Showing posts with label WALKLATE KATH and BARRY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WALKLATE KATH and BARRY. Show all posts

Tuesday, 16 August 2016

OLD MIDDLEWICH POSTCARD circa 1911

By kind permission of  DAVE GRIFFITHS
by Dave Roberts

We're much indebted to DAVE GRIFFITHS for permission to use this fine old Middlewich postcard which he recently came across and posted on the Northwich & Mid-Cheshire Facebook Group.
Dave was looking for information as to the scenes depicted here, and also to the approximate date of the postcard. 
As to the date, we were able to help almost immediately, as this postcard is one of many featured in the collection which Geraldine Williams loaned to us a few years ago and which we will be featuring in the Middlewich Diary soon.
Geraldine's copy was sent from 39 Booth Lane, Cledford, Middlewich on November 27th 1911 to a Mrs J Twiss in Sandy Lane, Lymm.
Middlewich postcards, like other postcards of the time, had a very long 'shelf-life'. This card would, in all probability, still be on sale in the town twenty years later, until the changes of the early thirties, including the replacement of the old Town Bridge by the current structure, rendered it obsolete.
Of course, most of the scenes pictured here were also available at the time as individual cards.
Here's a coloured version of the Town Bridge postcard, from the afore-mentioned Geraldine Williams collection (follow the link for a comparison with the view in the present day).
And here, courtesy of Kath and Barry Walklate, is a photo of the Bullring, as shown in the centre of Dave's postcard, at around the same period. That famous gas-lamp, though, where our Town Crier used to stand, seems to be different in each photo.

by kind permission of DAVE GRIFFITHS
Dave also took the trouble to scan the other side of the postcard, thus giving us even more insight into the time it was produced, and posted.
If you look carefully at the extreme left-hand side, you'll note that the card was published by 'W. Clarke, Stationer, Middlewich' which gives us a clue to its local origins. Remarkably, though, if you look at the top right hand side, in the square reserved for a postage stamp, you'll see that the card was, unexpectedly perhaps, 'printed in Saxony', an ancient area of Northern Germany, famous for its printing expertise. 
Presumably the Great War which came a few years later will have put paid to this connection
And so to the  actual message on the postcard. 
It's addressed to 'Miss Maggie Bailey' and comes from her 'affectionate Mother', who appears, from what she says, to come from one of the mill towns of Lancashire or Yorkshire.
She says it it is 'Right(?) country here, not many shops but no mill chimneys'. Which could be considered strange because the one thing Middlewich had in abundance between the late nineteenth century and the late 1960s/early 1970s was factory chimneys. 
In fact, for a small industrial town, it had more than its fair share. At the time we are speaking of, there would have been at least twenty at the various salt works around the town.
Dave Griffiths says that the writer may well have been specifically referring to 'mill chimneys', which were usually a lot taller and more imposing than salt works chimneys.
Or, it may have been that the writer of the postcard was staying not in Middlewich, but somewhere on the outskirts, and so missed out on seeing our chimneys?
On the other hand,she does say that she will be visting the Wesleyan Chapel that evening, and that was quite definitely in Middlewich.
There is one further possibility, which we'll put forward, even though it might sound a little fanciful: Although many of the salt works in Middlewich were, for historical reasons, close to the town centre, it might have been possible to visit the town, and even spend a night or two here, without noticing them. Some of them were in Brooks Lane and would have been inconspicuous if you didn't venture as far as the Town Bridge; the Pepper Street Works would have been  hidden behind the shops in Wheelock Street and might also only have been apparent to someone venturing away from the town centre.
The same thing might apply to the other works which were, at the time, dotted around the town - on the Sandbach Road, off King Street and close to the canal in Webbs Lane.
But it still seems a little odd for someone to have actually spent any amount of time here, in what was a very industrialised little town, and not seen them. Or, indeed, noticed (and smelled) that all-pervading sulphurous coal smoke which was a hallmark of this town right up until the late 1960s.
Just a thought. 
We welcome your comments and observations on this fascinating piece of local history.

Nick Colley adds (on the Northwich and Mid-Cheshire Group):

Just to add a little to this, the back of the postcard shows that it was published by W. Clarke, Stationer, Middlewich.

This was William Clarke who was a newsagents and stationer at 2 Leadsmithy Street. He was certainly there for the 1901 census and 1911 census and in the 1910 Kelly's Commercial Directory all of which ties in nicely with the 1911 date already suggested,.
Maggie Bailey's mother must have gone into the shop on Leadsmithy Street to purchase the postcard. 
Also the little box where the stamp goes has 'Printed in Saxony' this confirms the date as being pre WW1 as of course once war broke out British postcard publishers stopped using printers in Germany!

Saturday, 1 September 2012

THE SYCAMORE COMMUNITY GARDENS OPENING DAY, SEPTEMBER 1st



(This diary entry was originally published on 20th June and revised and re-published on 23rd August  and 1st September 2012)

(ARCHIVE VERSION)

The Sycamore Community Gardens in Warmingham Lane, which were originally due to be opened in June,  were eventually opened on Saturday September 1st at 2pm. The opening ceremony was performed by Deputy Town Mayor Bernice Walmsley.
.......................................................................................
As the name implies, this is a community initiative which has turned what was just a piece of waste ground into a beautiful garden for the benefit of pensioners living in the adjacent houses.
The main instigators of the scheme were Kath and Barry Walklate, themselves pensioners, who have been delighted with the help and support they have received, not least from the now  retired Assistant Town Clerk Stephen Dent who helped them obtain funding from the Big Lottery Fund via the Community Pride Group.
The grand opening  featured stalls, a tombola and live music.
The opening was based around no. 44 Warmingham Lane.
We'd like to congratulate everyone concerned with this wonderful project, not least Kath and Barry who have put many hours of unpaid hard work into it.



PHOTO: STEPHEN DENT