Samuel Gratrix, Junior and Brother


of Manchester
1852 Advertising as lead and block tin merchants and manufacturers, glass retailers, lead mills, at Alport Town, 211 Deansgate, Manchester
1928 Advertising as suppliers of lead, tin, solder, white metal and zinc, lead pipes, at Alport Works, Quay Street, Manchester
Location
The 1849 36" O.S. map shows 'Alport Lead Mill' on the north side of the street curiously named 'Alport Town', which ran from Deansgate to Watson Street. The Manchester and Salford Junction Canal ran under the length of Alport Town. The lead mill was a more-or-less square building with a ground area of 60 x 70 ft. Its immediate neighbours were the Black Horse Inn and high density back-to-back housing, including a group called Gratrix's Buildings. The mill is not present on Bancks's 1831 map.
The 1894 OS map shows that the 'Alport Works (Brass)' had been extended along most of the length of Alport Town and along much of Watson Street. Gratrix's Buildings and a row on Watson Street had been demolished to make way for the works, but the Black Horse Inn remained.[1].
1890s: Lead, glass, oil, paint, and colour merchants, brass founders, metal workers, sanitary plumbers, and electrical engineers. In the 1890s they had premises in ‘Alport Town’ and Bradford (Manchester). They were forced to move from Alport Town when the area was to be redeveloped for the construction of a large freight warehouse for the GNR, alongside Central Station. This was the subject of a court case, with Messrs Gratrix claiming compensation for having to move to a new site in central Manchester (Alport Works, Quay Street) [2]
A 1920s map shows that the 'Alport Works' occupied a square site on the south side of Quay Street at its junction with Lower Byrom Street. Immediately adjacent on the east was the County Court building, with the graveyard of St. John's Church immediately to the south.