• Home • Up • Basford • Bolton • Bury & Radcliffe • Codnor • Coventry • Kings Norton & Harborne • Nottingham • Pendleton • Salford • Smethwick • St Helens & Windle • Stivichall • Ramsbottom • Summerseat •

 

 

 Bury Parish Church

 

Bury Register Office -

Town Hall, 

Manchester Road, 

Bury,

Lancashire 

BL9 0SW.
Tel: 0161 253 6026. E-mail: registrars@bury.gov.uk
Cheques payable to Bury MBC. Credit cards accepted.

                        BURY        FAMOUS PEOPLE FROM BURY         BURY WORKHOUSE            RADCLIFFE

 

BURY   Our family surnames of – WOLFENDALE, BARLOW & CHAPMAN Lived in Bury, as well as Radcliffe.

These towns are about 8 miles North of Manchester, Lancashire UK.

The borough of Bury has had a few different spellings in the past, including the first spelling as it is now in 1230: - Bur in1190, Byri and Biri in 1247, Burgh in1292, and Byry in 1295.

Bury has grown over the centuries from small Bronze Age settlements along the banks of the river Irwell. By Medieval times, it was a market town for surrounding agriculture areas.

In the early 19th century, the industrial revolution brought prosperity to Bury and the surrounding area, with businesses engaged in the manufacture of cotton, bleaching and calico printing, also paper-making.

POPULATIONS OF BURY IN 1773  AND THE 1800’s

                         1773   -   2,090    -  463 HOUSES

1801   -   7,072

1811   -   8,762

  1821   -   10,583

  1831   -   15,086

  1841   -   20,710

  1851   -   26,155

  1861   -   30,397

  1871   -   32,611

  1881   -   38,667

FAMOUS PEOPLE FROM BURY

Sir Robert Peel  (1788-1850) - Born at Chamber Hall in Bury, the famous son of a famous father who owned cotton spinning mills and branched out into calico printing. Prime Minister in 1834 and again in 1841 for five years, he was the man who set up the Metropolitan Police Force, they started with the nickname ‘Peelers’, then ‘Roberts’ and then ‘Bobbies’. Should be remembered for the repeal of the corn laws and the work that he did cutting back on children working long hours, very young in the mills and down the mines.

John Kay  (born 1704 at Park, Ramsbottom) - A clever man with an inventive mind, but lacking the hard-nosed business acumen needed at the time to make money out of the Fly Shuttle, that he invented in 1733. He was driven out of Bury by workers who feared a loss of jobs and by the mill-owners who liked the invention, but didn’t want to pay John Kay the Royalties.

Robert Kay (son) 1726-1802 - Also an inventor who developed the ‘drop box’ that let patterns and colours come into the weaving.

Henry Dunster  (1609-1659) - First president of Harvard University.

Sir Edward Ebenezer Kay (1882-1897) - Lord Justice of Appeal

Sir John Holker (1826-1882) - Attorney General and Lord Justice of Appeal.

Lord Hewart of Bury (1870-1943) - Lord Chief Justice.

Prof. Sir John Charnley (1911-1982) - An Orthopaedic surgeon who led the way in hip surgery and replacement. Freeman of the Borough.

Reg Harris - World champion cyclist born in the borough in 1920.

John Spencer - World professional snooker champion, born 1935.

Peter Skellern - Musician, composer, etc. Born in Bury in 1945, the son of Councillor Jack Skellern, Mayor of Bury in 1971-2.

 

Bury Workhouse

Bury Union Workhouse


The Bury Board of Guardians founded the workhouse c1840, the infirmary in 1857. Situated in Rochdale Old Road, Jericho, Bury.
In 1930 it became known as Jericho Hospital, the Public Assistance Infirmary. In 1948 under the NHS it was renamed as Fairfield General Hospital

Up to 1834

In a parliamentary report of 1777, Bury was listed as having a workhouse with accommodation for 50 inmates.

A workhouse also operated at Radcliffe

In a 1797 survey of the poor in England, it was reported of Bury that:

The Poor are supported partly at home, partly in a Workhouse, where there were in December, 1795, 37 persons of whom 16 were children, 3 young women and the rest old and infirm. Six of the boys are at work at a cotton printer's, and earn from is. 6d. to 3s. a week. The earnings of the others is trifling. The house is in an open airy spot about a mile from the town. The beds are of flock and are tolerably well provided with covering. There are 6 or 7 in each room, and upon the whole the house seems clean and neat. The diet is regulated according to the discretion of the master, but the usual bill of fare is : Breakfast—every day, oatmeal pottage or hasty pudding, bread and beer. Dinner—Sunday, Thursday, bread, broth, beef potatoes, etc. ; other days, bread, butter and potatoes. Supper hasty pudding as at breakfast. In summer milk is supplied with hasty pudding, in winter treacle. Bread and boiled milk is sometimes substituted for hasty pudding.

After 1834

The Bury Poor Law Union was formally declared on 8th February 1837.

Prior to the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act, and for over thirty years after its passing, the Bury Poor Law Union made use of a number of parish workhouses to accommodate its paupers. In 1851, the Poor Law Board proposed the building of a joint workhouse for Bury and the adjacent Union of Rochdale which was in a similar position. In 1852, the Bury Guardians borrowed £6,000 and advertised for plans for a workhouse to accommodate 400 inmates, with a separate 60-bed hospital. A further £8,000 was borrowed in 1855, and in 1856, work on the new buildings commenced. When the workhouse opened in 1858, the total expenditure had risen to £20,481. Over the next twenty years, various additions were made including accommodation for infants in 1862, and for the insane in 1868. In 1876, a new 32-bed infectious hospital was built at the west of the site. It comprised four ward-blocks connected by a wide, open covered way, and was designed in conjunction with the Local Government Board. A contemporary report described the new wards as 'excellent in themselves and greatly in advance of anything hitherto attempted'. Additional buildings erected at the same time included a nurses' home and mortuary.

In 1903-5, a new 126-bed infirmary was erected to the south of the workhouse. Designed by A Hopkinson, and built from Accrington plastic bricks, it comprised a central administrative block flanked by two double pavilions. Accommodation for 17 nurses was provided in the administrative block.

By 1912, the number of inmates in the workhouse was well over 700, including 83 children and vagrants. In 1914 a military hospital was established at the site. The workhouse later became Bury Union Institution, then Jericho Institution.

In 1940, it became a decontamination centre. In the same year, a bomb fell in the grounds but caused relatively little damage or injury.The site is now known as Fairfield hospital and most have the old workhouse blocks have been replaced by modern buildings.   

      

RADCLIFFE: An Old English place name meaning "red cliff or bank". Entry in the Doomsday Book of 1086 describes it as "Radecluie". This township, which was also an ancient Ecclesiastical Parish, was originally in Lancashire. It was in Bury Poor Law Union. In 1866 Radcliffe Local Board of Health was established. In 1872 part of the township was included in the area of Bury improvement commissioners. In 1894 Radcliffe Urban District was formed from the area of the Local Board and parts of Elton and Pilkington townships.

Bury Image Bank

Bury Image Bank is a comprehensive image library containing a local history and archives database,

showcasing streets and buildings from c.1850 to the present day.

• Home • Up • Basford • Bolton • Bury & Radcliffe • Codnor • Coventry • Kings Norton & Harborne • Nottingham • Pendleton • Salford • Smethwick • St Helens & Windle • Stivichall • Ramsbottom • Summerseat •

Search Census Records Now - Click here

 

 

 
 
 

Website Created & Maintained by Peter Ward

Please note that all the information supplied on ‘Our Ward Family Website’ is for the purpose of private study and research only, and may NOT be used for commercial purposes.

Copyright © 2004-2010 The Webmaster of Our Ward Family Web Site (Peter Ward). All rights reserved.