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History of Manchester

The history of Manchester encompasses its change from a minor Lancastrian township into the pre-eminent industrial metropolis of the United Kingdom and the world.[1] Manchester began expanding "at an astonishing rate" around the turn of the 19th century as part of a process of unplanned urbanisation brought on by a boom in textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution.[2] The transformation took little more than a century.

Manchester Town Hall

Having evolved from a Roman castrum in Celtic Britain, in the Victorian era Manchester was a major locus of the Industrial Revolution, and was the site of one of the world's first passenger railway stations as well as many scientific achievements of great importance. Manchester also led the political and economic reform of 19th century Britain as the vanguard of free trade.[3] The mid-20th century saw a decline in Manchester's industrial importance, prompting a depression in social and economic conditions. Subsequent investment, gentrification and rebranding from the 1990s onwards changed its fortunes and reinvigorated Manchester as a post-industrial city with multiple sporting, broadcasting and educational institutions.

Manchester has been on a provisional list for UNESCO World Heritage City on numerous occasions. However, since the 1996 bombing, local authorities have persisted on a course of economic evolution rather than prioritising the past. This economic evolution is perhaps best illustrated with the 558-foot (170-metre) Beetham Tower which instantly "torpedoed" any possibility of World Heritage City status according to one author.[4] Despite this, areas perceived as internationally important in the Industrial Revolution, such as Castlefield and Ancoats, have been sympathetically redeveloped.

Etymology edit

The name Manchester originates from the Latin name Mamucium or its variant Mancunio. These names are generally thought to represent a Latinisation of an original Brittonic name. The generally accepted etymology of this name is that it comes from Brittonic *mamm- ("breast", in reference to a "breast-like hill").[5][6][7] However, more recent work suggests that it could come from *mamma ("mother", in reference to a local river goddess). Both usages are preserved in Insular Celtic languages, such as mam meaning "breast" in Irish and "mother" in Welsh.[8] The suffix -chester is from Old English ceaster ("Roman fortification", itself a loanword from Latin castra, "fort; fortified town").[6][5]

The Latin name for Manchester is often given as Mancuniun. This is most likely a neologism coined in Victorian times, similar to the widespread Latin name Cantabrigia for Cambridge (whose actual name in Roman times was Duroliponte[9]).

Prehistory edit

 
Runway 2 of Manchester Airport lies on top of Oversley Farm, a Neolithic farming community.

Prehistoric evidence of human activity in the area of Manchester is limited, although scattered stone tools have been found.[10]

There is evidence of Bronze Age activity around Manchester in the form of burial sites.[10] Although some prehistoric artefacts have been discovered in the city centre, these have come from redeposited layers, meaning they do not necessarily originate from where they were found; wider evidence has been found for activity in other parts of the borough.[11] Before the Roman invasion of Britain, the location lay within the territory dominated by the Brigantes and prior to the Roman conquest of the area in the 70s AD, it was part of the territory of the Brigantes, a Celtic tribe, although it may have been under the control of the Setantii, a sub-tribe of the Brigantes.[12]

For the important prehistoric farm site at Oversley Farm, see Oversleyford § Oversley Farm.

Roman edit

 
A reconstructed gateway of Mamucium fort

The Roman fort of Mamucium was established c. AD 79 near a crossing point on the River Medlock.[13] The fort was sited on a sandstone bluff near the confluence of the rivers Medlock and Irwell in a naturally defensible position.[14] It was erected as a series of fortifications established by Gnaeus Julius Agricola during his campaign against the Brigantes who were the Celtic tribe in control of most of what would become northern England.[15] It guards the Deva Victrix (Chester) to Eboracum (York) Roman road running east to west, and a road heading north to Bremetennacum (Ribchester).[16] The neighbouring forts were Castleshaw and Northwich.[17] Built first from turf and timber, the fort was demolished around 140. When it was rebuilt around 160, it was again of turf and timber construction.[18] In about 200 the fort underwent another rebuild, this time enhancing the defences by replacing the gatehouse with a stone version and facing the walls with stone.[19] The fort would have been garrisoned by a cohort, about 500 infantry, of auxiliary troops.[20]

 
Map of Manchester from Roman Manchester (1900)

Evidence of both pagan and Christian worship has been discovered. Two altars have been discovered and there may be a temple of Mithras associated with Mamucium. A word square was discovered in the 1970s that may be one of the earliest examples of Christianity in Britain.[21] A civilian settlement (the first in Manchester), or vicus, grew in association with the fort, made up of traders and families of the soldiers. An area which has a concentration of furnaces and industrial activity has been described as an industrial estate.[22] The vicus was probably abandoned by the mid 3rd century, although a small garrison may have remained at Mamucium into the late 3rd and early 4th centuries.[23] The Castlefield area of Manchester is named after the fort.

Post-Roman edit

 
Looking west along Nico Ditch, near Levenshulme

Once the Romans left Britain, the focus of settlement in Manchester shifted to the confluence of the rivers Irwell and Irk.[24] During the Early Middle Ages that followed – and persisted until the Norman conquest – the settlement of Manchester was in the territory of several different kingdoms.[25] In the late 6th and early 7th centuries, the kingdom of Northumbria extended as far south as the River Mersey, south of what was then the settlement of Manchester.[25] Etymological evidence indicates that the areas to the north west of Manchester (such as Eccles and Chadderton) were British while the parts of Manchester (such as Clayton, Gorton and Moston) were Anglian, and the south west of Manchester was Danish (including Cheadle Hulme, Davyhulme, Hulme and Levenshulme).[25]

Between the 6th and 10th centuries, the kingdoms of Northumbria, Mercia and Wessex struggled for control over North West England.[25] In 620, Edwin of Northumbria may have sacked Manchester, and the settlement may have been sacked again in 870 by the Danes.[26] According to legend, Nico Ditch – which runs east–west from Ashton-under-Lyne to Stretford and passes through Gorton, Levenshulme, Burnage, Rusholme, Platt Field Park in Fallowfield, Withington and Chorlton-cum-Hardy – is a defence against Viking invaders and was dug in 869–870. Whether this is true is uncertain, but the ditch does date from between the 7th and 9th centuries.[27] The Anglo Saxon Chronicle detail that in 919 Edward the Elder sent men "to Mameceaster, in Northumbria, to repair and man it"; this probably refers to a burh at Manchester as an advanced post of Mercia. Although it is unsure where the site is,[28] it is possibly a reference to the Roman fort.[26] In 1055, most of what later became Lancashire was under the control of Tostig.[26]

The ancient parish of Manchester covered a wider area than today's metropolitan borough (although not including its full extent), and was probably established in the Anglo-Saxon period (there were at that time only two churches in the parish: at Manchester and Ashton-under-Lyne). Forty distinct townships developed in the parish and in medieval times the royal manor of Salford was the most important of these.

Medieval edit

 
Map of the Salford Hundred, with Manchester in the south-east
 
Map of the ancient parish of Manchester
 
Chetham's School of Music
 
Old Wellington Inn Shambles Square was built in 1552.

Manchester was administratively part of the Salford Hundred.[29] In 1086 the hundred covered about 350 square miles (910 km2) and had a population of about 3,000.[30] It was given to Roger de Poitou; Roger divided the hundred into fiefdoms and made the Gresle family barons of Manchester. Albert de Gresle was the first baron of Manchester.[29] Although the Gresle family did not reside at the manor, Manchester continued to grow in their absence and stewards represented the lords of the manor.[31]

Manchester's entry in the Domesday Book reads "the Church of St Mary and the Church of St Michael hold one carucate of land in Manchester exempt from all customary dues except tax".[32] St Mary's Church was an Anglo-Saxon church on the site of Manchester Cathedral;[32] St Michael's Church may have been in Ashton-under-Lyne.[30] The parish of Manchester – of which St Mary's Church was a part – was the ecclesiastical centre of the Salford Hundred. It covered about 60 square miles (160 km2) and extended as far as the edges of Flixton and Eccles in the west, the Mersey between Stretford and Stockport in the south, the edge of Ashton-under-Lyne in the east, and the edge of Prestwich in the north.[30] That such a large area was covered by a single parish has been taken as evidence of the area's "impoverished and depopulated status". The only tax the parish was subject to was Danegeld.[30]

There was a castle in Manchester overlooking the rivers Irk and Irwell, where Chetham's School of Music stands today.[29] This castle was probably a ringwork[33] and has been described as "of no political or military importance".[29] By the late 13th century the Grelleys or Gresles, who were barons of Manchester for two centuries,[29] had replaced the castle with a fortified manor house. They used the house as the administrative centre of the manor.[34] While the town was owned by the lords of the manor, they directly leased land to tenants and created burgage tenements for indirect rent; as well as containing a house, these plots of land could also contain workshops and gardens.[34] The family also owned the only corn mill in the manor which was used by all the tenants of the manor to grind their corn. Medieval Manchester was centred on the manor house and the Church of St Mary mentioned in the Domesday Book.[34] As well as a castle at Manchester, there was also one in Ringway. Ullerwood Castle, a motte-and-bailey, probably dates from the 12th century and was owned by Hamon de Massey who owned several manors in the north east of Cheshire.[35]

The first lord of the manor to actually live in Manchester was Robert Grelley (1174–1230); his presence led to an influx of skilled workers, such as stonemasons and carpenters, associated with the construction of the manor house.[36] In the early 13th century, Manchester for a period was not under the control of the Grelleys. Robert Grelley was one of the barons who made King John sign Magna Carta. Grelley was excommunicated for his role in the rebellion and when King John later ignored the terms of Magna Carta, Grelley forfeited his lands. King John died in 1216 and Hubert de Burgh, 1st Earl of Kent, returned Grelley's land to him on behalf of King Henry III[36] In the medieval period Manchester grew into a market town and had a market every Saturday.[37] In 1223, Manchester gained the right to hold an annual fair; the market was held in Acresfield – where St Ann's Square is today – on what was then arable land. It was the first fair to be established in the Salford Hundred and the fourth in south Lancashire.[38] Manchester became a market town in 1301 when it received its Charter.[34] On 1 November 1315, Manchester was the starting place of a rebellion by Adam Banastre.[31] Banastre, Henry de Lea, and William de Bradshagh rebelled against Thomas, 2nd Earl of Lancaster.[39]

The medieval town's defences incorporated the rivers Irk and Irwell on two sides and a 450-yard (410 m) long ditch on the others. The ditch, known as Hanging Ditch, was up to 40 yards (37 m) wide and 40 yards (37 m) deep. It was spanned by Hanging Bridge, the main route in and out of the town. The name may derive from hangan meaning hollow,[40] although there is an alternative derivation from the Old English hen, meaning wild birds, and the Welsh gan, meaning between two hills.[41] It dates to at least 1343 but may be even older.[42]

In the 14th century, Manchester became home to a community of Flemish weavers, who settled in the town to produce wool and linen. This in part helped to develop a tradition of cloth production in the region, which in turn sparked the growth of the city to become Lancashire's major industrial centre. The various townships and chapelries of the ancient parish of Manchester became separate civil parishes in 1866.

Thomas de la Warre was a Lord of the Manor and also a priest. He obtained licences from the Pope and King Henry V to enable him to found and endow a collegiate church, dedicated to the Blessed Virgin, St. George and St. Denys or St. Denis, the latter two being the patron saints of England and France respectively. Construction began around 1422, and continued until the first quarter of the 16th century. The 'merchant princes' of the town endowed a number of chantry chapels, reflecting an increasing prosperity based on wool. This church later became Manchester Cathedral.

Thomas also gave the site of the old manor house as a residence for the priests. It remains as one of the finest examples of a medieval secular religious building in Britain and is now the home of Chetham's School of Music.

Growth of the textile trade edit

 
Royal Exchange, Cross Street

By the 16th century the wool trade had made Manchester a flourishing market town. The collegiate church, which is now the cathedral, was finally completed in 1500–1510. The magnificent carved choir stalls date from this period, and in 1513 work began on a chapel endowed by James Stanley, Bishop of Ely, in thanksgiving for the safe return of his kinsman (sometimes said to be his son) John Stanley from the Battle of Flodden.

The English Reformation resulted in the collegiate church being refounded as a Protestant institution. One of the more famous Wardens of this institution at the time was Dr John Dee, known as "Queen Elizabeth's Merlin".

The town's growth was given further impetus in 1620 with the start of fustian weaving. In this period Manchester grew heavily due to an influx of Flemish settlers who founded Manchester's new weaving industry.[43] In the course of the 17th century, thanks to the development of the textile industry and contacts with the City of London, Manchester became a noted centre of puritanism. Consequently, it sided with Parliament in the quarrel with Charles I. Indeed, it might be said that the English Civil War started here. In 1642, Lord Strange, the Royalist son of the Earl of Derby attempted to seize the militia magazine stored in the old college building. In the ensuing scuffle, Richard Percival, a linen weaver, was killed. He is reckoned by some to be the first casualty in the English Civil War.

Lord Strange returned and attempted to besiege the town, which had no permanent fortifications. With the help of John Rosworm, a German mercenary, the town was vigorously defended. Captain Bradshaw and his musketeers resolutely manned the bridge to Salford. Eventually, Strange realised that his force was ill-prepared, and after hearing that his father had died, withdrew to claim his title.

During the Commonwealth, Manchester was granted a seat in Parliament for the first time. Maj Gen Charles Worsley, scion of an old Lancashire family and one of Cromwell's most trusted lieutenants, had been given the Mace at the famous dissolution of Parliament in 1654. Elected Manchester's first MP, he did not sit for long before Parliament was again dissolved, leading to the Rule of the Major Generals: effectively martial law. Worsley, given responsibility for Lancashire, Cheshire and Staffordshire, took his duties seriously, turning out alehouses, banning bear baiting and cracking down on the celebration of Christmas. He eventually died in 1656, at a time of the gradual ebbing away of Cromwell's authority.[44]

On the English Restoration in 1660, as a reprisal for its defence of the Parliamentarian cause, Manchester was deprived of its recently granted Members of Parliament. No MP was to sit for Manchester until 1832. The consequences of the restoration led to a great deal of soul searching. One clergyman, Henry Newcombe, could not remain in the remodelled Anglican Church, and was instrumental in the establishment of the Cross Street Chapel in 1694. This later passed into Unitarian hands, and a new chapel on the original site can be visited.

Humphrey Chetham purchased the old college buildings after the civil war, and endowed it as a bluecoat school. Chetham's Hospital, as it was known, later became Chetham's School of Music. The endowment included a collection of books, which in 1653 became Chetham's Library, the first free public library in the English-speaking world. As of 2017, it is still open and free to use.[45]

Despite the political setbacks, the town continued to prosper. A number of inhabitants supported the Glorious Revolution in 1688. They became discontented with the Tory clergy at the collegiate church, and a separate church, more to their tastes, was founded by Lady Ann Bland. St Ann's Church is a fine example of an early Georgian church, and was consecrated in 1712. The surroundings, what is now St Ann's Square but was previously known as Acresfield, were in imitation of a London square.

About this time, Defoe described the place as "the greatest mere village in England", by which he meant that a place the size of a populous market town had no form of local government to speak of, and was still subject to the whims of a lord of the manor.

In 1745, Charles Edward Stuart and his army entered Manchester en route to London. Despite its previous radicalism, the town offered no resistance and the Jacobites obtained enough recruits to form a 'Manchester Regiment'. It is suggested that this was because the town had no local government to speak of, and the magistrates, who could have organised resistance, were mostly conservative landowners. Moreover, these Tory landowners had taken to apprenticing their sons to Manchester merchants, so the political complexion of the town's elite had changed. The Jacobite army got no further than Derby and then retreated. On their way back through Manchester, the stragglers were pelted by the mob. The luckless 'Manchester Regiment' were left behind to garrison Carlisle, where they quickly surrendered to the pursuing British Army.

Industrial Revolution edit

 
Cotton mills in Ancoats about 1820
 
Manchester from Kersal Moor, by William Wyld in 1852. Manchester acquired the nickname Cottonopolis during the early 19th century owing to its many textile factories.
 
Liverpool Road railway station, the terminus of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway
 
A 19th-century slum dwelling. The overhang contained privies, whose waste fell straight into the River Medlock below.[46]

Manchester remained a small market town until the late 18th century and the beginning of the Industrial Revolution. The Spinning Jenny in 1764 marked the beginning of the Industrial Revolution and brought with it the first fully mechanised production process. The myriad small valleys in the Pennine Hills to the north and east of the town, combined with the damp climate, proved ideal for the construction of water-powered cotton mills such as Quarry Bank Mill,[47] which industrialised the spinning and weaving of cloth.

Indeed, it was the importing of cotton, which began towards the end of the 18th century, that revolutionised the textile industry in the area. This new commodity was imported through the port of Liverpool, which was connected with Manchester by the Mersey and Irwell Navigation—the two rivers had been made navigable from the 1720s onwards.

Manchester now developed as the natural distribution centre for raw cotton and spun yarn, and a marketplace and distribution centre for the products of this growing textile industry. Richard Arkwright is credited as the first to erect a cotton mill in the city. His first experiment, installing a Newcomen steam engine to pump water for a waterwheel failed, but he next adapted a Watt steam engine to directly operate the machinery. The result was the rapid spread of cotton mills throughout Manchester itself and in the surrounding towns. To these must be added bleach works, textile print works, and the engineering workshops and foundries, all serving the cotton industry. During the mid-19th century Manchester grew to become the centre of Lancashire's cotton industry and was dubbed "Cottonopolis", and a branch of the Bank of England was established in 1826.

The city had one of the first telephone exchanges in Europe (possibly the first in the UK) when in 1879 one was opened on Faulkner Street in the city centre using the Bell patent system.[48] By 1881 it had 420 subscribers—just 7 years later a new exchange had the capacity for 10 times that number. Manchester Central exchange was still the largest outside the capital in Edwardian times when it employed 200 operators and the city had several other important roles in the history of telephony.

Transport edit

The growth of the city was matched by the expansion of its transport links. The growth of steam power meant that demand for coal rocketed. To meet this demand, the first canal of the industrial era, the Duke's Canal, often referred to as the Bridgewater Canal, was opened in 1761, linking Manchester to the coal mines at Worsley. This was soon extended to the Mersey Estuary. Soon an extensive network of canals was constructed, linking Manchester to all parts of England.

One of the world's first public omnibus services began in 1824; it ran from Market Street in Manchester to Pendleton and Salford.

The world's first steam passenger railway edit

In 1830, Manchester was again at the forefront of transport technology with the opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, the world's first steam passenger railway. This provided faster transport of raw materials and finished goods between the port of Liverpool and mills of Manchester. By 1838, Manchester was connected by rail with Birmingham and London, and by 1841 with Hull. The existing horse-drawn omnibus services were all acquired by the Manchester Carriage Company, Ltd in 1865. Horse-drawn trams began in Salford (1877) and Manchester (1880–81), were succeeded by electric trams in 1901–03 and by 1930 Manchester Corporation Tramways were running the third largest system in the UK.[49]

Population edit

The Industrial Revolution resulted in Manchester's population exploding as people moved from other parts of the British Isles into the city seeking new opportunities.

Particularly large numbers came from Ireland, especially after the Great Famine of the 1840s. In 1851 it was estimated that 15% of the population of Manchester were Irish born. The first Irish community in the city was said to date back to 1798 and with further waves of immigration from Ireland coming after the second World War. The Irish influence continues to this day and, every March Manchester plays host to a large St Patrick's Day parade. It is estimated that about 35% of the population of Manchester and Salford has some Irish ancestry.[50]

Scottish migration in to Manchester can be traced back to before 1745 when the Jacobites marched through the city but the population of Scottish born residents peaked at almost 2% of the city's total population in 1871. Many of the city's machine making firms which powered the Industrial Revolution had their roots in emigrant Scottish engineers.[51]

A Welsh community has existed in Manchester since the 16th century.[52] In 1892 there was 80,000 Welsh born residents in the North West of England with particularly high concentrations in Manchester and Liverpool. David Lloyd George was born in the city and Welsh socialist Robert Jones Derfel spent much of his life in the city.[53]

Large numbers of (mostly Jewish) immigrants later came to Manchester from Central and Eastern Europe. The area, including Broughton, Prestwich and Whitefield today has a Jewish population of about 40,000. This is the largest Jewish community outside London by quite some way. To these groups may be added (in later years) Levantines (involved in the Egyptian cotton trade), Germans and Italians. The German influence can be seen in the city's Halle Orchestra and the Ancoats area of the city was known as Little Italy. By the beginning of the 20th century, Manchester was a very cosmopolitan place and had additionally received immigrants from France, Greece, Armenia, Lithuania, Poland and Ukraine. The opening of the Manchester Ship Canal in 1894 lead to influx of workers from Africa, Asia, Middle East and Scandinavia.

There has been a presence of Black people in Manchester since the 1700s. There are records of black people being buried at Manchester Cathedral from 1757. The abolitionist Thomas Clarkson noted during a speech in Manchester in 1787 "'I was surprised also to find a great crowd of black people standing round the pulpit. There might be forty or fifty of them.'[54]

From the 1940s onwards further waves of immigration brought Cypriots and Hungarians fleeing conflict but in the largest numbers came people re-settling from the British Colonies of the Indian subcontinent, Caribbean and Hong Kong. There has been a Chinese community in the city since the early 20th century.[55] Chinatown, Manchester is said to be the second largest in the United Kingdom and the third largest in Europe.

From the 1990s onwards Kosovans, Afghans, Iraqis and Congolese have settled in the area.[56]

It has been suggested as a result of the last two hundred years that Manchester having been involved in all these periods of immigration is the most polyglot of all British cities aside from London[57]

Intellectual life edit

The unconventional background of such a diverse population stimulated intellectual and artistic life. The Manchester Academy, for example, opened in Mosley Street in 1786, having enjoyed an earlier incarnation as the Warrington Academy. It was originally run by Presbyterians being one of the few dissenting academies that provided religious nonconformists, who were excluded from the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, with higher education. It taught classics, radical theology, science, modern languages, language and history. In the arts, the Hallé Orchestra, was patronised in its early years, by the German community and attracted a loyal following.

Manchester's rapid growth into a significant industrial centre meant the pace of change was fast and frightening. At that time, it seemed a place in which anything could happen—new industrial processes, new ways of thinking (the so-called 'Manchester School', promoting free trade and laissez-faire), new classes or groups in society, new religious sects and new forms of labour organisation. Such radicalism culminated in the opening of the Free Trade Hall which had several incarnations until its current building was occupied in 1856. It attracted educated visitors from all parts of Britain and Europe. "What Manchester does today," it was said, "the rest of the world does tomorrow." Benjamin Disraeli, at that time a young novelist, had one of his characters express such sentiments. "The age of ruins is past ... Have you seen Manchester? Manchester is as great a human exploit as Athens ...".[58]

Reform edit

 
The Peterloo Massacre was a major event in the history of the city.

At the beginning of the 19th century, Manchester was still governed by a court leet on the medieval model, and a Boroughreeve was responsible for law and order during the daylight hours. The Manchester and Salford Police Act of 1792 created Police Commissioners, whose job was to provide a night-watch. The commissioners were also given responsibility for road-building, street cleaning, street lighting and the maintenance of fire engines.[59]

The end of the 18th century saw the first serious recession in the textile trade. There were food riots in 1797, and soup kitchens were established in 1799. Manchester was the scene of the Blanketeer agitation in 1817. Popular unrest was paralleled by discontent with Manchester's lack of representation at Westminster, and the town quickly became a centre of radical agitation.

The protest turned to bloodshed in the summer of 1819. A meeting was held in St Peter's Field on 16 August to demonstrate for parliamentary reform. It was addressed by Henry Hunt, a powerful speaker known as Orator Hunt. Local magistrates, fearful of the large crowd estimated at 60,000–80,000, ordered volunteer cavalry from the Manchester and Salford Yeomanry to clear a way through the crowd to arrest Hunt and the platform party. The Yeomanry were armed with sabres and some reports say that many of them were drunk. They lost control and started to strike out at members of the crowd. The magistrates, believing that the Yeomanry were under attack, then ordered the 15th Hussars to disperse the crowd, which they did by charging into the mass of men, women and children, sabres drawn. These events resulted in the deaths of fifteen people and over six hundred injured. The name "Peterloo" was coined immediately by the radical Manchester Observer, combining the name of the meeting place, St Peter's Field, with the Battle of Waterloo fought four years earlier. One of those who later died from his wounds had been present at Waterloo, and told a friend shortly before his death that he had never been in such danger as at Peterloo: "At Waterloo there was man to man but there it was downright murder."[60]

The Manchester Guardian, a newspaper with a radical agenda, was established shortly afterwards. In 1832, following the Great Reform Act, Manchester elected its first MPs since the election of 1656. Five candidates, including William Cobbett, stood and Liberals Charles Poulett Thomson and Mark Philips were elected. The Great Reform Act led to conditions favourable to municipal incorporation. Manchester became a municipal borough in 1838,[61] and what remained of the manorial rights were later purchased by the town council.

Industrial and cultural growth edit

The prosperity from the textile industry led to an expansion of Manchester and the surrounding conurbation. Many institutions were established including Belle Vue Zoological Gardens (founded by John Jennison in 1836), the Manchester Athenaeum (1836–37), the Corn Exchange (1837) and the Royal Victoria Gallery of Practical Science (1840–42).

This wealth fuelled the development of science and education in Manchester. The Manchester Academy had moved to York in 1803 and, though it returned in 1840, in 1853 it moved again to London, eventually becoming Harris Manchester College, Oxford. However, a Mechanics' Institute, later to become UMIST, was founded in 1824 by among others, John Dalton the "father of atomic theory". In 1851 Owens College was founded by the trustees of John Owens, a textile merchant who had left a bequest for that purpose. Owens College was to become the first constituent college of the Victoria University which was granted its Royal Charter in 1880. This flowering of radicalism and reform took place within the context of ferment in Manchester's cultural and intellectual life. John Dalton lectured on his atomic theory at the Literary and Philosophical Society in 1803. The establishment of the Portico Library in 1806, the Royal Manchester Institution (later the Art Gallery) in 1823, and the Manchester Botanical and Horticultural Society in 1827 are evidence of this.

The growth of city government continued with Manchester finally being incorporated as a borough in 1838, covering the township of Manchester (the area which is now the city centre), along with Ardwick, Beswick, Cheetham, Chorlton-on-Medlock and Hulme.[62]

In 1841, Robert Angus Smith took up work as an analytical chemist at the Royal Manchester Institution and started to research the unprecedented environmental problems. Smith went on to become the first director of the Alkali Inspectorate and to characterise, and coin the term, acid rain.

Manchester continued to be a nexus of political radicalism. From 1842 to 1844, the German social philosopher Friedrich Engels lived there and wrote his influential book Condition of the Working Class in England (1845). He habitually met Karl Marx in an alcove at Chetham's Library.

In 1846 the Borough bought the manorial rights from the Mosley family and the granting of city status followed in 1853.

In 1847 the Manchester diocese of the Church of England was established.

In 1851, the Borough became the first local authority to seek water supplies beyond its boundaries.

By 1853, the number of cotton mills in Manchester had reached its peak of 108.[63] Warehouses became commonplace in what now makes up the city centre. These 19th century Mancunian warehouses were often decorative and ornate for a building of such simple function. The most notable 19th century warehouse is Watts Warehouse on Portland Street.

The Cooperative Wholesale Society was formed in 1863.[64] Manchester is now home to the Co-operative Group, the largest mutual business in the world with over six million members. The group remained based on their listed estate in Manchester city centre.

The outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861 saw an immediate shortage of cotton and the ensuing cotton famine brought enormous distress to the area until the war ended in 1865.

The first Trades Union Congress was held in Manchester (at the Mechanics' Institute, David Street), from 2 to 6 June 1868. Manchester was the subject of Friedrich Engels' The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844, Engels himself spending much of his life in and around Manchester. Manchester was also an important cradle of the Labour Party and the Suffragette Movement.

Manchester's golden age was perhaps the last quarter of the 19th century. Many of the great public buildings (including the town hall) date from then. The city's cosmopolitan atmosphere contributed to a vibrant culture, which included the Hallé Orchestra. In 1889, when county councils were created in England, the municipal borough became a county borough with even greater autonomy.

 
Albert Square

During the late 19th century Manchester began to suffer an economic decline, partly exacerbated by its reliance on the Port of Liverpool, which was charging excessive dock usage fees. Championed by local industrialist Daniel Adamson, the Manchester Ship Canal was built as a way to reverse this. It gave the city direct access to the sea allowing it to export its manufactured goods directly. This meant that it no longer had to rely on the railways and Liverpool's ports. When completed in 1894 it allowed Manchester to become Britain's third busiest port, despite being 40 miles (64 km) inland. The Manchester Ship Canal was created by canalising the Rivers Irwell and Mersey for 36 miles (58 km) from Salford to the Mersey estuary at the port of Liverpool. This enabled oceangoing ships to sail right into the Port of Manchester (actually in Salford). The docks functioned until the 1970s when their closure led to a large increase in unemployment in the area.

The world's first industrial estate edit

Trafford Park in Stretford (outside the city boundaries) was the world's first industrial estate and still exists today, though with a significant tourist and recreational presence. Manchester suffered greatly from the inter-war depression and the underlying structural changes that began to supplant the old industries, including textile manufacture.

Further expansion edit

The municipal borough created in 1838 covered the six townships of Ardwick, Beswick, Cheetham, Chorlton-on-Medlock, Hulme and Manchester.[62] The borough became a city in 1853. Expansion of the city limits was constrained westwards, as Salford immediately to the west had been given its own borough charter in 1844. These areas were included in the city limits of Manchester at these dates:-

20th century edit

By 1900 the Manchester city region was the 9th most populous in the world.[66] In the early 20th century Manchester's economy diversified into engineering chemical and electrical industries. The stimulus of the ship canal saw the establishment of Trafford Park, the world's first industrial park, in 1910 and the arrival of the Ford Motor Company and Westinghouse Electric Corporation from the USA. The influence is still visible in "Westinghouse Road" and a grid layout of numbered streets and avenues.

In 1931 the population of Manchester reached an all-time peak of 766,311. However, the period from the 1930s onwards saw a continuous decline in population. During this period, textile manufacture, Manchester's traditional staple industry went into steep decline, largely due to the Great Depression of the 1930s and foreign competition.[citation needed] During this period the Women's Citizens League campaigned for better maternity facilities in the city.[67]

Significant changes in this period were the move of the Manchester Royal Infirmary from Piccadilly in 1908 and the building of a new public library and town hall extension in the 1930s.

Second World War edit

 
Manchester Central Library, St Peter's Square

In the Second World War Manchester played a key role as an industrial manufacturing city, including the Avro aircraft factory (now BAE Systems) which built countless aircraft for the RAF, the most famous being the Avro Lancaster bomber. As a consequence of its war efforts, the city suffered heavily from bombing during the Blitz in 1940 to 1941. It was attacked a number of times by the Luftwaffe, particularly in the "Christmas Blitz" of December 1940, which destroyed a large part of the historic city centre and seriously damaged the cathedral, which took 20 years to restore.[68] In total, 589 civilians are recorded to have died as result of enemy action within the Manchester County Borough.[69]

Post-war edit

The Royal Exchange ceased trading in 1968.

The 1950s saw the start of Manchester's rise as a football superpower. Despite the Munich air disaster, Manchester United F.C. went on to become one of the world's most famous clubs, rising to a dominance of the English game from the early 1990s onwards.

Mancunian Films had been established by John E. Blakeley in the 1930s as a vehicle for northern comedians such as George Formby and Frank Randle. The company opened its own studios, Dickenson Road Studios, in Manchester in 1947 and produced a successful sequence of films until Blakeley's retirement six years later. The studio was sold to the BBC in 1954, the same year that saw the advent of commercial television in the UK. The establishment of Granada Television based in the city attracted much of the production talent from the studios and continued Manchester's tradition of cultural innovation, often with its trademark social radicalism in its programming.

The same period saw the rise to national celebrity of local stars from the Granada TV soap opera Coronation Street, which was first aired on ITV in December 1960 and remains on air more than 60 years later.

The city also attracted international media and public attention for the success of its two senior football clubs—Manchester United and Manchester City.

Manchester United had won two league titles and a FA Cup in the first two decades of the 20th century, but the inter-war years had been blighted by a loss of form on the pitch and ongoing financial problems. The club's revival occurred with the appointment of Matt Busby as manager in 1945; he guided the club to an FA Cup triumph in 1948 and a league title in 1952. He then built a highly successful new side consisting of mostly young players (nicknamed the Busby Babes by the media) which went on to win two league titles and became the first English club to play in the new European Cup. Then tragedy struck in February 1958; eight of the club's players (three of them established England internationals; Roger Byrne, Tommy Taylor and Duncan Edwards) died as a result of the Munich air disaster on the return flight from a European Cup tie in Yugoslavia and two others injured to such an extent that they never played again. Busby, who was seriously injured in the crash, was left to build a new team.[70] His new United side, built around Munich crash survivors including Bill Foulkes and Bobby Charlton, went on to dominate the English game in the 1960s, featuring new stars like Denis Law and George Best, winning two more league titles, a FA Cup and then the European Cup in 1968—the first English club to win the trophy. Busby retired the following year after 24 years in charge.[71] The club was less successful in the 1970s, its only major trophy of the decade being the FA Cup in 1977, and the club even spent a season outside the top division of English football. The 1980s were slightly more successful with a further two FA Cups wins and regular top four league finishes, but the club has enjoyed an unmatched run of success which began after the appointment of Alex Ferguson as manager in 1986. By the time Ferguson retired in 2013 after 27 years as manager, the club had won a further 13 league titles, five FA Cups, four League Cups and two European Cups. High-profile players to have played for the club during Sir Alex Ferguson's management (he was knighted in 1999) include Bryan Robson, Mark Hughes, Ryan Giggs, Eric Cantona, David Beckham and Wayne Rooney.

Manchester City entered the Football League in 1899, and won their first major honour with the FA Cup in 1904. Manchester City had been league champions once and FA Cup winners twice by 1939, but enjoyed further success in the post-war years, starting with an FA Cup win in 1956. The club's next success came more than a decade later, with a league championship triumph in 1968, an FA Cup triumph in 1969, and a double of the European Cup Winners' Cup and Football League Cup in 1970 under the management of Joe Mercer and Malcolm Allison. Great players of the 1950s and 1960s sides included Don Revie, Bert Trautmann, Francis Lee, Colin Bell and Tony Book.[72] They won the League Cup in 1976 but after  losing the 1981 FA Cup Final, the club went through a period of decline, which eventually saw them relegated as far down as third tier of English football by the end of the 1997–98 season.

They since regained promotion to the top tier in 2001–02 and have remained a fixture in the Premier League since 2002–03. For 80 years until 2003, the club had played at the Maine Road stadium in the Moss Side area of the city, before moving to the City of Manchester Stadium to the east of the city centre, which had been constructed for the previous year's Commonwealth Games. In 2008, Manchester City was purchased by Abu Dhabi United Group for £210 million and received considerable financial investment. The club's next major trophy was the FA Cup in 2011. The club's first top division league title for 44 years followed in 2012, and a League Cup triumph followed in 2014.

The club have now won seven domestic league titles. Under the management of Pep Guardiola they won the Premier League in 2018 becoming the only Premier League team to attain 100 points in a single season. In 2019, they won four trophies, completing an unprecedented sweep of all domestic trophies in England and becoming the first English men's team to win the domestic treble.[73] Manchester City's revenue was the fifth highest of a football club in the world in the 2017–18 season at €527.7 million.[74][75] In 2018, Forbes estimated the club was the fifth most valuable in the world at $2.47 billion.[76]

As with many British cities during the period. The 1950s and 1960s saw extensive re-development of the city, with old and overcrowded housing cleared to make way for high-rise blocks of flats. This changed the appearance of Manchester considerably, although the high-rise experiment later proved unpopular and unsuccessful. The city-centre also saw major re-development, with developments such as the Manchester Arndale.

Manchester's key role in the industrial revolution was repeated and the city became a centre of research and development. Manchester made important contributions to the computer revolution. The father of modern computing Alan Turing was based at Manchester University and it was his idea of the stored-program concept that led in 1948 to the Manchester Baby, which was the first electronic stored-program computer to run a programme. This was developed by Frederic C. Williams and Tom Kilburn at the University of Manchester. This was followed by the Manchester Mark 1, in 1949. These inventions were commercialised in the Ferranti Mark 1, one of the first commercially available computers.

In the late 1950s, Manchester was chosen as a testing ground for a new telephone service which formed the foundations of what we now know of as mobile phone technology. The "Post Office South Lancashire Radiophone Service" was controlled from the city's Peterloo telephone exchange and enabled customers with the apparatus installed in their vehicle to phone to any UK subscriber.

In 1974, Manchester was split from the county of Lancashire, and the Metropolitan Borough of Manchester was created.

The diversification of the city's economy helped to cushion the blow of this decline. However, as with many inner-city areas, the growth of car ownership and commuting meant that many people moved from the inner-city and into surrounding suburbs. By 1971 the population of Manchester had declined to 543,868, and by 2001 422,302.

IRA bomb and its effects edit

 
The devastation left by the IRA bombing
 
Manchester's Exchange Square undergoing extensive regeneration

During the 1980s, with the demise of many traditional industries under the radical economic restructuring often known as Thatcherism, the city and region experienced some decline. The revival started towards the end of the decade, catalysed, not only by wider growing prosperity in the UK but by the creative music industry. New institutions such as Factory Records and Fac 51 Hacienda earned the city the sobriquet Madchester.

At 11.20 am on Saturday 15 June 1996, the IRA detonated a large bomb in the city centre, the largest to be detonated on British soil. Fortunately, warnings given in the previous hour had allowed the evacuation of the immediate area, so this bomb caused over 200 injuries but no deaths. The principal damage was to the physical infrastructure of nearby buildings. Since then the city centre has undergone extensive rejuvenation alongside the more general efforts to regenerate previously run-down areas of the wider city (such as Hulme and Salford). This reconstruction spurred a massive regeneration of the city centre, with complexes such as the Printworks and the Triangle creating new city focal points for both shopping and entertainment. The following regeneration took over a decade to complete. The completion of the renovated Manchester Arndale in September 2006 allowed the centre to hold the title of the UK's largest city centre shopping mall.[77] The bomb is commemorated by a plaque fixed to a nearby postbox which withstood the blast, which reads "This postbox remained standing almost undamaged on June 15, 1996 when this area was devastated by a bomb. The box was removed during the rebuilding of the city centre and was returned to its original site on November 22nd 1999."

21st century edit

 
Beetham Tower, Manchester's second tallest building, was completed in 2006.

In 2002, the city hosted the XVII Commonwealth Games very successfully, earning praise from many previously sceptical sources. Manchester has twice failed in its bid to host the Olympic Games, losing to Atlanta in 1996 and Sydney in 2000.

In the 1990s, Manchester earned a reputation for gang-related crime, particularly after a spate of shootings involving young men, and reports of teenagers carrying handguns as "fashion accessories". A more concerted effort to reduce such crime has focused on prohibiting the availability of firearms, working with the community, deterring young individuals from joining gangs and jailing ringleaders have all helped to reduce gun crime. Consequently, gun crime has plummeted year on year since 2007.[78][79] Crime figures from 2011 show there were 19.2 firearm crimes per 100,000 population in Greater Manchester—compared to 35.1 in the Metropolitan Police area and City of London, and 34.3 in the West Midlands.[80]

The Canal Street area of the city is well known as the "Gay Village". Manchester's claim to the status of "gay capital of the UK" was strengthened in 2003 when it played host city to the annual Europride festival.[81][82]

During the 1980s, the Victoria University of Manchester had somewhat complacently exploited its reputation as one of the leading red brick universities. During the same period, many of those universities established post-war vigorously pursued policies of growth and innovation. The university consequently saw its standing decline and only in the 1990s did it embark on a catch-up programme. In October 2004 the Victoria University of Manchester and UMIST merged to form the University of Manchester, the largest University in the UK with ambitious plans to be one of the world's leading research-intensive universities.

Since the regeneration after the 1996 IRA bomb, and aided by the XVII Commonwealth Games, Manchester's city centre has changed significantly. Large sections of the city dating from the 1960s have been either demolished and re-developed or modernised with the use of glass and steel; a good example of this transformation is the Manchester Arndale. Many old mills and textile warehouses have been converted into apartments, helping to give the city a much more modern, upmarket look and feel. Some areas, like Hulme (first unsuccessfully regenerated in the 1960s when multi-storey flats replaced Victorian slums), have undergone extensive regeneration programmes and many million-pound lofthouse apartments have since been developed to cater for its growing business community. The 168 metre tall, 47-storey Beetham Tower, completed in 2006, provides the highest residential accommodation in the United Kingdom — the lower 23 floors form the Hilton Hotel, while the upper 24 floors are apartments. The Beetham Tower was originally planned to stand 171 metres in height, but this had to be changed due to local wind conditions.[83]

In January 2007, the independent Casino Advisory Panel awarded Manchester a licence to build the only supercasino in the UK to regenerate the Eastlands area of the city,[84] but in March the House of Lords rejected the decision by three votes rendering previous House of Commons acceptance meaningless. This left the supercasino, and 14 other smaller concessions, in parliamentary limbo until a final decision was made.[85] On 11 July 2007, a source close to the government declared the entire supercasino project "dead in the water".[86] A member of the Manchester Chamber of Commerce professed himself "amazed and a bit shocked" and that "there has been an awful lot of time and money wasted".[87] After a meeting with the Prime Minister, Manchester City Council issued a press release on 24 July 2007 stating that "contrary to some reports the door is not closed to a regional casino".[88] The supercasino was officially declared dead in February 2008 with a compensation package described by the Manchester Evening News as "rehashed plans, spin and empty promises".[89]

Parts of the city centre were affected by rioting by Rangers fans during the 2008 UEFA Cup final riots.[90]

By 2011, Manchester and Salford were on a tentative list for UNESCO World Heritage Site status.[91] The proposal centres on the Bridgewater Canal, regarded as the first true canal which helped create the industrial revolution.

On Tuesday 9 August, the centres of Manchester and Salford were among the many cities and towns affected by the 2011 England riots.[92]

On 22 May 2017, the city suffered its worst postwar tragedy when an Islamic extremist, Libyan immigrant Salaman Abedi, carried out a suicide bombing following a concert by the American singer Ariana Grande at the Manchester Arena. Abedi killed himself and 22 other people, and injured over 800, with many of the casualties being children, teenagers and young adults.[93] It was the deadliest terrorist attack and the first suicide bombing in Britain since the 7 July 2005 London bombings. The attack caused worldwide condemnation and the changing of the UK's threat level to "critical" for the first time since 2007.[94] Many of the injured and dead were from the Greater Manchester area and neighbouring parts of Cheshire and Lancashire.

Civic history edit

The town of Manchester (as it was then) was granted a charter in 1301 by Thomas de Grelley, Baron of Manchester, who was also the Lord of the Manor of Manchester, but the borough status it conferred on the town was lost following a court case in 1359.[95]

Until the 19th century, Manchester was one of the many townships in the ancient parish of Manchester which covered a wider area than today's metropolitan borough.

In 1792 commissioners, usually known as police commissioners, were established for the improvement of the Township of Manchester.

The Municipal Corporations Act 1835 converted many older boroughs into a new standardised type of borough called municipal boroughs, with elected councils, and included provisions to allow other towns to become municipal boroughs. Manchester took advantage of the new provisions and secured a charter incorporating the town as a municipal borough on 23 October 1838. The borough as created in 1838 covered the six townships of Ardwick, Beswick, Cheetham, Chorlton-on-Medlock, Hulme and Manchester. The municipal borough was slightly smaller than the parliamentary constituency of Manchester which had been created under the Reform Act 1832, which also included Bradford, Harpurhey and Newton.[95][62] The first election to the borough council (also called the corporation) was held on 14 December 1838. The council held its first meeting on 15 December 1838 at the Manor Court Room on Brown Street, when Thomas Potter was appointed the first Mayor of Manchester and Joseph Heron was appointed the first town clerk, a post he would hold for over forty years.[96]

On 11 December 1840, the Manchester Poor Law Union was formally declared and took responsibility for the administration and funding of the Poor Law in the area.[97]

City of Manchester edit

On 29 March 1853 the borough was elevated to city status.[98] In 1885 further areas were added to the City of Manchester with Bradford, Harpurhey, Rusholme and parts of Moss Side and Withington townships.

By the Local Government Act 1888, the City of Manchester became in 1889 a county borough, although it still kept the city title.[95]

Other areas, which had been under the control of Lancashire County Council, were added to the city between 1890 and 1933:

Under the Local Government Act 1972, the City of Manchester, with the addition of the civil parish of Ringway, became on 1 April 1974 one of the ten Metropolitan Boroughs of the newly created Metropolitan county of Greater Manchester.

In 1986 Greater Manchester County Council was abolished by the Local Government Act 1985 and most of its functions were devolved to the ten boroughs, making them effectively unitary authorities. Some of the County Council's functions were taken over by joint bodies such as a passenger transport authority, and joint fire, police and waste disposal authorities.

In one of its most noted acts, Manchester City Council carried a resolution in 1980 to create the UK's first Nuclear Free Zone[99][100] The Peace Gardens were later constructed on a small piece of land in Lincoln Square.

Greater Manchester edit

Before 1974 the area of Greater Manchester was split between Cheshire and Lancashire with numerous parts being independent county boroughs. The area was informally known as "SELNEC", for "South East Lancashire North East Cheshire". Also, small parts of the West Riding of Yorkshire (around Saddleworth) and Derbyshire were covered.

SELNEC had been proposed by the Redcliffe-Maud Report of 1969 as a "metropolitan area". This had roughly the same northern boundary as today's Greater Manchester but covered much more territory in north-east Cheshire – including Macclesfield and Warrington. It also covered Glossop in Derbyshire.

In 1969 a SELNEC Passenger Transport Authority was set up, which covered an area smaller than the proposed SELNEC, but different from the eventual Greater Manchester.

Although the Redcliffe-Maud report was rejected by the Conservative Party government after it won the 1970 general election, it was committed to local government reform and accepted the need for a county based on Manchester. Its original proposal was much smaller than the Redcliffe-Maud Report's SELNEC, but further fringe areas such as Wilmslow, Warrington and Glossop were trimmed from the edges and included instead in the shire counties. The metropolitan county of Greater Manchester was eventually established in 1974.

Greater Manchester's representative county council was abolished in 1986, following the Local Government Act 1985. However, Greater Manchester is still a metropolitan county and ceremonial county.

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

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  • Newman, Caron (2006). "Medieval Period Resource Assessment". Archaeology North West. 8: 115–144. ISSN 0962-4201.
  • Philpott, Robert A. (2006). "The Romano-British Period Resource Assessment". Archaeology North West. 8: 59–90. ISSN 0962-4201.
  • Reid, Robert (1989). The Peterloo Massacre. William Heinemann Ltd. ISBN 0-434-62901-4.
  • Shotter, David (2004) [1993]. Romans and Britons in North-West England. Lancaster: Centre for North-West Regional Studies. ISBN 1-86220-152-8.
  • Walker, John, ed. (1989). Castleshaw: The Archaeology of a Roman Fortlet. Greater Manchester Archaeological Unit. ISBN 0-946126-08-9.

Further reading edit

Published in the 19th century
Published in the 20th century
  • Axon, William Edward Armytage (1911). "Manchester" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). pp. 544–549.
  • William Dean Howells (1909), "Some Merits of Manchester", Seven English Cities, New York: Harper & Brothers
  • Kargon, R.H. (1977). Science in Victorian Manchester: Enterprise and Expertise. Manchester University Press. ISBN 0-7190-0701-1.
  • Shercliff, W. H. (1977) Manchester: a Short History of its Development
  • Haslam, Dave (1999). Manchester, England; the Story of the Pop Cult City. London: Fourth Estate. ISBN 1-84115-146-7.
  • Mamchestre Mamchestre pg 36 chap IV

External links edit

  • Manchester chronology
  • Our Manchester
  • A brief history of Manchestery

history, manchester, history, manchester, encompasses, change, from, minor, lancastrian, township, into, eminent, industrial, metropolis, united, kingdom, world, manchester, began, expanding, astonishing, rate, around, turn, 19th, century, part, process, unpla. The history of Manchester encompasses its change from a minor Lancastrian township into the pre eminent industrial metropolis of the United Kingdom and the world 1 Manchester began expanding at an astonishing rate around the turn of the 19th century as part of a process of unplanned urbanisation brought on by a boom in textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution 2 The transformation took little more than a century Manchester Town HallHaving evolved from a Roman castrum in Celtic Britain in the Victorian era Manchester was a major locus of the Industrial Revolution and was the site of one of the world s first passenger railway stations as well as many scientific achievements of great importance Manchester also led the political and economic reform of 19th century Britain as the vanguard of free trade 3 The mid 20th century saw a decline in Manchester s industrial importance prompting a depression in social and economic conditions Subsequent investment gentrification and rebranding from the 1990s onwards changed its fortunes and reinvigorated Manchester as a post industrial city with multiple sporting broadcasting and educational institutions Manchester has been on a provisional list for UNESCO World Heritage City on numerous occasions However since the 1996 bombing local authorities have persisted on a course of economic evolution rather than prioritising the past This economic evolution is perhaps best illustrated with the 558 foot 170 metre Beetham Tower which instantly torpedoed any possibility of World Heritage City status according to one author 4 Despite this areas perceived as internationally important in the Industrial Revolution such as Castlefield and Ancoats have been sympathetically redeveloped Contents 1 Etymology 2 Prehistory 3 Roman 4 Post Roman 5 Medieval 6 Growth of the textile trade 7 Industrial Revolution 8 Transport 8 1 The world s first steam passenger railway 9 Population 10 Intellectual life 11 Reform 12 Industrial and cultural growth 12 1 The world s first industrial estate 13 Further expansion 14 20th century 14 1 Second World War 14 2 Post war 14 3 IRA bomb and its effects 15 21st century 16 Civic history 16 1 City of Manchester 17 Greater Manchester 18 See also 19 References 19 1 Notes 19 2 Bibliography 20 Further reading 21 External linksEtymology editThe name Manchester originates from the Latin name Mamucium or its variant Mancunio These names are generally thought to represent a Latinisation of an original Brittonic name The generally accepted etymology of this name is that it comes from Brittonic mamm breast in reference to a breast like hill 5 6 7 However more recent work suggests that it could come from mamma mother in reference to a local river goddess Both usages are preserved in Insular Celtic languages such as mam meaning breast in Irish and mother in Welsh 8 The suffix chester is from Old English ceaster Roman fortification itself a loanword from Latin castra fort fortified town 6 5 The Latin name for Manchester is often given as Mancuniun This is most likely a neologism coined in Victorian times similar to the widespread Latin name Cantabrigia for Cambridge whose actual name in Roman times was Duroliponte 9 Prehistory edit nbsp Runway 2 of Manchester Airport lies on top of Oversley Farm a Neolithic farming community Prehistoric evidence of human activity in the area of Manchester is limited although scattered stone tools have been found 10 There is evidence of Bronze Age activity around Manchester in the form of burial sites 10 Although some prehistoric artefacts have been discovered in the city centre these have come from redeposited layers meaning they do not necessarily originate from where they were found wider evidence has been found for activity in other parts of the borough 11 Before the Roman invasion of Britain the location lay within the territory dominated by the Brigantes and prior to the Roman conquest of the area in the 70s AD it was part of the territory of the Brigantes a Celtic tribe although it may have been under the control of the Setantii a sub tribe of the Brigantes 12 For the important prehistoric farm site at Oversley Farm see Oversleyford Oversley Farm Roman editMain article Mamucium nbsp A reconstructed gateway of Mamucium fortThe Roman fort of Mamucium was established c AD 79 near a crossing point on the River Medlock 13 The fort was sited on a sandstone bluff near the confluence of the rivers Medlock and Irwell in a naturally defensible position 14 It was erected as a series of fortifications established by Gnaeus Julius Agricola during his campaign against the Brigantes who were the Celtic tribe in control of most of what would become northern England 15 It guards the Deva Victrix Chester to Eboracum York Roman road running east to west and a road heading north to Bremetennacum Ribchester 16 The neighbouring forts were Castleshaw and Northwich 17 Built first from turf and timber the fort was demolished around 140 When it was rebuilt around 160 it was again of turf and timber construction 18 In about 200 the fort underwent another rebuild this time enhancing the defences by replacing the gatehouse with a stone version and facing the walls with stone 19 The fort would have been garrisoned by a cohort about 500 infantry of auxiliary troops 20 nbsp Map of Manchester from Roman Manchester 1900 Evidence of both pagan and Christian worship has been discovered Two altars have been discovered and there may be a temple of Mithras associated with Mamucium A word square was discovered in the 1970s that may be one of the earliest examples of Christianity in Britain 21 A civilian settlement the first in Manchester or vicus grew in association with the fort made up of traders and families of the soldiers An area which has a concentration of furnaces and industrial activity has been described as an industrial estate 22 The vicus was probably abandoned by the mid 3rd century although a small garrison may have remained at Mamucium into the late 3rd and early 4th centuries 23 The Castlefield area of Manchester is named after the fort Post Roman edit nbsp Looking west along Nico Ditch near LevenshulmeOnce the Romans left Britain the focus of settlement in Manchester shifted to the confluence of the rivers Irwell and Irk 24 During the Early Middle Ages that followed and persisted until the Norman conquest the settlement of Manchester was in the territory of several different kingdoms 25 In the late 6th and early 7th centuries the kingdom of Northumbria extended as far south as the River Mersey south of what was then the settlement of Manchester 25 Etymological evidence indicates that the areas to the north west of Manchester such as Eccles and Chadderton were British while the parts of Manchester such as Clayton Gorton and Moston were Anglian and the south west of Manchester was Danish including Cheadle Hulme Davyhulme Hulme and Levenshulme 25 Between the 6th and 10th centuries the kingdoms of Northumbria Mercia and Wessex struggled for control over North West England 25 In 620 Edwin of Northumbria may have sacked Manchester and the settlement may have been sacked again in 870 by the Danes 26 According to legend Nico Ditch which runs east west from Ashton under Lyne to Stretford and passes through Gorton Levenshulme Burnage Rusholme Platt Field Park in Fallowfield Withington and Chorlton cum Hardy is a defence against Viking invaders and was dug in 869 870 Whether this is true is uncertain but the ditch does date from between the 7th and 9th centuries 27 The Anglo Saxon Chronicle detail that in 919 Edward the Elder sent men to Mameceaster in Northumbria to repair and man it this probably refers to a burh at Manchester as an advanced post of Mercia Although it is unsure where the site is 28 it is possibly a reference to the Roman fort 26 In 1055 most of what later became Lancashire was under the control of Tostig 26 The ancient parish of Manchester covered a wider area than today s metropolitan borough although not including its full extent and was probably established in the Anglo Saxon period there were at that time only two churches in the parish at Manchester and Ashton under Lyne Forty distinct townships developed in the parish and in medieval times the royal manor of Salford was the most important of these Medieval edit nbsp Map of the Salford Hundred with Manchester in the south east nbsp Map of the ancient parish of Manchester nbsp Chetham s School of Music nbsp Old Wellington Inn Shambles Square was built in 1552 Manchester was administratively part of the Salford Hundred 29 In 1086 the hundred covered about 350 square miles 910 km2 and had a population of about 3 000 30 It was given to Roger de Poitou Roger divided the hundred into fiefdoms and made the Gresle family barons of Manchester Albert de Gresle was the first baron of Manchester 29 Although the Gresle family did not reside at the manor Manchester continued to grow in their absence and stewards represented the lords of the manor 31 Manchester s entry in the Domesday Book reads the Church of St Mary and the Church of St Michael hold one carucate of land in Manchester exempt from all customary dues except tax 32 St Mary s Church was an Anglo Saxon church on the site of Manchester Cathedral 32 St Michael s Church may have been in Ashton under Lyne 30 The parish of Manchester of which St Mary s Church was a part was the ecclesiastical centre of the Salford Hundred It covered about 60 square miles 160 km2 and extended as far as the edges of Flixton and Eccles in the west the Mersey between Stretford and Stockport in the south the edge of Ashton under Lyne in the east and the edge of Prestwich in the north 30 That such a large area was covered by a single parish has been taken as evidence of the area s impoverished and depopulated status The only tax the parish was subject to was Danegeld 30 There was a castle in Manchester overlooking the rivers Irk and Irwell where Chetham s School of Music stands today 29 This castle was probably a ringwork 33 and has been described as of no political or military importance 29 By the late 13th century the Grelleys or Gresles who were barons of Manchester for two centuries 29 had replaced the castle with a fortified manor house They used the house as the administrative centre of the manor 34 While the town was owned by the lords of the manor they directly leased land to tenants and created burgage tenements for indirect rent as well as containing a house these plots of land could also contain workshops and gardens 34 The family also owned the only corn mill in the manor which was used by all the tenants of the manor to grind their corn Medieval Manchester was centred on the manor house and the Church of St Mary mentioned in the Domesday Book 34 As well as a castle at Manchester there was also one in Ringway Ullerwood Castle a motte and bailey probably dates from the 12th century and was owned by Hamon de Massey who owned several manors in the north east of Cheshire 35 The first lord of the manor to actually live in Manchester was Robert Grelley 1174 1230 his presence led to an influx of skilled workers such as stonemasons and carpenters associated with the construction of the manor house 36 In the early 13th century Manchester for a period was not under the control of the Grelleys Robert Grelley was one of the barons who made King John sign Magna Carta Grelley was excommunicated for his role in the rebellion and when King John later ignored the terms of Magna Carta Grelley forfeited his lands King John died in 1216 and Hubert de Burgh 1st Earl of Kent returned Grelley s land to him on behalf of King Henry III 36 In the medieval period Manchester grew into a market town and had a market every Saturday 37 In 1223 Manchester gained the right to hold an annual fair the market was held in Acresfield where St Ann s Square is today on what was then arable land It was the first fair to be established in the Salford Hundred and the fourth in south Lancashire 38 Manchester became a market town in 1301 when it received its Charter 34 On 1 November 1315 Manchester was the starting place of a rebellion by Adam Banastre 31 Banastre Henry de Lea and William de Bradshagh rebelled against Thomas 2nd Earl of Lancaster 39 The medieval town s defences incorporated the rivers Irk and Irwell on two sides and a 450 yard 410 m long ditch on the others The ditch known as Hanging Ditch was up to 40 yards 37 m wide and 40 yards 37 m deep It was spanned by Hanging Bridge the main route in and out of the town The name may derive from hangan meaning hollow 40 although there is an alternative derivation from the Old English hen meaning wild birds and the Welsh gan meaning between two hills 41 It dates to at least 1343 but may be even older 42 In the 14th century Manchester became home to a community of Flemish weavers who settled in the town to produce wool and linen This in part helped to develop a tradition of cloth production in the region which in turn sparked the growth of the city to become Lancashire s major industrial centre The various townships and chapelries of the ancient parish of Manchester became separate civil parishes in 1866 Thomas de la Warre was a Lord of the Manor and also a priest He obtained licences from the Pope and King Henry V to enable him to found and endow a collegiate church dedicated to the Blessed Virgin St George and St Denys or St Denis the latter two being the patron saints of England and France respectively Construction began around 1422 and continued until the first quarter of the 16th century The merchant princes of the town endowed a number of chantry chapels reflecting an increasing prosperity based on wool This church later became Manchester Cathedral Thomas also gave the site of the old manor house as a residence for the priests It remains as one of the finest examples of a medieval secular religious building in Britain and is now the home of Chetham s School of Music Growth of the textile trade edit nbsp Royal Exchange Cross StreetBy the 16th century the wool trade had made Manchester a flourishing market town The collegiate church which is now the cathedral was finally completed in 1500 1510 The magnificent carved choir stalls date from this period and in 1513 work began on a chapel endowed by James Stanley Bishop of Ely in thanksgiving for the safe return of his kinsman sometimes said to be his son John Stanley from the Battle of Flodden The English Reformation resulted in the collegiate church being refounded as a Protestant institution One of the more famous Wardens of this institution at the time was Dr John Dee known as Queen Elizabeth s Merlin The town s growth was given further impetus in 1620 with the start of fustian weaving In this period Manchester grew heavily due to an influx of Flemish settlers who founded Manchester s new weaving industry 43 In the course of the 17th century thanks to the development of the textile industry and contacts with the City of London Manchester became a noted centre of puritanism Consequently it sided with Parliament in the quarrel with Charles I Indeed it might be said that the English Civil War started here In 1642 Lord Strange the Royalist son of the Earl of Derby attempted to seize the militia magazine stored in the old college building In the ensuing scuffle Richard Percival a linen weaver was killed He is reckoned by some to be the first casualty in the English Civil War Lord Strange returned and attempted to besiege the town which had no permanent fortifications With the help of John Rosworm a German mercenary the town was vigorously defended Captain Bradshaw and his musketeers resolutely manned the bridge to Salford Eventually Strange realised that his force was ill prepared and after hearing that his father had died withdrew to claim his title During the Commonwealth Manchester was granted a seat in Parliament for the first time Maj Gen Charles Worsley scion of an old Lancashire family and one of Cromwell s most trusted lieutenants had been given the Mace at the famous dissolution of Parliament in 1654 Elected Manchester s first MP he did not sit for long before Parliament was again dissolved leading to the Rule of the Major Generals effectively martial law Worsley given responsibility for Lancashire Cheshire and Staffordshire took his duties seriously turning out alehouses banning bear baiting and cracking down on the celebration of Christmas He eventually died in 1656 at a time of the gradual ebbing away of Cromwell s authority 44 On the English Restoration in 1660 as a reprisal for its defence of the Parliamentarian cause Manchester was deprived of its recently granted Members of Parliament No MP was to sit for Manchester until 1832 The consequences of the restoration led to a great deal of soul searching One clergyman Henry Newcombe could not remain in the remodelled Anglican Church and was instrumental in the establishment of the Cross Street Chapel in 1694 This later passed into Unitarian hands and a new chapel on the original site can be visited Humphrey Chetham purchased the old college buildings after the civil war and endowed it as a bluecoat school Chetham s Hospital as it was known later became Chetham s School of Music The endowment included a collection of books which in 1653 became Chetham s Library the first free public library in the English speaking world As of 2017 it is still open and free to use 45 Despite the political setbacks the town continued to prosper A number of inhabitants supported the Glorious Revolution in 1688 They became discontented with the Tory clergy at the collegiate church and a separate church more to their tastes was founded by Lady Ann Bland St Ann s Church is a fine example of an early Georgian church and was consecrated in 1712 The surroundings what is now St Ann s Square but was previously known as Acresfield were in imitation of a London square About this time Defoe described the place as the greatest mere village in England by which he meant that a place the size of a populous market town had no form of local government to speak of and was still subject to the whims of a lord of the manor In 1745 Charles Edward Stuart and his army entered Manchester en route to London Despite its previous radicalism the town offered no resistance and the Jacobites obtained enough recruits to form a Manchester Regiment It is suggested that this was because the town had no local government to speak of and the magistrates who could have organised resistance were mostly conservative landowners Moreover these Tory landowners had taken to apprenticing their sons to Manchester merchants so the political complexion of the town s elite had changed The Jacobite army got no further than Derby and then retreated On their way back through Manchester the stragglers were pelted by the mob The luckless Manchester Regiment were left behind to garrison Carlisle where they quickly surrendered to the pursuing British Army Industrial Revolution edit nbsp Cotton mills in Ancoats about 1820 nbsp Manchester from Kersal Moor by William Wyld in 1852 Manchester acquired the nickname Cottonopolis during the early 19th century owing to its many textile factories nbsp Liverpool Road railway station the terminus of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway nbsp A 19th century slum dwelling The overhang contained privies whose waste fell straight into the River Medlock below 46 Manchester remained a small market town until the late 18th century and the beginning of the Industrial Revolution The Spinning Jenny in 1764 marked the beginning of the Industrial Revolution and brought with it the first fully mechanised production process The myriad small valleys in the Pennine Hills to the north and east of the town combined with the damp climate proved ideal for the construction of water powered cotton mills such as Quarry Bank Mill 47 which industrialised the spinning and weaving of cloth Indeed it was the importing of cotton which began towards the end of the 18th century that revolutionised the textile industry in the area This new commodity was imported through the port of Liverpool which was connected with Manchester by the Mersey and Irwell Navigation the two rivers had been made navigable from the 1720s onwards Manchester now developed as the natural distribution centre for raw cotton and spun yarn and a marketplace and distribution centre for the products of this growing textile industry Richard Arkwright is credited as the first to erect a cotton mill in the city His first experiment installing a Newcomen steam engine to pump water for a waterwheel failed but he next adapted a Watt steam engine to directly operate the machinery The result was the rapid spread of cotton mills throughout Manchester itself and in the surrounding towns To these must be added bleach works textile print works and the engineering workshops and foundries all serving the cotton industry During the mid 19th century Manchester grew to become the centre of Lancashire s cotton industry and was dubbed Cottonopolis and a branch of the Bank of England was established in 1826 The city had one of the first telephone exchanges in Europe possibly the first in the UK when in 1879 one was opened on Faulkner Street in the city centre using the Bell patent system 48 By 1881 it had 420 subscribers just 7 years later a new exchange had the capacity for 10 times that number Manchester Central exchange was still the largest outside the capital in Edwardian times when it employed 200 operators and the city had several other important roles in the history of telephony Transport editThe growth of the city was matched by the expansion of its transport links The growth of steam power meant that demand for coal rocketed To meet this demand the first canal of the industrial era the Duke s Canal often referred to as the Bridgewater Canal was opened in 1761 linking Manchester to the coal mines at Worsley This was soon extended to the Mersey Estuary Soon an extensive network of canals was constructed linking Manchester to all parts of England One of the world s first public omnibus services began in 1824 it ran from Market Street in Manchester to Pendleton and Salford The world s first steam passenger railway edit In 1830 Manchester was again at the forefront of transport technology with the opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway the world s first steam passenger railway This provided faster transport of raw materials and finished goods between the port of Liverpool and mills of Manchester By 1838 Manchester was connected by rail with Birmingham and London and by 1841 with Hull The existing horse drawn omnibus services were all acquired by the Manchester Carriage Company Ltd in 1865 Horse drawn trams began in Salford 1877 and Manchester 1880 81 were succeeded by electric trams in 1901 03 and by 1930 Manchester Corporation Tramways were running the third largest system in the UK 49 Population editThe Industrial Revolution resulted in Manchester s population exploding as people moved from other parts of the British Isles into the city seeking new opportunities Particularly large numbers came from Ireland especially after the Great Famine of the 1840s In 1851 it was estimated that 15 of the population of Manchester were Irish born The first Irish community in the city was said to date back to 1798 and with further waves of immigration from Ireland coming after the second World War The Irish influence continues to this day and every March Manchester plays host to a large St Patrick s Day parade It is estimated that about 35 of the population of Manchester and Salford has some Irish ancestry 50 Scottish migration in to Manchester can be traced back to before 1745 when the Jacobites marched through the city but the population of Scottish born residents peaked at almost 2 of the city s total population in 1871 Many of the city s machine making firms which powered the Industrial Revolution had their roots in emigrant Scottish engineers 51 A Welsh community has existed in Manchester since the 16th century 52 In 1892 there was 80 000 Welsh born residents in the North West of England with particularly high concentrations in Manchester and Liverpool David Lloyd George was born in the city and Welsh socialist Robert Jones Derfel spent much of his life in the city 53 Large numbers of mostly Jewish immigrants later came to Manchester from Central and Eastern Europe The area including Broughton Prestwich and Whitefield today has a Jewish population of about 40 000 This is the largest Jewish community outside London by quite some way To these groups may be added in later years Levantines involved in the Egyptian cotton trade Germans and Italians The German influence can be seen in the city s Halle Orchestra and the Ancoats area of the city was known as Little Italy By the beginning of the 20th century Manchester was a very cosmopolitan place and had additionally received immigrants from France Greece Armenia Lithuania Poland and Ukraine The opening of the Manchester Ship Canal in 1894 lead to influx of workers from Africa Asia Middle East and Scandinavia There has been a presence of Black people in Manchester since the 1700s There are records of black people being buried at Manchester Cathedral from 1757 The abolitionist Thomas Clarkson noted during a speech in Manchester in 1787 I was surprised also to find a great crowd of black people standing round the pulpit There might be forty or fifty of them 54 From the 1940s onwards further waves of immigration brought Cypriots and Hungarians fleeing conflict but in the largest numbers came people re settling from the British Colonies of the Indian subcontinent Caribbean and Hong Kong There has been a Chinese community in the city since the early 20th century 55 Chinatown Manchester is said to be the second largest in the United Kingdom and the third largest in Europe From the 1990s onwards Kosovans Afghans Iraqis and Congolese have settled in the area 56 It has been suggested as a result of the last two hundred years that Manchester having been involved in all these periods of immigration is the most polyglot of all British cities aside from London 57 Intellectual life editThe unconventional background of such a diverse population stimulated intellectual and artistic life The Manchester Academy for example opened in Mosley Street in 1786 having enjoyed an earlier incarnation as the Warrington Academy It was originally run by Presbyterians being one of the few dissenting academies that provided religious nonconformists who were excluded from the universities of Oxford and Cambridge with higher education It taught classics radical theology science modern languages language and history In the arts the Halle Orchestra was patronised in its early years by the German community and attracted a loyal following Manchester s rapid growth into a significant industrial centre meant the pace of change was fast and frightening At that time it seemed a place in which anything could happen new industrial processes new ways of thinking the so called Manchester School promoting free trade and laissez faire new classes or groups in society new religious sects and new forms of labour organisation Such radicalism culminated in the opening of the Free Trade Hall which had several incarnations until its current building was occupied in 1856 It attracted educated visitors from all parts of Britain and Europe What Manchester does today it was said the rest of the world does tomorrow Benjamin Disraeli at that time a young novelist had one of his characters express such sentiments The age of ruins is past Have you seen Manchester Manchester is as great a human exploit as Athens 58 Reform edit nbsp The Peterloo Massacre was a major event in the history of the city At the beginning of the 19th century Manchester was still governed by a court leet on the medieval model and a Boroughreeve was responsible for law and order during the daylight hours The Manchester and Salford Police Act of 1792 created Police Commissioners whose job was to provide a night watch The commissioners were also given responsibility for road building street cleaning street lighting and the maintenance of fire engines 59 The end of the 18th century saw the first serious recession in the textile trade There were food riots in 1797 and soup kitchens were established in 1799 Manchester was the scene of the Blanketeer agitation in 1817 Popular unrest was paralleled by discontent with Manchester s lack of representation at Westminster and the town quickly became a centre of radical agitation The protest turned to bloodshed in the summer of 1819 A meeting was held in St Peter s Field on 16 August to demonstrate for parliamentary reform It was addressed by Henry Hunt a powerful speaker known as Orator Hunt Local magistrates fearful of the large crowd estimated at 60 000 80 000 ordered volunteer cavalry from the Manchester and Salford Yeomanry to clear a way through the crowd to arrest Hunt and the platform party The Yeomanry were armed with sabres and some reports say that many of them were drunk They lost control and started to strike out at members of the crowd The magistrates believing that the Yeomanry were under attack then ordered the 15th Hussars to disperse the crowd which they did by charging into the mass of men women and children sabres drawn These events resulted in the deaths of fifteen people and over six hundred injured The name Peterloo was coined immediately by the radical Manchester Observer combining the name of the meeting place St Peter s Field with the Battle of Waterloo fought four years earlier One of those who later died from his wounds had been present at Waterloo and told a friend shortly before his death that he had never been in such danger as at Peterloo At Waterloo there was man to man but there it was downright murder 60 The Manchester Guardian a newspaper with a radical agenda was established shortly afterwards In 1832 following the Great Reform Act Manchester elected its first MPs since the election of 1656 Five candidates including William Cobbett stood and Liberals Charles Poulett Thomson and Mark Philips were elected The Great Reform Act led to conditions favourable to municipal incorporation Manchester became a municipal borough in 1838 61 and what remained of the manorial rights were later purchased by the town council Industrial and cultural growth editThe prosperity from the textile industry led to an expansion of Manchester and the surrounding conurbation Many institutions were established including Belle Vue Zoological Gardens founded by John Jennison in 1836 the Manchester Athenaeum 1836 37 the Corn Exchange 1837 and the Royal Victoria Gallery of Practical Science 1840 42 This wealth fuelled the development of science and education in Manchester The Manchester Academy had moved to York in 1803 and though it returned in 1840 in 1853 it moved again to London eventually becoming Harris Manchester College Oxford However a Mechanics Institute later to become UMIST was founded in 1824 by among others John Dalton the father of atomic theory In 1851 Owens College was founded by the trustees of John Owens a textile merchant who had left a bequest for that purpose Owens College was to become the first constituent college of the Victoria University which was granted its Royal Charter in 1880 This flowering of radicalism and reform took place within the context of ferment in Manchester s cultural and intellectual life John Dalton lectured on his atomic theory at the Literary and Philosophical Society in 1803 The establishment of the Portico Library in 1806 the Royal Manchester Institution later the Art Gallery in 1823 and the Manchester Botanical and Horticultural Society in 1827 are evidence of this The growth of city government continued with Manchester finally being incorporated as a borough in 1838 covering the township of Manchester the area which is now the city centre along with Ardwick Beswick Cheetham Chorlton on Medlock and Hulme 62 In 1841 Robert Angus Smith took up work as an analytical chemist at the Royal Manchester Institution and started to research the unprecedented environmental problems Smith went on to become the first director of the Alkali Inspectorate and to characterise and coin the term acid rain Manchester continued to be a nexus of political radicalism From 1842 to 1844 the German social philosopher Friedrich Engels lived there and wrote his influential book Condition of the Working Class in England 1845 He habitually met Karl Marx in an alcove at Chetham s Library In 1846 the Borough bought the manorial rights from the Mosley family and the granting of city status followed in 1853 In 1847 the Manchester diocese of the Church of England was established In 1851 the Borough became the first local authority to seek water supplies beyond its boundaries By 1853 the number of cotton mills in Manchester had reached its peak of 108 63 Warehouses became commonplace in what now makes up the city centre These 19th century Mancunian warehouses were often decorative and ornate for a building of such simple function The most notable 19th century warehouse is Watts Warehouse on Portland Street The Cooperative Wholesale Society was formed in 1863 64 Manchester is now home to the Co operative Group the largest mutual business in the world with over six million members The group remained based on their listed estate in Manchester city centre The outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861 saw an immediate shortage of cotton and the ensuing cotton famine brought enormous distress to the area until the war ended in 1865 The first Trades Union Congress was held in Manchester at the Mechanics Institute David Street from 2 to 6 June 1868 Manchester was the subject of Friedrich Engels The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844 Engels himself spending much of his life in and around Manchester Manchester was also an important cradle of the Labour Party and the Suffragette Movement Manchester s golden age was perhaps the last quarter of the 19th century Many of the great public buildings including the town hall date from then The city s cosmopolitan atmosphere contributed to a vibrant culture which included the Halle Orchestra In 1889 when county councils were created in England the municipal borough became a county borough with even greater autonomy nbsp Albert SquareDuring the late 19th century Manchester began to suffer an economic decline partly exacerbated by its reliance on the Port of Liverpool which was charging excessive dock usage fees Championed by local industrialist Daniel Adamson the Manchester Ship Canal was built as a way to reverse this It gave the city direct access to the sea allowing it to export its manufactured goods directly This meant that it no longer had to rely on the railways and Liverpool s ports When completed in 1894 it allowed Manchester to become Britain s third busiest port despite being 40 miles 64 km inland The Manchester Ship Canal was created by canalising the Rivers Irwell and Mersey for 36 miles 58 km from Salford to the Mersey estuary at the port of Liverpool This enabled oceangoing ships to sail right into the Port of Manchester actually in Salford The docks functioned until the 1970s when their closure led to a large increase in unemployment in the area The world s first industrial estate edit Trafford Park in Stretford outside the city boundaries was the world s first industrial estate and still exists today though with a significant tourist and recreational presence Manchester suffered greatly from the inter war depression and the underlying structural changes that began to supplant the old industries including textile manufacture Further expansion editThe municipal borough created in 1838 covered the six townships of Ardwick Beswick Cheetham Chorlton on Medlock Hulme and Manchester 62 The borough became a city in 1853 Expansion of the city limits was constrained westwards as Salford immediately to the west had been given its own borough charter in 1844 These areas were included in the city limits of Manchester at these dates 1885 Harpurhey Bradford with Beswick Rusholme 1890 Crumpsall Blackley and Moston Newton Heath Clayton Openshaw West Gorton 1903 Heaton Park So far most expansion had been northerly and easterly 1904 Moss Side Chorlton cum Hardy Withington Burnage Didsbury all to the south 1909 Gorton Levenshulme 1931 The parishes of Northenden Baguley and Northen Etchells beyond the River Mersey previously in Bucklow Rural District in Cheshire They later formed the Wythenshawe housing estate This followed an unsuccessful attempt to annex the same area in 1927 65 1974 Local Government Act 1972 Ringway Manchester International Airport 20th century editBy 1900 the Manchester city region was the 9th most populous in the world 66 In the early 20th century Manchester s economy diversified into engineering chemical and electrical industries The stimulus of the ship canal saw the establishment of Trafford Park the world s first industrial park in 1910 and the arrival of the Ford Motor Company and Westinghouse Electric Corporation from the USA The influence is still visible in Westinghouse Road and a grid layout of numbered streets and avenues In 1931 the population of Manchester reached an all time peak of 766 311 However the period from the 1930s onwards saw a continuous decline in population During this period textile manufacture Manchester s traditional staple industry went into steep decline largely due to the Great Depression of the 1930s and foreign competition citation needed During this period the Women s Citizens League campaigned for better maternity facilities in the city 67 Significant changes in this period were the move of the Manchester Royal Infirmary from Piccadilly in 1908 and the building of a new public library and town hall extension in the 1930s Second World War edit nbsp Manchester Central Library St Peter s SquareIn the Second World War Manchester played a key role as an industrial manufacturing city including the Avro aircraft factory now BAE Systems which built countless aircraft for the RAF the most famous being the Avro Lancaster bomber As a consequence of its war efforts the city suffered heavily from bombing during the Blitz in 1940 to 1941 It was attacked a number of times by the Luftwaffe particularly in the Christmas Blitz of December 1940 which destroyed a large part of the historic city centre and seriously damaged the cathedral which took 20 years to restore 68 In total 589 civilians are recorded to have died as result of enemy action within the Manchester County Borough 69 Post war edit The Royal Exchange ceased trading in 1968 The 1950s saw the start of Manchester s rise as a football superpower Despite the Munich air disaster Manchester United F C went on to become one of the world s most famous clubs rising to a dominance of the English game from the early 1990s onwards Mancunian Films had been established by John E Blakeley in the 1930s as a vehicle for northern comedians such as George Formby and Frank Randle The company opened its own studios Dickenson Road Studios in Manchester in 1947 and produced a successful sequence of films until Blakeley s retirement six years later The studio was sold to the BBC in 1954 the same year that saw the advent of commercial television in the UK The establishment of Granada Television based in the city attracted much of the production talent from the studios and continued Manchester s tradition of cultural innovation often with its trademark social radicalism in its programming The same period saw the rise to national celebrity of local stars from the Granada TV soap opera Coronation Street which was first aired on ITV in December 1960 and remains on air more than 60 years later The city also attracted international media and public attention for the success of its two senior football clubs Manchester United and Manchester City Manchester United had won two league titles and a FA Cup in the first two decades of the 20th century but the inter war years had been blighted by a loss of form on the pitch and ongoing financial problems The club s revival occurred with the appointment of Matt Busby as manager in 1945 he guided the club to an FA Cup triumph in 1948 and a league title in 1952 He then built a highly successful new side consisting of mostly young players nicknamed the Busby Babes by the media which went on to win two league titles and became the first English club to play in the new European Cup Then tragedy struck in February 1958 eight of the club s players three of them established England internationals Roger Byrne Tommy Taylor and Duncan Edwards died as a result of the Munich air disaster on the return flight from a European Cup tie in Yugoslavia and two others injured to such an extent that they never played again Busby who was seriously injured in the crash was left to build a new team 70 His new United side built around Munich crash survivors including Bill Foulkes and Bobby Charlton went on to dominate the English game in the 1960s featuring new stars like Denis Law and George Best winning two more league titles a FA Cup and then the European Cup in 1968 the first English club to win the trophy Busby retired the following year after 24 years in charge 71 The club was less successful in the 1970s its only major trophy of the decade being the FA Cup in 1977 and the club even spent a season outside the top division of English football The 1980s were slightly more successful with a further two FA Cups wins and regular top four league finishes but the club has enjoyed an unmatched run of success which began after the appointment of Alex Ferguson as manager in 1986 By the time Ferguson retired in 2013 after 27 years as manager the club had won a further 13 league titles five FA Cups four League Cups and two European Cups High profile players to have played for the club during Sir Alex Ferguson s management he was knighted in 1999 include Bryan Robson Mark Hughes Ryan Giggs Eric Cantona David Beckham and Wayne Rooney Manchester City entered the Football League in 1899 and won their first major honour with the FA Cup in 1904 Manchester City had been league champions once and FA Cup winners twice by 1939 but enjoyed further success in the post war years starting with an FA Cup win in 1956 The club s next success came more than a decade later with a league championship triumph in 1968 an FA Cup triumph in 1969 and a double of the European Cup Winners Cup and Football League Cup in 1970 under the management of Joe Mercer and Malcolm Allison Great players of the 1950s and 1960s sides included Don Revie Bert Trautmann Francis Lee Colin Bell and Tony Book 72 They won the League Cup in 1976 but after losing the 1981 FA Cup Final the club went through a period of decline which eventually saw them relegated as far down as third tier of English football by the end of the 1997 98 season They since regained promotion to the top tier in 2001 02 and have remained a fixture in the Premier League since 2002 03 For 80 years until 2003 the club had played at the Maine Road stadium in the Moss Side area of the city before moving to the City of Manchester Stadium to the east of the city centre which had been constructed for the previous year s Commonwealth Games In 2008 Manchester City was purchased by Abu Dhabi United Group for 210 million and received considerable financial investment The club s next major trophy was the FA Cup in 2011 The club s first top division league title for 44 years followed in 2012 and a League Cup triumph followed in 2014 The club have now won seven domestic league titles Under the management of Pep Guardiola they won the Premier League in 2018 becoming the only Premier League team to attain 100 points in a single season In 2019 they won four trophies completing an unprecedented sweep of all domestic trophies in England and becoming the first English men s team to win the domestic treble 73 Manchester City s revenue was the fifth highest of a football club in the world in the 2017 18 season at 527 7 million 74 75 In 2018 Forbes estimated the club was the fifth most valuable in the world at 2 47 billion 76 As with many British cities during the period The 1950s and 1960s saw extensive re development of the city with old and overcrowded housing cleared to make way for high rise blocks of flats This changed the appearance of Manchester considerably although the high rise experiment later proved unpopular and unsuccessful The city centre also saw major re development with developments such as the Manchester Arndale Manchester s key role in the industrial revolution was repeated and the city became a centre of research and development Manchester made important contributions to the computer revolution The father of modern computing Alan Turing was based at Manchester University and it was his idea of the stored program concept that led in 1948 to the Manchester Baby which was the first electronic stored program computer to run a programme This was developed by Frederic C Williams and Tom Kilburn at the University of Manchester This was followed by the Manchester Mark 1 in 1949 These inventions were commercialised in the Ferranti Mark 1 one of the first commercially available computers In the late 1950s Manchester was chosen as a testing ground for a new telephone service which formed the foundations of what we now know of as mobile phone technology The Post Office South Lancashire Radiophone Service was controlled from the city s Peterloo telephone exchange and enabled customers with the apparatus installed in their vehicle to phone to any UK subscriber In 1974 Manchester was split from the county of Lancashire and the Metropolitan Borough of Manchester was created The diversification of the city s economy helped to cushion the blow of this decline However as with many inner city areas the growth of car ownership and commuting meant that many people moved from the inner city and into surrounding suburbs By 1971 the population of Manchester had declined to 543 868 and by 2001 422 302 IRA bomb and its effects edit nbsp The devastation left by the IRA bombing nbsp Manchester s Exchange Square undergoing extensive regenerationDuring the 1980s with the demise of many traditional industries under the radical economic restructuring often known as Thatcherism the city and region experienced some decline The revival started towards the end of the decade catalysed not only by wider growing prosperity in the UK but by the creative music industry New institutions such as Factory Records and Fac 51 Hacienda earned the city the sobriquet Madchester At 11 20 am on Saturday 15 June 1996 the IRA detonated a large bomb in the city centre the largest to be detonated on British soil Fortunately warnings given in the previous hour had allowed the evacuation of the immediate area so this bomb caused over 200 injuries but no deaths The principal damage was to the physical infrastructure of nearby buildings Since then the city centre has undergone extensive rejuvenation alongside the more general efforts to regenerate previously run down areas of the wider city such as Hulme and Salford This reconstruction spurred a massive regeneration of the city centre with complexes such as the Printworks and the Triangle creating new city focal points for both shopping and entertainment The following regeneration took over a decade to complete The completion of the renovated Manchester Arndale in September 2006 allowed the centre to hold the title of the UK s largest city centre shopping mall 77 The bomb is commemorated by a plaque fixed to a nearby postbox which withstood the blast which reads This postbox remained standing almost undamaged on June 15 1996 when this area was devastated by a bomb The box was removed during the rebuilding of the city centre and was returned to its original site on November 22nd 1999 21st century edit nbsp Beetham Tower Manchester s second tallest building was completed in 2006 In 2002 the city hosted the XVII Commonwealth Games very successfully earning praise from many previously sceptical sources Manchester has twice failed in its bid to host the Olympic Games losing to Atlanta in 1996 and Sydney in 2000 In the 1990s Manchester earned a reputation for gang related crime particularly after a spate of shootings involving young men and reports of teenagers carrying handguns as fashion accessories A more concerted effort to reduce such crime has focused on prohibiting the availability of firearms working with the community deterring young individuals from joining gangs and jailing ringleaders have all helped to reduce gun crime Consequently gun crime has plummeted year on year since 2007 78 79 Crime figures from 2011 show there were 19 2 firearm crimes per 100 000 population in Greater Manchester compared to 35 1 in the Metropolitan Police area and City of London and 34 3 in the West Midlands 80 The Canal Street area of the city is well known as the Gay Village Manchester s claim to the status of gay capital of the UK was strengthened in 2003 when it played host city to the annual Europride festival 81 82 During the 1980s the Victoria University of Manchester had somewhat complacently exploited its reputation as one of the leading red brick universities During the same period many of those universities established post war vigorously pursued policies of growth and innovation The university consequently saw its standing decline and only in the 1990s did it embark on a catch up programme In October 2004 the Victoria University of Manchester and UMIST merged to form the University of Manchester the largest University in the UK with ambitious plans to be one of the world s leading research intensive universities Since the regeneration after the 1996 IRA bomb and aided by the XVII Commonwealth Games Manchester s city centre has changed significantly Large sections of the city dating from the 1960s have been either demolished and re developed or modernised with the use of glass and steel a good example of this transformation is the Manchester Arndale Many old mills and textile warehouses have been converted into apartments helping to give the city a much more modern upmarket look and feel Some areas like Hulme first unsuccessfully regenerated in the 1960s when multi storey flats replaced Victorian slums have undergone extensive regeneration programmes and many million pound lofthouse apartments have since been developed to cater for its growing business community The 168 metre tall 47 storey Beetham Tower completed in 2006 provides the highest residential accommodation in the United Kingdom the lower 23 floors form the Hilton Hotel while the upper 24 floors are apartments The Beetham Tower was originally planned to stand 171 metres in height but this had to be changed due to local wind conditions 83 In January 2007 the independent Casino Advisory Panel awarded Manchester a licence to build the only supercasino in the UK to regenerate the Eastlands area of the city 84 but in March the House of Lords rejected the decision by three votes rendering previous House of Commons acceptance meaningless This left the supercasino and 14 other smaller concessions in parliamentary limbo until a final decision was made 85 On 11 July 2007 a source close to the government declared the entire supercasino project dead in the water 86 A member of the Manchester Chamber of Commerce professed himself amazed and a bit shocked and that there has been an awful lot of time and money wasted 87 After a meeting with the Prime Minister Manchester City Council issued a press release on 24 July 2007 stating that contrary to some reports the door is not closed to a regional casino 88 The supercasino was officially declared dead in February 2008 with a compensation package described by the Manchester Evening News as rehashed plans spin and empty promises 89 Parts of the city centre were affected by rioting by Rangers fans during the 2008 UEFA Cup final riots 90 By 2011 Manchester and Salford were on a tentative list for UNESCO World Heritage Site status 91 The proposal centres on the Bridgewater Canal regarded as the first true canal which helped create the industrial revolution On Tuesday 9 August the centres of Manchester and Salford were among the many cities and towns affected by the 2011 England riots 92 On 22 May 2017 the city suffered its worst postwar tragedy when an Islamic extremist Libyan immigrant Salaman Abedi carried out a suicide bombing following a concert by the American singer Ariana Grande at the Manchester Arena Abedi killed himself and 22 other people and injured over 800 with many of the casualties being children teenagers and young adults 93 It was the deadliest terrorist attack and the first suicide bombing in Britain since the 7 July 2005 London bombings The attack caused worldwide condemnation and the changing of the UK s threat level to critical for the first time since 2007 94 Many of the injured and dead were from the Greater Manchester area and neighbouring parts of Cheshire and Lancashire Civic history editThe town of Manchester as it was then was granted a charter in 1301 by Thomas de Grelley Baron of Manchester who was also the Lord of the Manor of Manchester but the borough status it conferred on the town was lost following a court case in 1359 95 Until the 19th century Manchester was one of the many townships in the ancient parish of Manchester which covered a wider area than today s metropolitan borough In 1792 commissioners usually known as police commissioners were established for the improvement of the Township of Manchester The Municipal Corporations Act 1835 converted many older boroughs into a new standardised type of borough called municipal boroughs with elected councils and included provisions to allow other towns to become municipal boroughs Manchester took advantage of the new provisions and secured a charter incorporating the town as a municipal borough on 23 October 1838 The borough as created in 1838 covered the six townships of Ardwick Beswick Cheetham Chorlton on Medlock Hulme and Manchester The municipal borough was slightly smaller than the parliamentary constituency of Manchester which had been created under the Reform Act 1832 which also included Bradford Harpurhey and Newton 95 62 The first election to the borough council also called the corporation was held on 14 December 1838 The council held its first meeting on 15 December 1838 at the Manor Court Room on Brown Street when Thomas Potter was appointed the first Mayor of Manchester and Joseph Heron was appointed the first town clerk a post he would hold for over forty years 96 On 11 December 1840 the Manchester Poor Law Union was formally declared and took responsibility for the administration and funding of the Poor Law in the area 97 City of Manchester edit On 29 March 1853 the borough was elevated to city status 98 In 1885 further areas were added to the City of Manchester with Bradford Harpurhey Rusholme and parts of Moss Side and Withington townships By the Local Government Act 1888 the City of Manchester became in 1889 a county borough although it still kept the city title 95 Other areas which had been under the control of Lancashire County Council were added to the city between 1890 and 1933 1890 Blackley Crumpsall Moston Openshaw and Newton incl Kirkmanshulme townships Clayton area part of Droylsden township and part of Gorton township 1901 A very small part of Gorton Urban District 1903 Part Heaton Park area of Prestwich Urban District 1904 Burnage Didsbury and Chorlton cum Hardy civil parishes and Moss Side and Withington Urban Districts 1909 Levenshulme Urban District and the remaining area of Gorton Urban District 1913 Part of Heaton Norris Urban District 1933 Part of Denton Urban District In addition to these areas in 1931 the Cheshire civil parishes of Baguley Northenden and Northen Etchells were also added to the City of Manchester 95 Under the Local Government Act 1972 the City of Manchester with the addition of the civil parish of Ringway became on 1 April 1974 one of the ten Metropolitan Boroughs of the newly created Metropolitan county of Greater Manchester In 1986 Greater Manchester County Council was abolished by the Local Government Act 1985 and most of its functions were devolved to the ten boroughs making them effectively unitary authorities Some of the County Council s functions were taken over by joint bodies such as a passenger transport authority and joint fire police and waste disposal authorities In one of its most noted acts Manchester City Council carried a resolution in 1980 to create the UK s first Nuclear Free Zone 99 100 The Peace Gardens were later constructed on a small piece of land in Lincoln Square Greater Manchester editBefore 1974 the area of Greater Manchester was split between Cheshire and Lancashire with numerous parts being independent county boroughs The area was informally known as SELNEC for South East Lancashire North East Cheshire Also small parts of the West Riding of Yorkshire around Saddleworth and Derbyshire were covered SELNEC had been proposed by the Redcliffe Maud Report of 1969 as a metropolitan area This had roughly the same northern boundary as today s Greater Manchester but covered much more territory in north east Cheshire including Macclesfield and Warrington It also covered Glossop in Derbyshire In 1969 a SELNEC Passenger Transport Authority was set up which covered an area smaller than the proposed SELNEC but different from the eventual Greater Manchester Although the Redcliffe Maud report was rejected by the Conservative Party government after it won the 1970 general election it was committed to local government reform and accepted the need for a county based on Manchester Its original proposal was much smaller than the Redcliffe Maud Report s SELNEC but further fringe areas such as Wilmslow Warrington and Glossop were trimmed from the edges and included instead in the shire counties The metropolitan county of Greater Manchester was eventually established in 1974 Greater Manchester s representative county council was abolished in 1986 following the Local Government Act 1985 However Greater Manchester is still a metropolitan county and ceremonial county See also editBeyer Peacock amp Company History of England List of famous Mancunians List of railway stations in Greater Manchester Manchester Metropolitan University Politics in Manchester Stephenson s Rocket Timeline of Manchester history Transport in Manchester University of Manchester University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology Victoria University of ManchesterReferences editNotes edit Kidd Alan 2006 Manchester A History Lancaster Carnegie Publishing ISBN 1 85936 128 5 Frangopulo Nicholas 1977 Tradition in Action The historical evolution of the Greater Manchester County Wakefield EP Publishing ISBN 0 7158 1203 3 Manchester the first industrial city Entry on Sciencemuseum website Archived from the original on 9 March 2012 Retrieved 17 March 2012 Aspin Chris 1981 The Cotton Industry Shire Publications Ltd p 3 ISBN 0 85263 545 1 Asa Briggs Victorian cities 1965 pp 83 136pp Punter John 2009 Urban Design and the British Urban Renaissance p 59 ISBN 978 0 203 86920 8 a b The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place Names Based on the Collections of the English Place Name Society ed by Victor Watts Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 under MANCHESTER a b Mills A D 2003 A Dictionary of British Place Names Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 852758 6 Archived from the original on 21 October 2013 Retrieved 7 November 2013 Hylton 2003 p 6 Breeze Andrew 2004 Manchester s Ancient Name The Antiquaries Journal 84 353 357 doi 10 1017 S0003581500045893 ISSN 0003 5815 S2CID 163005777 Burnham Barry C Wacher John 1990 The Small Towns of Roman Britain London B T Batsford ISBN 0 7134 6175 6 a b Nevell 2008 p 11 Nevell 2008 p 12 Kidd 1996 p 12 Gregory 2007 pp 1 3 Gregory 2007 p 1 Mason 2001 pp 41 42 Gregory 2007 pp 1 2 Walker 1999 p 15 Gregory 2007 p 3 Philpott 2006 p 66 Norman Redhead 20 April 2008 A guide to Mamucium BBC Retrieved on 20 July 2008 Shotter 2004 p 129 Shotter 2004 p 117 Gregory 2007 p 190 Hylton 2003 pp 3 8 a b c d Hylton 2003 p 7 a b c Hylton 2003 p 8 Nevell 1992 pp 77 83 Historic England Monument No 1348592 Research records formerly PastScape Retrieved 10 January 2008 a b c d e Kidd 1996 p 13 a b c d Hylton 2003 p 10 a b The city and parish of Manchester Introduction A History of the County of Lancaster Volume 4 1911 pp 174 187 Retrieved 17 August 2022 a b Hylton 2003 p 9 Newman 2006 p 141 a b c d Kidd 1996 p 14 Nevell 1997 p 27 33 35 a b Hylton 2003 p 11 Kidd 1996 p 15 Kidd 1996 pp 14 15 Liverpool The castle and development of the town A History of the County of Lancaster Volume 4 1911 pp 4 36 Retrieved 17 August 2022 Hylton 2003 p 16 Cooper 2003 p 52 Cooper 2003 p 51 Frangopulo N ed 1962 Rich Inheritance Manchester Education Committee pp 109 111 Durston Christopher 2001 Cromwell s Major Generals Worsley and his descendants lived at Platt Hall Rusholme now a museum until 1906 Chetham s Library Home Page Chetham s Library Retrieved on 6 July 2007 Hylton p 144 Established as a silk mill in 1784 by Samuel Greg at Styal Cheshire Pevsner Nikolaus amp Hubbard Edward 1971 Cheshire Harmondsworth Penguin p 347 Early Manchester telephone exchanges PDF Mosi org Archived from the original PDF on 5 June 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Bett W H amp Gillham J C 1976 The Tramways of South east Lancashire Hanwell London Light Railway Transport League ISBN 0 900433 62 0 pp 5 6 President Higgins on Manchester s Irish Connection 15 May 2013 Migration and ethnic history Scottish Manchester City Council Migration and ethnic history Welsh Manchester City Council Jones Merfyn 1981 Welsh Immigrants in the Cities of North West England 1890 1930 Some Oral Testimony Oral History 9 2 33 41 JSTOR 40178621 What evidence is there of a black presence in Britain and north west England Revealing Histories BBC Manchester Chinatown History of Manchester s Chinatown Immigration Timeline PDF Salford Museum Manchester Migrant city Disraeli Benjamin 1844 Coningsby PDF public library uk Retrieved 12 January 2019 Reid 1989 p 21 Reid 1989 p 201 Parkinson Bailey John J 2000 Manchester an architectural history Manchester University Press ISBN 9780719056062 a b c Copy of the Charter Manchester Times 27 October 1838 p 2 Retrieved 3 September 2022 a Charter of Incorporation for the district comprised within the boundaries of the townships of Manchester Chorlton upon Medlock Hulme Ardwick Beswick and Cheetham in the said county palatine of Lancaster which said townships together with the townships of Newton Harpurhey and Bradford comprise the boundaries of the Parliamentary Borough of Manchester Witness ourself at our Palace at Westminster this twenty third day of October in the second year of our reign Miller and Wild 2007 p 77 Webb Catherine ed 1904 Chapter III Industrial Co operation Manchester Co operative Union Retrieved 27 November 2016 Manchester Extension Bill Approved The Times 17 April 1930 Top 10 Cities of 1900 T Chandler Retrieved 28 August 2007 Our Spring Conference North West Labour History Society www nwlh org uk Retrieved 16 January 2022 Timeline Manchester Cathedral Manchester Cathedral Online 2008 Archived from the original on 16 April 2016 Retrieved 5 May 2009 CWGC Civilian War Dead Manchester County Borough Commonwealth War Graves Commission Retrieved 15 September 2023 Sir Matt Busby Official Manchester United Website Manchester United F C Retrieved 4 October 2013 Sir Matt Busby Official Manchester United Website Manchester United F C 28 December 1970 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Club History Manchester City FC Manchester City F C 21 March 2013 Retrieved 4 October 2013 Bullin Matt 18 May 2019 Man City win treble how impressive is that achievement BBC Sport Retrieved 18 May 2019 verification needed Deloitte Football Money League 2018 Deloitte 23 January 2018 Retrieved 23 January 2018 verification needed UK Business Insider verification needed Ozanian Mike The World s Most Valuable Soccer Teams 2018 Forbes Retrieved 12 June 2018 verification needed CADWeb Project Management Manchester Arndale CADWeb 2005 Retrieved 28 June 2007 Greater Manchester gun crime down by 20 BBC News 18 October 2010 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Manchester gang related shootings decline BBC News 22 December 2011 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Comment Let s keep things in perspective gun crime has fallen across Greater Manchester since 2007 Mancunian Matters 24 September 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2012 Europe s biggest gay festival to be held in UK Manchester Evening News M E N Media 11 February 2003 Retrieved 20 May 2007 Ottewell David 12 February 2004 More gay couples want children Manchester Evening News M E N Media Retrieved 20 May 2007 City building reaches full height BBC News 26 April 2006 Retrieved 2 May 2006 Casino Advisory Panel Recommends to Secretary of State Where 17 New Casinos Should Be Located Press release Department for Culture Media and Sport 13 October 2006 Archived from the original on 14 October 2008 Retrieved 9 October 2008 Greenwich loses Casino Bet BBC 15 February 2007 Retrieved 9 October 2008 Lords scupper super casino plan BBC News 28 March 2007 Retrieved 9 October 2008 Brown cools on supercasino plan Reuters 11 July 2007 Retrieved 9 October 2008 Anger at super casino plan review BBC News 11 July 2007 Retrieved 9 October 2008 Manchester reaffirms casino commitment manchester gov uk Manchester City Council Retrieved 9 October 2008 Ottewell David 26 February 2008 Empty promises and spin Manchester Evening News M E N media Archived from the original on 6 July 2008 Retrieved 9 October 2008 Association Press 3 September 2010 Hooligans jailed after Rangers Uefa Cup final riot in Manchester The Guardian Manchester and Salford Ancoats Castlefield and Worsley UNESCO Retrieved 21 September 2011 Clifton Helen Allison Eric 6 December 2011 Manchester and Salford a tale of two riots The Guardian Manchester Arena attack Bomb injured more than 800 BBC News 16 May 2018 Manchester attack Terror threat reduced from critical to severe BBC News 27 May 2017 a b c d Greater Manchester Gazetteer Greater Manchester County Record Office Places names M to N Archived from the original on 18 July 2011 Municipal elections Manchester Times 22 December 1838 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Manchester Lancashire The Workhouse Retrieved 27 November 2016 Whitehall March 31 1853 London Gazette 21426 950 1 April 1853 Retrieved 3 September 2022 Nuclear free local authorities manchester gov uk Manchester City Council Archived from the original on 13 July 2009 Manchester Features Still working for a nuclear free world BBC Retrieved 4 October 2013 Bibliography edit Asa Briggs 1993 Manchester Victorian Cities Berkeley Calif University of California Press ISBN 0 520 07922 1 Cooper Glynis 2003 Hidden Manchester Breedon Books Publishing ISBN 1 85983 401 9 Gregory Richard ed 2007 Roman Manchester The University of Manchester s Excavations within the Vicus 2001 5 Oxford Oxbow Books ISBN 978 1 84217 271 1 Hylton Stuart 2003 A History of Manchester Chichester Phillimore and co Ltd ISBN 1 86077 240 4 Kidd Alan 1996 Manchester Keele Keele University Press ISBN 1 85331 028 X Mason David J P 2001 Roman Chester City of the Eagles Stroud Tempus Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7524 1922 6 Miller Ian Wild Chris 2007 A amp G Murray and the Cotton Mills of Ancoats Oxford Archaeology North ISBN 978 0 904220 46 9 Mosley Stephen The chimney of the world a history of smoke pollution in Victorian and Edwardian Manchester Routledge 2013 Nevell Mike 1992 Tameside Before 1066 Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council ISBN 1 871324 07 6 Nevell Mike 1997 The Archaeology of Trafford Trafford Metropolitan Borough Council with the University of Manchester Archaeological Unit ISBN 1 870695 25 9 Nevell Mike 2008 Manchester The Hidden History The History Press ISBN 978 0 7524 4704 9 Newman Caron 2006 Medieval Period Resource Assessment Archaeology North West 8 115 144 ISSN 0962 4201 Philpott Robert A 2006 The Romano British Period Resource Assessment Archaeology North West 8 59 90 ISSN 0962 4201 Reid Robert 1989 The Peterloo Massacre William Heinemann Ltd ISBN 0 434 62901 4 Shotter David 2004 1993 Romans and Britons in North West England Lancaster Centre for North West Regional Studies ISBN 1 86220 152 8 Walker John ed 1989 Castleshaw The Archaeology of a Roman Fortlet Greater Manchester Archaeological Unit ISBN 0 946126 08 9 Further reading editPublished in the 19th centuryJohn Britton 1807 Manchester Beauties of England and Wales vol 9 London Vernor Hood amp Sharpe hdl 2027 mdp 39015063565736 Manchester Black s Picturesque Tourist and Road book of England and Wales 3rd ed Edinburgh Adam and Charles Black 1853 Frederick Dolman 1895 Manchester Municipalities at Work the Municipal Policy of Six Great Towns and its Influence on their Social Welfare London Methuen amp Co OCLC 8429493 Manchester Great Britain 4th ed Leipsic Karl Baedeker 1897 OCLC 6430424Published in the 20th centuryAxon William Edward Armytage 1911 Manchester Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed pp 544 549 William Dean Howells 1909 Some Merits of Manchester Seven English Cities New York Harper amp Brothers Kargon R H 1977 Science in Victorian Manchester Enterprise and Expertise Manchester University Press ISBN 0 7190 0701 1 Shercliff W H 1977 Manchester a Short History of its Development Haslam Dave 1999 Manchester England the Story of the Pop Cult City London Fourth Estate ISBN 1 84115 146 7 Mamchestre Mamchestre pg 36 chap IVExternal links editManchester chronology Image of Deansgate in Manchester with trams about 1910 The English Civil War in Manchester Our Manchester A brief history of Manchestery Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title History of Manchester amp oldid 1186825315, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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