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Droylsden and Audenshaw (Paperback)
Loot Price: R325
Discovery Miles 3 250
You Save: R65
(17%)
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Droylsden and Audenshaw (Paperback)
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List price R390
Loot Price R325
Discovery Miles 3 250
You Save R65 (17%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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Once part of Lancashire, Droylsden and Audenshaw are now part of
Tameside Metropolitan Borough of Manchester. The varied histories
of both towns see the transition from farming to an industrial
community. Droylsden is still home to the James Robertson's Jam
Factory and, until recently, the Christy Fairfield cotton mills,
which produced the first machine woven towels in the world.
Audenshaw also has an illustrious industrial history including
hatting, coal mining and the manufacturing of sewing machines as
well as the production of cotton. People and places of note include
the eighteenth-century Moravian community at Fairfield, in
Droylsden, with its enclosed cobbled settlement of housing,
including a chapel and girls' school. In Audenshaw, the old village
was submerged beneath the Audenshaw reservoirs, created by the
Manchester and Salford Waterworks by 1884. The book, with over 200
photographs, gives us a glimpse of the streets of the two towns and
the people who lived there, at work and leisure. Nearly all of the
photographs seen here are loaned from family albums or church and
school archives. In print for the first time, they will provide
much nostalgic pleasure for all who have grown up in this area of
Manchester.
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