Showing posts with label Heaton Norris. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Heaton Norris. Show all posts
Sunday, 21 January 2018
Briggs Stores ghost sign
Briggs Stores ghost sign, on the side of a house in Heaton Norris, Stockport, on the corner of Belmont Street and Clement Street. This photo was taken a few years ago. When we lived in Heaton Norris in the late 1980s/early 1990s, Belmont Street boasted some fabulous ghost signs, including a smart green and gold Hovis sign, and a chip shop with an interior straight out of the 1950s. It's all smartened up now, of course.
Labels:
Belmont,
Cheshire,
ghost sign,
Heaton Norris,
Heatons,
history,
house,
Manchester,
shop,
sign,
Stockport,
stores,
wall
Location:
Belmont Way, Stockport SK4, UK
Saturday, 28 November 2015
With thanks to Mrs J Pogson
Signs bearing the names of Mrs J Pogson, Mrs S Shore, Mrs Joseph Warburton and others decorate the Bethesda Primitive Methodist Chapel in Heaton Norris, Stockport. A handsome building, the Chapel was founded in 1890 and is now dedicated to commercial use. I'm not sure whether Mrs J Pogson would have approved. Apparently the primitive Methodists were successful in evangelising industrial communities in the late 19th century - and Stockport was famous for its textile mills and hatmaking.
Sunday, 17 August 2014
Local hero
Nelstrops Albion Mills in Stockport.
I’ve gone past this mill countless times, and have always
admired the white wash of flour up the side of the building. It was only when I
saw Nelstrops flour for sale in a local shop that I was prompted to look into
its history.
It turns out that Nelstrops is the only independent family
miller in the North West. The company was founded in 1820 by an enterprising 19
year old, William Nelstrop, who later became Mayor of Stockport. According to
the company’s website, he was offered a knighthood by Queen Victoria for his
role in defusing the anti-corn law riots, but refused the honour – partly because
he sympathised with the poor who could not afford bread, and partly because the
lower wheat prices would benefit his business.
The business is still run by his descendants, and the Albion
Mills on Lancashire Hill have survived fires and blitz. The sign on the top says the building was erected in 1820 and rebuilt in 1894.
Labels:
Albion,
bread,
Corn Laws,
flour,
Heaton Norris,
history,
inn,
Lancashire Hill,
Manchester Road,
Mill,
Navigation,
Nelstrops,
pub,
sign,
Stockport
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