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Wigan Album

Scholes

28 Comments

SCHOLES CHANGING IN 1966
SCHOLES CHANGING IN 1966
Photo: Frank Orrell
Views: 7,744
Item #: 26946
A view of Scholes in 1966 as demolition of the old streets was under way.
Not sure but I think it shows St. Catherine's Church in the centre and St. Patrick's on the right. Again, not sure, but it could be Scholefield Lane going up on the right.

Comment by: Scholes Malc on 2nd November 2015 at 22:40

thats Hardybutts on right -correct on Churches though- in background just make out the Wutchie, Grey Hills & Rockies

Comment by: John on 3rd November 2015 at 00:01

Malc, to get my bearings, is the main cleared area, with rounded corner, where the Royal George lodging house used to be?

Comment by: Thomas(Tom)Walsh. on 3rd November 2015 at 00:54

The building in the foreground is The Stanley Arms. The new buildings is Acton House(still there)The bulildindg on the extreme left is Seddons Stocking Factory, by this time it was The Paradise Club. The shop on the right hand side of Hardybutts is Mr.Pomfretts ,a gentleman if ever there was one!

Comment by: Tics on 3rd November 2015 at 07:08

Picture taken from were Brookhouse flats are now

Comment by: RON HUNT on 3rd November 2015 at 07:49

Spring Street with the corner shop (where I was born and lived until I was 7). Stanley Arms pub looking to rear and Amy Lane is the narrow pathway bottom left, it ran down to Scholes Bridge.

Comment by: roy sturgeon on 3rd November 2015 at 08:34

that spare land in the middle is where the royal george lodging house was

Comment by: Albert. on 3rd November 2015 at 10:01

Is the road in the foreground, Warrington Lane, coming from School Lane, that road would be to the left, if I have got things correct.?

Comment by: Scholes Malc on 3rd November 2015 at 15:02

Ron - next street after your was Silver Street where my Grandparents raised their 'clan' (the Griffins)
Slaughter house at the end of the sreet - remember when the odd cow escaped!

Comment by: RON HUNT on 3rd November 2015 at 15:14

Malc you could get from Spring Street to Silver Street by way of what was colloquially named "PIGGY BREW" I think originally there were houses there which had been demolished??? I went to Warrington Lane school and my friend, named Raymond Stotherts, lived next door, or next door but one, to the slaughter house. I remember the first time I saw a NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC magazine was at his house I was in awe <g> I must have been 6 or 7 but I can still remember it very vividly.

Comment by: roy sturgeon on 3rd November 2015 at 15:23

scholes malc thats no way to talk about your granma

Comment by: Ernest Pyke on 3rd November 2015 at 16:15

roy sturgeon; You missed an exclamation mark or lol at the end of your comment.

Comment by: roy sturgeon on 3rd November 2015 at 17:33

could not resist just joking

Comment by: roy sturgeon on 3rd November 2015 at 19:14

that area used to be my paper round about 1955 hardybutts seemed like 10 mile with a paper bag

Comment by: AB on 3rd November 2015 at 20:24

Ron, in the war an air raid Shelter was in Piggy brow, My route to Whelley School, was through there past it, and into Silver St past Mc Avoys slaughterhouse and along Union St to Scholes

Comment by: RON HUNT on 3rd November 2015 at 21:28

I remember there was an Air Raid shelter in the 'backs' behind the top house on the right, as you faced the Royal George, at the top of Spring Street

Comment by: AB on 4th November 2015 at 11:06

There was 3 lodging houses, The Royal George,one in Hardybuts and on the corner of Union St and another in Union St near the Scholes end.The one in Hardybuts had double doors and from Silver St I used to see a big open fire Also in Silver St opposite the slaughterhouse was An Irish Club a drab place with wire over the windows there just seemed to be a door and a flight of stairs to it, on a Saturday night one could hear the "Diddle diddle and thump thump"of Irish music. I recall the lament of a couple of bruised teenage girls who had been in there the previous night,"They sup guinness and dance in their working boots"

Comment by: Barry on 4th November 2015 at 11:09

I remember the white pub and Amy Lane. What does interest me was how did people get access to Brook House. If the pub was in front had the car park not been built? Interesting. When was the pub demolished. Also, is there any history of when the high rise flats were built, what year etc?

Comment by: 1934granada. on 4th November 2015 at 11:53

Very interesting photo here.
However, I can't my bearings as to where it is!I recognise the churches though. Is the long road on the right Scholefield Lane?

Comment by: Former pole erector on 4th November 2015 at 13:46

Centre-stage is the (then) GPO pole erection unit. This was brand new in 1966. Prior to this holes had to be dug, and poles manhandled. One of the people with the device could well be me. Time and place fit.

Comment by: RON HUNT on 4th November 2015 at 13:48

Where the two women are stood is now the location of a bus shelter, heading out of town, just past Scholes Crossing.The road running north south is Hardybutts.

Comment by: Stuart Naylor on 4th November 2015 at 19:42

Barry

The photograph was taken from Woodcock House, not Brook House.

Comment by: baker boy on 4th November 2015 at 20:00

the planners certainly got scholes right with those lovely universally hated five storey blocks.
no lifts in them and designed for young families, wmbc still as thick now as back then.

Comment by: Stuart Naylor on 4th November 2015 at 22:17

baker boy

Those five storey blocks you mention with no lifts, were the 'Maisonettes' and they were poorly built and basically crap, but Wigan MBC demolished them all circa 20 years ago in the 1990's

Comment by: Rev David Long on 5th November 2015 at 14:04

Just to avoid confusion - the now-demolished development in Scholes in which the unlamented 'upside-down' maisonettes featured, was built over the site of the housing between St Patrick's and St Catherine's churches, and spreading off to the left towards the top of this pic.
The two blocks in build here still exist, along with the adjacent bungalows - as Wellington Street and Acton House sheltered housing. St Patrick's Way runs along on the other side of them, between Scholes Precinct to the left, and Darlington Street East to the right. On the other side of the road from them is St Patrick's Club, and St Patrick's Primary School, which severs the lower end of Hardybutts, which is the road running up the hill, from its upper end, which runs past St Patrick's Church.
My 2013 pic taken from St Catherine's spire shows a recent view taken from the opposite angle, down the hill:
http://www.wiganworld.co.uk/newgallery/photograph.php?opt=stcaths&photo=540

Comment by: Tics on 6th November 2015 at 14:14

The maisonette block now demolished that was built on the land were the wagons in the pic are was called Lowes House

Comment by: baker boy on 10th November 2015 at 15:30

stuart only the design was crap the brickies and other craftsmen where first rate,all employed by our works dept.

Comment by: A Hartley (new King-Barton) on 6th February 2022 at 08:42

Reading the comments above brings back some really good memories for me, I was born in Spring St and remember Pomfrets and Piggy Brow very well and the air raid shelter at the back of the first 3 houses, we used to play in them and found a couple of gas masks , they were happy times. I went to Warrington Lane infant school then on to St Catherine’s then Whelley sec mod, went to South Africa with my parents in 1967

Comment by: Phil on 5th October 2022 at 09:56

That's such an amazing photo, once I got my bearings. I was born in Gaskell Street (off Schofield Lane) then moved to Spring Street/Darlington St East, aged 4 (1964) - Ann's Chippy. Fascinating to hear everyone's recollections of the area, including a lot I didn't know. We used to race our bikes up Spring Street, onto Hardybutts, and sweep round onto Brookhouse Street, if I recall correctly. Bit daring at the time. I went to Warrington Lane school, then St Georges, and Deanery. Moved to Douglas House in 74. I've nothing but fond memories of those days. The piggy broo, the sweet shops, BB and Sunday school at St Catherines, paper rounds (phew), and all the great mates. Brings a memory to my eye.

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