.

Religion

The Holy Innocents Church (Anglican) stands on Wilbraham Road: the church was built in 1870–72 by the architects Price & Linklater using sandstone masonry. The style is Gothic revival and in 1983–84 the interior of the church was altered to designs by the Ellis Williams Partnership. The church was damaged by fire in 1954. The tower is at the south-east corner and is topped by an octagonal spire. The stained glass windows are mostly of the 1890s. After the closing of the nearby parish church of St James, Birch, in 1979 the two parishes were united under the name of the parish of Holy Innocents and St James.[8] There is a student-friendly independent church meeting in the 256 bar next door (Ivy Fallowfield Church){ivyfallowfield.org} and there is a Union Baptist Chapel not far away southwards. There is also a Seventh-day Adventist church in Wilbraham Road.

Wilbraham Road is also the site of the stylistically eclectic and, for its time, structurally innovative former South Manchester Synagogue (1913–2003); the building has been converted to other uses.

Platt Chapel

For more details on this topic, see Platt Chapel.
The 'More' building of the Allen Hall Complex (a Roman Catholic hall of residence): see below, Education

The chapel is on Wilmslow Road south of Grangethorpe Road and was a family chapel of the Worsleys of Platt Hall built in 1699. The present building is a rebuilding of 1790 modified in 1874–75. The congregation began as Independents (Congregationalists) and became Unitarian during the early 19th century. Since it ceased to be used for worship in 1970 it has been used by various local societies (from 1977). The graveyard, which used to be larger, is surrounded by Platt Fields Park.[9]

Education

Fallowfield Campus, Manchester Metropolitan University in 1985 (the main building is known as the Toastrack building)

Lady Barn House School, an independent primary school, was founded in Fallowfield in 1873 by William Henry Herford and took its name from the existing Ladybarn House which became its second home. In the 1950s it moved to Cheadle, Cheshire. Other schools and colleges in Fallowfield are the Holy Innocents Primary School (the former school buildings are next to the Holy Innocents Church and have been converted to other uses; they were built in 1882 to the designs of F. H. Oldham), Manchester Grammar School a notable public school which moved to Old Hall Lane from the city centre, Moseley Road School (Levenshulme High School and Lower School), the Princess Christian College (for the training of nannies) on Wilbraham Road, Manchester High School for Girls on Grangethorpe Road[10] and the Hollings College (also known as the Toast Rack building) campus of the Manchester Metropolitan University at the junction of Old Hall Lane with Wilmslow Road.[11][12]

Transport

The first flight into Fallowfield was made in 1912; the pilot was Mr Yoxall who flew the Avro 500 biplane from Trafford Park Aerodrome into a temporary air strip

Fallowfield has an excellent bus service along Wilmslow Road and other services connect it with Levenshulme and Chorlton-cum-Hardy. The majority of services are operated by Stagecoach Manchester. It also has Mauldeth Road railway station on the Styal Line.

Until 1958, Fallowfield had its own railway station, Fallowfield railway station, located on Wilmslow Road, providing trains between Manchester Central Station and Fairfield and Gorton.[13] The site is occupied by a Sainsbury's supermarket and a block of flats; with the station building itself serving as a Sainsbury's cafe. The railway line continued as a freight line until it was closed in 1988. After years of the line lying derelict, the old trackbed was repurposed around 2001 as a cycle track and today the Fallowfield Loop cycle route runs from Debdale Park to St Werburgh's Road Metrolink station. The route is run by Sustrans and forms part of Routes 6 and 60 of the National Cycle Network.[14][15]

Sport

Manchester students kicking off a match at Fallowfield Stadium in 1985

The 1893 FA Cup Final was played at Fallowfield Stadium, in which Wolverhampton Wanderers beat Everton 1-0, with Harry Allen scoring the only goal of the game. The stadium also hosted the cycling events for the 1934 British Empire Games,the Amateur Athletic Association championships in 1897 and 1907 and two Northern Union (later Rugby League) Challenge Cup finals in 1899 and 1900. It was demolished in 1994, and the site is now Manchester University's Richmond Park Halls of Residence.[16]

Musical associations

A TV broadcast called the Gospel and Blues Train featuring Muddy Waters, Sister Rosetta Tharpe, Sonny Terry and Brownie McGhee and other blues singers was recorded by Granada TV at Wilbraham Road railway station on Thursday, May 7 1964, after the station was closed to passenger traffic.[17]

Fallowfield was the subject of the penultimate track on Manchester band the Courteeners debut album, St Jude, entitled "Fallowfield Hillbilly". The Chemical Brothers met at the University of Manchester and played their first gig at 'The Bop', a popular student night that was located within the University of Manchester's Owens Park halls of residence.

Notable residents

References

Notes
  1. "City of Manchester ward population 2011". Retrieved 5 January 2016.
  2. Nevell 1998, pp. 40–41
  3. Cooper, Glynis (2002) The Illustrated History of Manchester's Suburbs. Derby: Breedon Books; pp. 75-76
  4. Yearsley, Ian (1962) The Manchester Tram. Huddersfield: Advertiser Press; pp. 58, 70, 134, 210
  5. https://www.thecaterer.com/#/business/companies/33902/mcdonalds-restaurants-ltd
  6. Manchester City Council - Fallowfield ward councillors, Manchester City Council, retrieved 21 June 2007
  7. Hartwell, Clare et al. (2004) Lancashire: Manchester and the South-East. (The Buildings of England) New Haven: Yale University Press ISBN 0-300-10583-5; p. 466–481
  8. Cooper (2002); p. 77
  9. Hartwell, Clare, et al. (2004) Lancashire: Manchester and the South-East. (The Buildings of England) New Haven: Yale University Press ISBN 0-300-10583-5; p. 469
  10. The school moved to Grangethorpe Road in the 1930s from Dover Street, Chorlton-on-Medlock.
  11. Hollings College ran courses in domestic science and catering. The distinctive college buildings were designed with parts shaped like a toast rack and a poached egg. On 1 January 1977, the college and Didsbury College of Education were amalgamated with Manchester Polytechnic, later to become the Metropolitan University.
  12. Cooper, Glynis (2002) The Illustrated History of Manchester's Suburbs. Derby: Breedon Books; p. 77
  13. "Fallowfield". Disused Stations. Retrieved 13 March 2013.
  14. "Fallowfield Loopline". Sustrans. Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  15. "Friends of the Fallowfield Loop". Retrieved 14 March 2013.
  16. The Harris Stadium (formerly Fallowfield Stadium), UK Running Track Directory, retrieved 29 September 2007
  17. "When the Blues train rolled into Chorlton". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 10 November 2014.
  18. 100 Years of Manchester High School for Girls, 1874–1974. Manchester: Manchester High School for Girls (compiled by K. L. Hilton)
  19. http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2008/may/31/exhibition.art1
Bibliography

Further reading

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