A Few Lost Rochdale Shops

Those who can remember the variety in the streets of towns in the North West will look back fondly to a time when Rochdale’s Yorkshire Street and Drake Street offered something distinctive and different to the streets of Bury or Oldham.  I could have picked Diggle and Taylor or Stock Liquidators, Lovick’s or Jimmy Duck’s,…

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Bagslate Races

Previous centuries have seen horse racing in Rochdale. The first was on Hunger Hill, later on Rooley Moor and then on Whittaker Moss south of Edenfield Road which must have been quite an organised occasion as a rudimentary grandstand on the site collapsed leading to the death of one Mary Sharples. After this, races were…

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Canon Francis Robert Raines

Apart from his grave in Milnrow St James’ Church graveyard and a local road that bears his name, little remains of one of the most important men from the Rochdale area in the 19th century. Francis Raines was born into a professional family in Whitby on 22nd February 1805.  He was the third son of…

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Cinemas Of Rochdale

Apart from his grave in Milnrow St James’ Church graveyard and a local road that bears his name, little remains of one of the most important men from the Rochdale area in the 19th century. Francis Raines was born into a professional family in Whitby on 22nd February 1805.  He was the third son of…

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Clegg Hall

If you are driving towards Milnrow from the Smithy Bridge side, take a right off Wildhouse Lane onto Branch Road. Go as far as you can go and there by the canal, is Clegg Hall. The large Grade 2 listed building stands on the site of a much older building thought to have been occupied…

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Clover Street Unitarian Church

From the beginning of the 19th century Rochdale was known as a place in which nonconformist churches thrived. By 1848 there were 23 places of worship in the town with the Church of England representing only a third of them offering services. Not only working people, but mill-owners belonged to nonconformist churches, meaning that they…

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G H Elliott

Many of the old stars of Music Hall are forgotten apart from the biggest names of all – Marie Lloyd, Dan Leno and others. One who made his way from one of the earliest styles of vaudeville came from Rochdale is remembered as much for his now un-politically correct show-business name as he is for…

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Ghosts of Rochdale

It has become a tradition at Christmas time to tell ghost stories. Here are a few concerning our town. The Goblin builders    This is an old tale told by Roby in his ‘Traditions’ about the building of the Parish Church. It seems that towards the end of the reign of William the Conqueror they decided…

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Hornets and the Fijians

Famous for coral diving, for white sand beaches and a cornucopia of flora and fauna, the Fiji Islands, set in the South Pacific are promoted by their tourist agencies as ‘the islands of happiness.’ With temperatures hardly dipping below 79 degrees and a tropical climate producing exotic food they seem a long way from Rochdale…

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James Duckworth and his Grocery Stores

Known throughout the town as Jimmy Ducks, a chain of grocery shops was started by a man of humble beginnings whose shops provided much service and many good memories for the people of Rochdale. James Duckworth was born in 1840 near Haslingden, the son of a poor weaver who found work in Rochdale and whose…

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