History of Manchester - 6. Cottonopolis
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- Опубліковано 26 лип 2024
- In the 19th century Manchester was leading the world in industrialisation and had become a global powerhouse in the manufacture of textiles. But it also meant the sweeping away of the old world and the introduction of a new way of life for ordinary working people.
With only a handful of remaining sites left from those days, I want to build a picture of how the city actually developed from the point of view of the people behind the glamour and glory of the industrial revolution - working class Mancunians.
Its a tale of slums, disease and desperation. Knife-wielding teens known as Scuttlers, and desperate poverty. But with a growing civic pride, and an increasing sense of compassion, its also a story of public parks, sanitation and municipal housing. A century of growth, for better and for worse.
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MUSIC USED:
'Cherry Ripe' - Joe Silver & the Rockville Brass Band
'Whisky for Interrogation' - ROZKOL
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction
02:21 Industrialisation
07:49 Birth of the Middle Class
08:56 Population Growth
10:46 Slums and Disease
14:50 New Housing and Parks
18:35 A City Hall
21:47 Mass Entertainment
23:15 Scuttlers!
25:56 Manchester Ship Canal
28:26 Salford
I'm a Scouser, but that was an amazing video about Manchester!
Cheers thanks! Wait till I get round to Liverpool one day!
@@BeeHereNowuk I watched the train one you did in Liverpool recently, another excellent video
Liverpool retains a cotton exchange to this day. The cotton trade was vital to Liverpool -a global industry!
Just found this video, it's great!
I live in the northern quarter, just off great ancoats street. I've been fascinated about the history of the buildings which seems to have been (mostly) forgotten or erased. Most people living here are probably oblivious to the reason the beautiful buildings they're living in are standing. My Grandad who died back in 1989 was born and raised in Ancoats, I only found this out a year ago after finding his birth record online. It's nice to know that a man I never knew but I'm so closely related to lived just over the road!
Would be interesting to know about your Grandad and the history of the buildings.
I visited Manchester today for the first time on a day trip to visit an art exhibition, as a life long Londoner I was seriously impressed with the cities historic architecture and general good atmosphere. After seeing your whole history playlist back to back I’ll return in the spring to explore, thanks for the well produced inspirational work on your city 🐝
Aw that's great to hear. You're welcome back any time!
I’m from Manchester and I see these houses and buildings often and had no idea how interesting our city is and how much history it has. Great video
Great city this built on CASH! Manchester was the brokerage centre for cotton but Oldham had far more cotton mills The driving force in Manchester was money and invention - I love it!
I was born in Manchester not far from Belle vue it was a wonderful place for a child and l remember the big car parks filled with buses every day with visitors it’s many many years since l left Britain for New York and l enjoy the videos showing city of my youth Thank you
Wow your channel had boomed well done you deserve it 👍👍
Thanks mate!
Great video! For example a city in Poland called Łódź was nicknamed "Polish Manchester" - just like it, it grew exponentially in the 19th century as a textile manufacturing city, becoming one the largest such cities in Europe with Polish, German, Russian and Jewish capital flowing in. Most famous factory (still standing and redeveloped) was Manufaktura. The city is also a stage was an amazing book by Wladyslaw Reymont "The Promised Land", telling the story of an early 19th century cutthroat capitalism.
Loving this series and channel. I'm a born and bred Mancunian yet I know very little of the City's history beyond the canals (I grew up in Worsley so we learned something if it). So thanks for these, it's been fascinating.
Thanks very much Mike. Glad they've been informative :)
My wife taught at a school founded in Victorian times in Rochdale . In the 19th century when the children were 8 years old they had to work half
a day in the local cotton mills . Mornings one week and afternoons the next. Ian Duckworth.
I am old enough to remember the slum dwellings. When I was Primary school age, we lived at 5 Peacock Street in Gorton, long demolished in the early 1970's the street named after Bayer-Peacock in an Victorian old 2 up, 2 down with no hot water, except for a small gas boiler above the kitchen sink, a tin bath, outside toilet down the bottom of the yard and a cast iron range in the downstairs back room. I went to Peacock Street Primary, I believe the same Primary school as Myra Hindley did. It seems ancient, but I am only in my middle 50's.
My kids and Grand kids think I was brought up in the Stone Age, but it is only 50 or so years ago. They take for granted such things as double glazing, central heating and wifi.
Manchester has a proud history and is now the fastest growing city in the uk
Whole family grew up in Manchester some years past. Wonderful to see it's legacy like this out there for many to see. Would love to see you do a tribute to Belle Vue.
Recently new to your channel, I’ve been working my way through all your old films. I’ve been holding off making a comment to request an episode just like this one in the hope that I’ve come across it.
My grandmother and her family (Pinner) immigrated from Manchester - leaving Robert St. West Gorton in 1927. She arrived in Australia 6 y.o.
Thank you for this excellent episode. It gives us a bit of insight into how ordinary people lived. It would be great to learn even more about how and from where all the people who migrated into Manchester came from.
Just found this channel.
Wow. Absolutely superb. Lucky enough to be mancunian so it's all familiar to me...
I had my wedding reception in the Pomona hotel in Reddish, very well done
blimey that john snow map of cholera outbreaks is terrifying. just looking at where I live..it must have been devastating..
@Ross Bourne and wearing snazzy socks
Superb video! This is such a rich & interesting period that's always captured my imagination. Despite the rush of new builds in the city over the last 20 years its still amazing that there are little pockets of history doted around. Technically your presentation and the quality of your work is right up there too, well done!
Thanks very much! That's nice to hear 😊
An absolutely fantastic video. Thanks for all your work on this and the rest of the series.
Love the history of Manchester series, great content, can't get enough of it.
Any thoughts on doing a series about the oldest pubs left in Manchester before they've all gone. I'm 57 and used to come into Manchester in the early 80's on pub crawls with mates and I'd say 50% of the old pubs have now gone.
Thanks for your content and great efforts 👍
Thanks for doing these videos! They are hugely interesting to me, as my ancestors came down from Scotland to Manchester in the early 19th century. They were machine makers and had their iron works under the name of Crighton & Co. and Crighton & Sons at Lower Mosley Street, Great Bridgewater Street, and later at Castlefield for the most part of the century. Someday I’ll need to visit the city!
Can't wait to watch this tonight!
I like your take on History you showing a side we hardly ever see. You are do doing a great job really like your site.
fantastic video lad.. it deserves way more views than it has.
Hi olly...what can I say? I effin love this series. .each one is like a historical video painting..well researched well put together well done mate! Best wishes and take care
Cheers Jimmy 👍👍
Was brought up on Scarsdale rd in the 1960 brilliant area miss it to this day
Another great video, Ollie. Belle Vue was bought by the Trusthouse Forte group in the 1980s. They ran it into the ground and sold the site for redevelopment.
Remember visiting a submarine in Salford Quays in the 70s. Blew my mind that submarines could come up the Manchester Ship Canal.
Worked for a period in Great Marlborough Street. Never been there since, completely different, mostly I understand developments for the University.
Another excellent video,very well presented.Easy to follow,looking forward to the next one.
Excellent and informative. My Gt grandparents moved from rural Cheshire to Harpurhey in 1885. This would have been there world
Another great video!
9.05. A few weeks ago i changed the postbox lock and front door lock to that front door on wood street. It is now a high end HMO.
Can't wait for the next part(s) of the story and see how Manchester has developed over the years.
Outstanding well done.
Interesting stuff. Thanks
Finally getting round to watching this now! i have one huge backlog of vids to watch! Great video! :)
Didn't L.S Lowry live in Victoria park for a while?
Wow! You covered some ground in this video. Good effort.
Would you consider doing a video about the hospital that used to stand on Piccadilly garden's?
Yeah, defo. Id need to learn a bit more first though.
Cheers mate thanks!! 🤜🤛
The only place ive heard or seen Anything about it were Photos in weatherspoon's on Dean's gate.
It's just a little detail, but growing up and even now, whenever we were going into the city centre, we'd say we're going into town, I wonder if that came about from the city's beginngings as a town. 🤔 Thank you for the video, it's much appreciated. 🐝🐝
Superb video, thank you for this!
There is something to be said for small parks, they can be safer than big ones and a large number of them can be beneficial. Jane Jacobs had good things to say about them.
Great video as always
Superb video....👍
A great video as always. Manchester has such a rich history.
Cheers thank you!
Thanks Ollie, as usual your presentation and editing skills have delivered another first class video, packed full of history and real interest. Growing up in Chorlton-on-Medlock I often walked down Daisy Bank Road on the way to and from primary school. Climbing the old stone gate towers from the toll gates, some of which were still in place in the early 60's. I knew people who still lived in cellar bed sits in and around Nelson Street. My old street, Summer Street, off Upper Brook Street, is long gone but I'm surprised to see how many small pockets of history still remain around there.
Looking forward to the next episode as always. Thanks again!
Very interesting, thanks Mike!
Really interesting and well put together items. I've learnt a lot. Thanks
Excellent video. Thank you.
Brilliant video!!¬ I was lost in it for every minute of it, although I come from over the border in Pudsey twixt Leeds and Bradford. I can remeber everything there being black too! The only let down was the fact that you didn't sing Runcorn!
Phil, East Yorkshire
But, everybody loves Runcorn! It's where the chemicals come from and everybody loves chemicals!
Ollie, you made a great video again. I couldn't close my eyes for a second or look elsewhere until I finished this video. Thank you so much.
Thanks 👍🏼
I'm concered for your lil tuffed blowing off standing on the top of windy buildings, stay safe out there
What a great series. Fascinating stuff. Keep up the good work😀👍
Excellent documentary, very well researched and presented, thank you.
Sir Edward Watkin provided 4 public parks for the people, he was a great Mancunian who went on to greater things like the Great Central Railway
Ollie, I am just so thrilled with your films, I wish I had had you as my history teacher when I was at School. You are such a great communicator. I lived near Manchester as a girl, and know many of the places you talk about, but I have learned so much more, that I did not know, by listening to your films. I now live in Yorkshire, but it makes me want to go back into Manchester and go and re-look at some of the places you mention. Thank you so much for the considerable time and effort that you have gone to, to make these, it has brought my husband and myself so much pleasure watching them.
Your scores for your vlogs are tremendous 🎩 ✌️♥️
Wow thank you. I appreciate that 👍🏼
Absolutely fantastic! Loved it from start to finish. So professionally put together and well researched. Cannot wait for the next video.
Thank you!!
Excellent series, really looking forward to further episodes!
Brilliantly informative as always.
Such an interesting and informative video. You’ve obviously put loads of work into it. Love your videos mate
Fascinating series.
Thank you so much for these videos, they’re great and you’ve done an excellent job
Another great video, cheers!
These videos are wonderful, thank you! They've given our genealogical digging from the states (via our records in Rochdale, Oldham, Shaw, and Shropshire) so much more depth.
brilliant these vidz mate
Class video, very well done! Moving to Ancoats soon so looking forward to doing some history hunting of my own.
Quality video again. Very much looking forward to the next one.
Cheers thanks!
Fantastic video mate! Extremely entertaining and educating. You certainly have a knack for exploring historic subjects and making them deeply interesting! Thank you!
Thank you!
Brilliant video about the history of our city , well done !
Cheers thank you!
Great video... glad I found your channel, some excellent content!
Thanks very much!
Great video
Great video. Very informative and excellently edited.
Thank you!!!
I love this series. Is there an episode on the music hall and theatres of Manchester?
Working class / Middle Class people are some of the BEST in the world.... Great vid and thanks for posting.........
Thank you very much 👍
Can't believe I've only just found you! Seriously, probably the best historical view of Manchester I've seen. Well done, be watching one a night for the foreseeable.. 👏👏
Thanks very much that's so nice! I was actually just sitting here wondering whether it's worth working on the next chapter so maybe this is a sign! 😄
Really enjoyed this. Thank you.
Thank you!
Lovely buildings.
Something should be done to preserve them.
Absolutely. Without them the Northern Quarter wouldn't be the Northern Quarter.
Brilliant ...
Another great video, new subscriber here and love your content!
Cheers thank you!
Channel goes from strength to strength these layers of history as you peel it back is always so revealing..
For example what is now Banglatown in London once edge of City and green fields then huegenots then Jewish ghetto and Tailoring then Bangladesh Clothing Trade.
In London you can the pump that was investigated Snow and proved his theory..
Great stuff . Thank you 👍
Cheers thank you!
Another entertaining and informative video! I really enjoy them. Your videos made me start researching Manchester more. I went there once as a 16-year-old, but I didn't really know anything about the history at the time. Your videos inspired me to look more into it and made me want even more to travel back there again. Your videos are so well researched and it's obvious you spend a lot of time and effort making them, I wish they would get more views, because they truly deserve it. Keep it up!
Haha thanks very much. It's not so bad really Manchester
I went to a really good rave in that old police station in about 2007/8
This is amazing. Im from london but this is so interesting it gripped me
Thanks glad you liked it 👍
Yet another fantastic video! Now please don't make us wait as long for the next one! 😅😂
Cheers thanks!!
Thanks for uploading this from a true manc 🐝👍
I wish history was taught like this and a number of other UA-cam..
Parks in my London area (E18 South Woodford edge ofindon)
We have luckily have Epping Forest a 7,000 acre ancient forest some ground of long gone stately home Wanstead Park that rivalled Blenheim Palace and other land enclosed and taken back by the Public via the courts
And given to the people by Queen Victoria..
The Quakers had a huge affect in the UK..
I think of movie with a little kid that's a chimney sweep when you describe the slums. Mary Poppins maybe. Such a long time ago. I bet wherever movie it was was using that for a reference.
thanks for doing this. its wonderful.
have you ever thought about doing where i live in pendlebury? love it if you did.
Great info. My Dad was born and raised there. I have have never been but sent my Daughter to see it. UA-cam says spelling error when I try to say where. LOL. Wythen.....
Family house still exists but is a council house. Family has been in it since the 20s
I spent a large part of my childhood on the edge of the ‘Northern Quarter’ and don’t know whether to laugh or cry. It might be the trendiest part of the city but it also looks something of a ‘shit hole’ and unloved. No doubt it is used and enjoyed by thousands, but it and most of the city looks unloved and uncared for. Engels would need to bring a spray can with him, if he ever returned and leave another ugly mark on what could be, should be a beautiful city.
Bullshit
I agree. I was going to visit a couple years ago until I saw the UA-cam videos.
Alfred Waterhouse built the Rochdale Town hall Clock tower in 1866 / 1871 the Town Hall used for the buying and selling of Wool Also Rochdale still has weavers cottages still standing
Wow I was watching your videos when you were making them about Roman Manchester/Castlefield and through lockdown your channel has really gone to the next level!!! Hope you stick at this, the history surrounding Manchester is endless and it’s quite rare to find on youtube! Even the translations of area names would make a quality vid....
Wythenshawe (whether you’re a fan or not), is named so because the Anglo-Saxons called it ‘Withigensceaga’, which meant: “small wood of willow trees”, today it means Wythenshawe. Northernden is named so because the Anglo Saxons built a small fort on the Mersey and named it “the northern den”, or so the tale goes! Couple of fun or not so fun facts for you😎!!
He already made a vid on Manchester district names some while ago, but cant remember if Wythenshawe was in it. At least he didnt translate Ramsbottom.
@@lifeschool cheers mate just found that video you’re speaking of👍🏼
Great mini-history. You can see the legacy of the cotton industry in the sewing specialist shops in the Northern Quarter, e.g. Fred Aldous Ltd, and one other shop I can unfortunately not find on Google Maps - a real gem of a store that I discovered pre-pandemic. BTW: You might like to cover the role of the immigrant German and Polish communities in Manchester. There was a Polish community in Manchester long before the EU. There was also a sizeable German commumity in Liverpool (who fell victim to the riots after the sinking of the Lusitania).
Brill !
I remember Manchester when it was a field
Fantastic stuff, I am a lover of our Manchester Industrial history. Have you ever thought of working on a collaboration with Martin Zero, he has the same passion as you about our city ?
I haven't seen the whole of this series so I don't know if you have explored the history of Salford. Salford, as you know, was a separate and distinct city 'over the river' from Manchester. It too was a powerhouse of the industrial revolution. Sadly, much of the city was demolished in the early 70s including my mother's birthplace of Upper Cleminson Street. Pretty much all the Victorian housing has gone and was replaced by high rise blocks and maisonettes, which in turn are being torn down.
Excellent series pal, looking forward to watching the next one 👍🏻 if you ever need a volunteer camera man give me a shout, would love to help out 👍🏻 I’m only local 😂
Brilliant content.
One thing missing, external Mic for better audio, apart from that the video was very well done and put together.
Subscribed!
Interesting that you mentioned how the town hall is actually a city hall as I don't know any Mancunian that refers to the city centre as anything other than 'town'
Scuttleropolis ... Alcoholism and working class poverty have never been high on my list of priorities to learn more about so Manchester is not anywhere on my list of places I want to visit in the world.
Good work! So let me get this right. Albert Square is triangular? Reminds me of a pizza - round, packed in a square box and cut into triangles...Seriously though, a thoroughly professional video. I thank you!