Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

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Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 167,711 pages of information and 247,105 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Mynshull Mills, Chorlton-on-Medlock: Difference between revisions

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* Proprietors: James & Wainwright Bellhouse
* Proprietors: James & Wainwright Bellhouse


* 1891 Directory: Listed. [[Cotton Mills in Manchester and Salford 1891|More details]]
* 1891 Directory: Listed. [[1891 Cotton Mills in Manchester and Salford|More details]]


* [[Goad's Insurance Plans]] for Manchester, Map 52 shows the arrangement of the mill buildings c.1899. There were three interconnected eight storey mill buildings labelled Mills A, B, & C, with additional buildings which included three horizontal boilers, a forge, and reeling and blowing rooms. The site was bounded by the curving [[River Medlock]] and, on the eastern side, by the viaduct of the railway linking Oxford Road and London Road (now Piccadilly) stations, while beyond the western boundary was a timber yard (previously occupied by Medlock New Mill, as shown on the 1849 O.S. map). One of the arches of the viaduct was partly occupied by the mill’s 'Grinding House'. Access to the mill appears to have been through another arch from Pritchard Street. The site is now a car park. Note: The c.1899 Goad Plan shows that on the opposite (north eastern) bank of the Medlock were the extensive premises of [[James and John M. Worrall]], Bleachers & Finishers.
* [[Goad's Insurance Plans]] for Manchester, Map 52 shows the arrangement of the mill buildings c.1899. There were three interconnected eight storey mill buildings labelled Mills A, B, & C, with additional buildings which included three horizontal boilers, a forge, and reeling and blowing rooms. The site was bounded by the curving [[River Medlock]] and, on the eastern side, by the viaduct of the railway linking Oxford Road and London Road (now Piccadilly) stations, while beyond the western boundary was a timber yard (previously occupied by Medlock New Mill, as shown on the 1849 O.S. map). One of the arches of the viaduct was partly occupied by the mill’s 'Grinding House'. Access to the mill appears to have been through another arch from Pritchard Street. The site is now a car park. Note: The c.1899 Goad Plan shows that on the opposite (north eastern) bank of the Medlock were the extensive premises of [[James and John M. Worrall]], Bleachers & Finishers.


* An excellent account of the mill and its history is available online <ref>[http://www.stats.uwo.ca/faculty/bellhouse/chapter6.pdf]Bellhouse Family History Pages</ref>
* An excellent account of the mill and its history is available online <ref>[http://www.stats.uwo.ca/faculty/bellhouse/chapter6.pdf]Bellhouse Family History Pages</ref>
        
        
== See Also ==
== See Also ==
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==Sources of Information==
==Sources of Information==
<references/>
<references/>
 
 
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[[Category: Town - Manchester]]
[[Category: Town - Manchester]]
[[Category: Textile Mills]]

Revision as of 16:09, 15 January 2016

of Charles Street, Oxford Road, Chorlton-on-Medlock

  • Proprietors: James & Wainwright Bellhouse
  • Goad's Insurance Plans for Manchester, Map 52 shows the arrangement of the mill buildings c.1899. There were three interconnected eight storey mill buildings labelled Mills A, B, & C, with additional buildings which included three horizontal boilers, a forge, and reeling and blowing rooms. The site was bounded by the curving River Medlock and, on the eastern side, by the viaduct of the railway linking Oxford Road and London Road (now Piccadilly) stations, while beyond the western boundary was a timber yard (previously occupied by Medlock New Mill, as shown on the 1849 O.S. map). One of the arches of the viaduct was partly occupied by the mill’s 'Grinding House'. Access to the mill appears to have been through another arch from Pritchard Street. The site is now a car park. Note: The c.1899 Goad Plan shows that on the opposite (north eastern) bank of the Medlock were the extensive premises of James and John M. Worrall, Bleachers & Finishers.
  • An excellent account of the mill and its history is available online [1]


See Also

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Sources of Information

  1. [1]Bellhouse Family History Pages