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HYDE CHESHIRE

Harry Rutherford's
Festival of Britain Mural




Showing posts with label Flowery Field. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Flowery Field. Show all posts

Friday, 4 October 2013

Flowery Field Demolition Stirs Memories


Today post comes from Marjorie

Here are some photos I took when they were demolishing Flowery Field School, in the early 1990s  I was sad to see it go as I had spent many happy hours there.

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This one shows the Infant department on the left and the Junior department on the right.

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This shows the gates at the end of the street. Behind them is what used to be the junior boys' playground.

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This is a view across the junior girls' playground.  The building on the right was the cloakroom which had rows of pegs on which to hang our coats.  At the far end are the remains of the toilets, girls on the left, boys on the right.  This playground seemed enormous when I was at school there and I was surprised to discover how small it really was.  There used to be a "Scholarship Board" which hung on the wall of the hall, upstairs, with the names of all past pupils who had gained a scholarship to the Grammar School, in the days before the eleven plus exam. Does anyone know what happened to it? Or to the large memorial in the Infant department which was, I think, to one of the Ashton's?

Thursday, 3 October 2013

White Hart Football Team

Today's post is by Cliff Ball and is in memory of his uncle George who sadly passed away last year (2012)

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This photograph is of the White Hart Football Team with the Reporter Cup
Taken in the late sixties

Back Row
Irvin Swindells – ? – Kevin Swindells – Eric Gregory – ? – Cliff Ball – Brian Parkes – ? – Alf White – Terry Hadfield

Front Row
Graham Chadwick – Lawrence Brady – George Ball – Eric Swindells – ?
Cliff Ball


Saturday, 25 May 2013

Flowery Field Junior School

This photo was taken at Flowery Field Junior School 
in the late 1960's.
On the back row, 3rd from right, is my brother Adrian. On the row in front of him, 2nd from right, is his pal Kevin Barker from Hallbottom Street.


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Thanks to David Hamilton for sharing this photo :)

Sunday, 19 May 2013

Postcards.

 Here is a collection of Hyde related postcards through the years.

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Flowery Field Unitarian Church

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Hyde Cemetery

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Looking towards Hyde from St Annes Road Denton

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Bennett Street Newton

Thursday, 4 April 2013

Arranging a Class Reunion ?

Below is an appeal from Marlese Savage (Klein) who wonders whether a school classmates reunion is possible.....

"We left school 50 years ago in 1963 which should be enough reason to meet up again.   Is there anyone out there who could try to arrange a meeting from our class?

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 My name is Marlese Savage (Klein) I went to Flowery Field Secondary School in Hyde from 1959 to 1963.   I've Lived in Germany since 1968 and my only contact to our class was Lesley Turner (Morton) who died over 10 years ago and John Howarth who lives in the USA.
I enclose a photograph of our class taken just before Christmas 1962.  I am the one with the cross on.I will be in Hyde from 14-18 th April, incase any one is interested please contact me by my Email address 
w-klein2@unitybox.de  we could meet and arrange something for the late summer."

Marlese Savage (Klein)


Thursday, 28 February 2013

More Flowery Field School Photos

Today we continue with our "Rogues Gallery" of school photos, this time showing some from Flowery Field School.

These were supplied by David Stafford.
He has sent more which I will post over the coming week !

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1947

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1954

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1956

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1961/62

As always, if anyone knows any names please drop us a line so we can add them to the photos.

Many Thanks , David. :)
Always appreciated !

Friday, 4 January 2013

Mystery Photos

Below are two photographs that were taken on Old Road in Flowery Field . You can see Rosemount Church at the top right of the photos.
What we don't know is what the parade was for. We believe they were taken circa late 1970's /early 1980's.

Any ideas? Please let us know !

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Love the old United Co-operative Dairies milk float !!

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Saturday, 1 December 2012

The White Hart Hotel

The White Hart Hotel on Old Road, Flowery Field. 
They were taken in 2007 just prior to it being demolished.

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Thanks Phil.
Much appreciated :)

Wednesday, 25 April 2012

Spring Gardens

Spring Gardens stands at the bottom of Old Road . It used to lined with old cottages which I believe belonged to Ashton Brothers. Sadly the cottages have been demolished now.


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Spring Gardens circa 1960's

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Spring Gardens circa 2010  

It looked so much nicer with the cottages and without the collection of Wheelie Bins !

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The opposite end which, as Dave says in the comments ,the only remaining buildings are The Flowery Field Pub, a house and a shop.
Picture courtesy of google maps


Updated by Dave

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Saturday, 7 April 2012

Barry Lewis (Floweryfield School Pictures)

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First is the Floweryfield secondary football team in 1959.  Rear row l-r Mr Burns, Stan Mills, David Neale, Ken Lee, Derek Morley, David Scott, Geoff Shawcross, Mr Heatly.  Front row l-r ?, Peter Cocker, Arthur Chesworth, Steve Brock, David Gooding, David Sowter.

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Second picture shows four teachers from Floweryfield secondary in 1960.  Mr Cotton (head Master) Mr Burns, Mr Freestone, Mr Hampson.

Sunday, 18 March 2012

Some more lovely May Queens.

Leigh Street Infants May Queen 1926.
Dorothy Higginbottom is the May Queen.


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Sadie Marsden.
Flowery Field May Queen. Date unknown.

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Monday, 18 July 2011

Birdcage Walk Flowery Field

Black and White picture provided by Grant

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Birdcage Walk Lodge Lane End

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Birdcage Walk is a footpath that goes between Lodge Lane and Bennet Street...   The entrance to Floweryfield Train Station in off this footpath by the Bennet Street side. I'd like to know how it got it's name.... can you help?

Thursday, 26 May 2011

Emily Lord Part 3

A PIONEER OF THE KHAKI GIRLS

Marriage of Miss E. L. Lord, of Flowery Field.

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The marriage at St George’s Church on Thurday of Miss Emily Louise Lord, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Lord, of the Flowery Field Hotel, Hyde, to Mr. Frank Waller son of Mrs. Waller and the late Mr. W. Waller. of Derby. The bride was the first young lady of Hyde to respond to the appeal made by the Government fot English girls to go to France and preform work on behalf of the military authorities. The first batch of such girls, known as the “Pioneers of the Khaki Girls” crossed the English Channel and arrived in France in March, 1917. They numbered but 12 strong, and amongst them Miss Lord. In France she remained until January of the present year, when she came home on leave. She had the misfortune to break down in health, and appearing before a medical board, she did not return to France. Miss Lord was discharged from the service in March, as a result of shell shock, sustained whilst in France. We are, however, pleased to state that she is now quite well again.
Miss Lord joined the Women’s Legion in November 1915, being one of the first recruits. She was sent to a military centre at Grantham to act as cook, and whilst in France she held the position of Sergeant in the Expeditionary Force Canteens. For the first two months after arriving in France Miss Lord was regularly working 19 hours a day. Up to joining the Women’s Legion she was teacher at St. George’s Sunday School Hyde. It was whilst in France that she met Mr. Waller, who was in hospital there. She attended him during his recovery, as on two occasions he was given up by the doctors.
Mr. Waller himself has seen between 3 and 4 years’ active service in Salonika and France. Enlisting as a private in the Hussars, he later obtained a commission in the Border Regiment, and was demobilised in June.

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At St. Georges a large number of people assembled to witness the ceremony, which was performed by the vicar, the Rev. H. J. Graham. The bride looked charming in a cream costume, with hat to correspond, and carried a beautiful bouquet. She was attended as bridesmaid by her sister, Miss Mabel Lord, who looked equally becoming in an old rose coloured dress, with black and old rose coloured hat. She also carried a bouquet. The bride’s mother looked smart in a dark grey dress, with hat of dark velvet, underlined with white, whilst Mrs. Waller wore a black crape de chine dress and black silk hat. Both carried bouquets. Others present  included Mrs. Cowburn, Nurse Waller and Miss Nellie Waller, sisters of the bridegroom. Mr.  J. H. Ward discharged the duties of best man.
 After the ceremony a reception was held at the Flowery Field Hotel, where a large number of guests were entertained. Mr. and Mrs. Waller are spending the honeymoon at Bournemouth, and will afterwards take up residance in London, where the bridegroom is employed in charge of Brent Gas Works, Hendon.
Amongst the many costly and handsome presents they have received is a beautiful piece of table silver from the Mayor and Mayoress of Hyde .. Alderman and Mrs. J. Mirfin

Friday, 20 May 2011

Fletcher Millers /Burmah Castrol

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Fletcher Millers were based at Flowery Field, the earliest reference I have found is to them taking a patent out in 1921 for improvements in or relating to back plates for gas and like stoves or cookers...  If you can fill in any detales please do so.

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In the 1930's it were dealing in the follow products.  "Clearedge" Translucent Soluble Coolant. "Cooledge" Water Soluble Cutting Oil. "Lardedge" Mineralised Lard Oil. "Rodol" Rust Preventatives. "Swift" Sulphurised Straight Cutting Oil. Metal Cutting Oils (neat and water soluble), Drawing Compounds, rust Preventives (liquid and solid), Easing Oil, Degreasing Compounds, Belt Dressing, Case-hardening Media, Oils for Engineering, Marine and Industrial purposes. This Hyde company was known world wide for its products and skill in making them.

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Fletcher Millers was taken over  by C. C. Wakefield and Co., Ltd., the makers of Castrol around 1960.

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I was born in 1958... 2 years before the company changed hands... by right the only name I should know this place as was Burma Castrol... yet I have always referred and still do the Fletcher Millers.... I never even knew what the company did... it was always referred to as Fletcher Miller and I must have heard it mentioned by that name that often it as stuck.

 Update

Fletcher Millers was an oil refinery - Duncan's Dad worked there for 33 years and during the war he wasn't drafted out as it was a reserved occupation that was essential and considered important enough to exempt the workers from military service. He was in the Home Guard instead but that's another story.

Below is a silver platter he received for loyal service. Sorry about the quality but  it was difficult to photograph due to being highly polished. (I kept getting myself mirrored in the picture ,haha) !

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Thursday, 19 May 2011

Emily Lord Part 2


Newton Heroine’s Reward

Mentioned in Field Marshalls Dispatch
When bombs and shrapnel fell around,
This woman stayed beside her post of duty.
Amid War’s terrors, deep, profound,
Which showed her character in all its beauty!

During the long sad days of the war nothing in our national character showed up to greater advantage or purer perfection than the courage of our glorious womanhood, and so it has ever been in the history of our splendid island race. It shone through the darkness of the Indian Mutiny, it illuminated the wreak of the Elbe, it give us a Florence Nightingale, a Nurse Gavell, a Grace Darling, and many another heroine known or unknown. We were proud of our women in the war, proud of those who stayed at home, and proud of those who fared forth to one or other of the arenas of conflict.

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Women's Legion

And Newton has every reason to be proud of Miss Emily Lord (she is not Miss Lord now), the very brave daughter of Mr J W Lord, the popular licensee and mine host of the Flowery Field Hotel, who, as a member of the Women’s Legion was one of the first of the plucky girls of Hyde to go out to the Expeditionary Forces in 1915, upon the formation of the Corps, and who underwent the hardships and vicissitudes of war in all its blatant horrors with a cheerfulness and courage that stood her in good stead.
Now in 1918 she was at Etaples during the memorable German bombing raids upon the big Base Hospitals, when so many of our gallant wounded were either killed, or maimed anew, some 2000 men in all, to recall the ghastly list, whilst many of the brave women tending them fell martyrs at their posts of duty. The memory of their noble deeds is slowly fading from the public mind as the hand of time moves on, but those deeds, nevertheless, will be found recorded at the last muster rol upon imperishable tablets of the Angels.
Among the fortunate and gallant survivors of these scenes of churlish carnage was Miss Lord, who calmly assisted the wounded through many a trying hour and harrowing scene, until she fell a victim in the end to her intrepid courage, and sustaining severe shell-shock was finally invalided home and discharged “medically unfit.”
Some of this is thrice-told story now, for is it not to be found recorded in glowing terms in the columns of the “North Cheshire Herald” under the date of October 27th, 1917?
Then, to follow her varying fortunes still further, we find her under happier auspices becoming Mrs Waller at St. George’s Church. Hyde on October 9th, 1919, her bridegroom being Lieut. Frank Waller, of the 4th Hussars, thus proving the truth of the old adage that  “none but the brave deserve the fair.”
But Mrs Waller’s splendid conduct as has now received the final seal of official recognition, for lo and behold, the other day there arrived at her proud and happy father’s hostelry a portentous-looking official envelope of goodly size, which when opened revealed the following:-

 “The War of 1914-15: Queen Mary’s Army Auxiliary Corps. 21 workers, Miss E. Lord, was mentioned in a Despatch from
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Field Marshal Sir Douglas Haigh, K.T., G.C.B., O.M., G.C.V.O., K.C.I.E., dated 16th March, 1919, for gallant and distinguished services in the field.
I have it in command from the King to record His Majesty’s high appreciation of the services rendered."

WINSTON S. CHURCHILL
Secretary of State for War.
War Office, Whitehall, S.W.
1st July, 1919

There are two very proud and happy men in existence to-day, be it added, the father of our Newton heroine, and the husband of the same, and may we add our fitting meed of congratulation! 
Extracts From The Reporter

To be continued

Sunday, 15 May 2011

Emily Lord Part 1


I was contacted a while back by Martin Waller concerning the story of Emily Lord and her bravery and much more. What I have done is to write this story how it was wrote in the 'Reporter' I will add one or two pictures as well.  


 PIONEER OF THE KHAKI GIRLS


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FLOWERY FIELD YOUNG LADY’S GOOD WORK IN FRANCE

An appeal throughout England for English girls to go to France and perform work on behalf of the military authorities, such as cooking, so as to relieve able-bodied men for other duties, such as service in the ranks. The first batch of such girls, known as the Pioneers of the Khaki Girls, crossed the English Channel and arrived in France. They numbered 12 strong, and the Borough of Hyde has the honour of having furnished one of the 12…. Namely, Miss Emily Lord, the younger daughter of Mr and Mrs J. W. Lord, of the Flowery Field Hotel. Miss Lord, an esteemed and most estimable young lady, has been wearing khaki nearly two years. She joined the Women’s Legion so long ago a Nov. 1915, being one of the first to join. She was sent to a military centre at Grantham, to act as cook. She now holds the rank of Sergeant in what is known as the Expeditionary Force Canteens. Last Saturday morning she arrived home on a fortnights leave, not having been home since last Christmas, so she is certainly doing what she can to help win the war. On Tuesday, Miss Lord very kindly and courteously gave a representative of the “Herald” a few particulars of the work she and others English girls have been doing in France. Since arriving last March, she has been cooking and waiting and waiting on a British officers club at Boulogne. Sometimes when soldiers come down the line they have nothing to eat for a couple of days or more.  They are provided with food, and have a wash before coming over to England. Frequently many of them go, or are taken, down to Boulogne after  “Going over the top” and taking part in hard fighting, and are most grateful for the kind attention they receive. In Miss Lord’s unit there are 46 girls in France, all of whom previously acted as cooks in military camps in England. Miss Lord told our representative that for the first two months after arriving in France she was – REGULARLY WORKING 19 HOURS A DAY- and she herself had worked 48 hours off the reel. It was extremely trying, and after a few weeks there were only 3 girls on duty, all the others being in hospital. Since then the conditions have improved by the arrival of fresh drafts of girls from England, and the work is now generally done in relays; - three relays each day, night included of course. The girls if not on night duty, sleep at a beautiful hostel about 15 minutes walk from the officers club. The hostel has been provided with furniture and various articles made by the girls themselves assisted by some of the soldier boys, and it is now very cosy. Contributions are made by the girls every week to buy cakes for socials and parties. These events afford a most pleasurable relief from what at times are still very arduous duties. Every week the girls entertain at the hostel about 12 of the “blue boys” those who are convalescent from wounds or sickness. They have a gramophone, and soon a piano is expected. When the girls went last March the officers club was in a very neglected condition, but it is now clean and comfortable. In the present club about fifty officers can be attended to, but next month another club is to be opened, which will provide accommodation for 250. There are now large numbers of English girls in France, cooking and performing other useful work for the benefit of British soldiers. Some are acting as clerks. Though very tiring at times, Miss Lord likes the work, feeling that she is doing her duty to good old England. On many occasions she as only had a ‘Army Biscuit’ to eat before starting her shift. Miss Lord speaks very highly of the conduct of British soldiers in France.
A new club has been opened at Poperinghe, in Belgium, only 6 miles west-south-west of Ypres, and within a few miles of resent terrific fighting: and Miss Lord thinks she may be going there when she returns on November 3rd. Up to joining the Women’s Legion she was a teacher at Hyde St. Georges Sunday School.


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Her father has been the licence of the Flowery Field Hotel for a few years now and as made many friends. He is a trained electrical engineer, and formerly was engaged at the Denton Tramways depot. 

To be continued   

Tuesday, 10 May 2011

Well Meadow To Dukinfield Road And Beyond



Dave took these picture of the tunnel under the railway leading from Flowery Field to Dukinfield Road after we did another posting from the area. It seems this as been a right of way for many years, well before the railway and the Throstle Bank mill was built as can be seen on the 1841 map.



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1841

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1910

If anyone can tell me the name of this footpath, I'd be greatful. 

Monday, 9 May 2011

Flowery Field School Class Photograph 1929

                    


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David Stafford contacted us and wondered if we would like to show this picture...  I wrote right back saying yes of course... pictures such as this are perfect for us. 
David says:

"A picture of a class from Flowery Field school on Well Meadow. Class standard 6 May 1929.  My aunty is in the picture, she is on the second row up from the bottom, second from the right. Her name was May Slater lived at the paper shop on Ashton Road Facing the old Hyde Spinning Company later Senior Service factory. Her married name is May Smith she is still fit and well living in Hyde. Has anyone got any relative in the picture?"

Thanks
David Stafford

Thank you David, we are always pleased to show such pictures, so if you have anything you would like to share please get in touch with us at hydonian@gmail.com and feel free to add names to any of these children above... and if you are one we'd love to hear from you.

Sunday, 6 March 2011

Bank Cottage Inn, Throstle Bank Street

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I'm lucky here because I can say I drank here quite a few times.... mostly in my dinner times from Throstle Bank Mill and UCD Dairies. I felt sad when I heard this pub had shut down, I think that was mid 1980's but please correct me on that if I'm wrong. 

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Hyde author Paul Taylor as a picture of this pub, in his book 'A History Of The Pubs Of Hyde And District'   and covers it very well. I will not quote him word for word, if you want to see what Paul's wrote you'll need to buy a copy..... I'm pleased to say Harrisons News Agent at the bottom of Market Street still have copies for sale. What I will say is that this Pub opened around 1869..... and served and quenched the thirst of many a mill worker in its day. I was reminded of this pub as I had cause to visit the area this week... it is now a home to someone, what stories those walls must hold. 

Monday, 21 February 2011

View from Field Street


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Here is an interesting photo of St Stephen´s chuch in Flowery Field sent in by Rowan Hardman. It must have been taken around 1910 around  Field Street  Flowery Field. The old man is a relative of Rowan's, she says this is perhaps her great great great grandad. The markings on the church roof are very distinctive as is the shape of the steeple. This area where the chap stands would be where the school yard and car park for Hyde Technology is now.  THANK YOU Again for sharing this great picture of man and church.


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Another great photo from Dave, this one he took last year and he has still managed the 'perfect' shot... ha!  cheers Dave.