Posts Tagged ‘Burslem’

When our roads were the worst in Europe

April 10th, 2013

An artist’s impression of the courthouse in Tunstall where the Court Leet sat

During the Middle Ages, the Hundred Courts and the Court Leets were responsible for repairing roads and bridges.

When feudalism ended in the 16th century, the duty to maintain highways was taken from the courts and given to local parishes.

In 1555, a Statute for Mending Highways ordered parishioners to elect two honest men to serve as highway surveyors. The surveyors, who were unpaid, held office for a year. Most were small farmers, local traders or innkeepers who knew nothing about road making or bridge building.

A few years later, Parliament gave the surveyors authority to collect stones and dig for gravel on land adjacent to the highway provided the holes they dug were filled in afterwards. Surveyors who forgot to fill the holes they had made were prosecuted. During 1667, two highway surveyors, Joseph Delves and Thomas Ratcliffe, who had failed to fill a hole they had dug at Chell were brought before Tunstall Court Leet and told to fill it in before the court’s next sitting or pay a penalty of five shillings.

The territory over which Tunstall Court Leet had criminal, civil and administrative jurisdiction covered parts of the parishes of Wolstanton and Stoke-upon-Trent.

Neither parish accepted responsibility for highway maintenance in areas that came under the court’s jurisdiction. In 1624, when the longbridge, which carried the road from Burslem to Newcastle-under-Lyme over the Fowlea Brook at Longport, needed repairing the Court Leet asked the County Quarter Sessions for financial help. Quarter Sessions gave a grant of £20 towards the cost. A few years later, in 1636 the Court Leet ordered the inhabitants of Sneyd and Tunstall to repair the road between Little Chell and Furlong Road or pay a forfeit of ten shillings each.

Although the Statute of Labour passed in 1586 compelled householders, cottagers and labourers living in a parish to spend six days a year repairing the roads, by the end of the 17th century England’s roads were the worst in Europe.

Like most roads throughout the country, those in North Staffordshire were deep rutted, waterlogged lanes. A new system of maintenance was needed and turnpike trusts were created.

Turnpike trusts were commercial enterprises. They repaired stretches of road and charged travellers fees which were called tolls. The first road to be turnpiked in Staffordshire was an eight mile stretch of the London to Carlisle road between Tittensor and Talke.

Copyright David Martin – The Phoenix Trust 2013

Note: The courthouse which was demolished in the latter part of the 19th century stood in Oldcourt Street.

PH/DM

 


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Focus on Burslem

November 7th, 2012

Focus on Burslem is a new series of articles being written for our website

Starting in the New Year, the series will include posts on Burslem’s social, economic and administrative history as well as its heritage buildings.

At the moment, we are looking for heritage buildings in Burslem, Cobridge, Longport and Middleport which have been regenerated or are being regenerated, to include in the series. If you run a business or a community activity from a regenerated building or if you are regenerating a heritage building please email phoenixstaffs@mail.com

PH/ND


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Buildings at Risk – Tunstall Library

September 15th, 2012

Tunstall Pool – a heritage building facing an uncertain future

Burslem lost its library after the Wedgwood Institute closed because the city council said the building was unsafe.

Since the Phoenix Trust began compiling its definitive list of  historic buildings at risk in North Staffordshire a large number of people have expressed concern for the future of Tunstall Library.

The library is housed in the Jubilee Buildings in The Boulevard which were designed by Absalom Reade Wood who was North Staffordshire’s leading civic architect.

Tunstall Pool in Bath Street, one of the Jubilee Buildings, has already closed and local people fear they could lose their library.

The Jubilee Buildings are not the only buildings at risk in North Staffordshire.

There are many more and you can help save our region’s architectural heritage by telling us about listed and unlisted buildings of historical or architectural importance that are at risk because of dereliction, neglect, decay or vandalism.

The buildings you tell us about will be featured on our website to encourage and empower local people to take a more active role in protecting and preserving North Staffordshire’s unique historic environment.

Let us have photographs of the building if possible.

A good photograph is worth a thousand words. It creates public interest and could help launch a campaign to save the building.

Please email details of the buildings and your photographs to phoenixstaffs@mail.com

Photograph © Copyright Kevin Hale and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.

 


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Focus on Burslem – Spencer Lawton

August 17th, 2012

One of the two drinking fountains at the main entrance to Burslem Park 

Local politician and Methodist lay preacher, Spencer Lawton was born in Hanley during the 1820s.

A commission agent in the pottery industry, he moved to Burslem and became a member of the board of health which governed the town until Queen Victoria made it a borough in 1878.

Spencer successfully stood for the borough council and was the councillor for south ward until he became an alderman.

An astute businessman, Spencer was appointed chairman of the finance committee. Seeing himself as the ratepayers’ watchdog. he used his position to curtail unnecessary local government expenditure.

Elected mayor for 1886-87, Spencer was in office when Burslem celebrated Queen Victoria’s Golden Jubilee. Made mayor again in 1893, he opened Burslem Park on August 30th, 1894.

Burslem Park was one of the first parks designed by the world’s leading landscape architect Thomas Mawson. It cost £14,000 and was laid out by unemployed pottery workers on derelict land between Moorland Road and Hamil Road.

Supervised by Mawson, the men cleared the site removing colliery waste and shards. Horse drawn wagons brought more than 70,000 loads of topsoil to cover the ground. An old pit mound was landscaped and a waterfall created. The men constructed an artificial lake and built an Elizabethan style half timbered lodge for the park superintendent.

Local industrialists gave seats and helped pay for the children’s playground.

The Wilkinson family gave two terracotta fountains which were made at Doulton’s Rowley Regis factory. They were placed on the terrace where a bandstand and a pavilion had been erected.

A two storey building the pavilion overlooked the park. It contained a buffet, a reception room and reading rooms for ladies and gentlemen.

Spencer gave the wrought iron gates at the park’s main entrance in Moorland Road where there were two drinking fountains.

A man with few interests outside work and politics, Spencer was a devout Christian who worshipped at Swan Bank Methodist Church where he became a lay reader. He held bible classes in the evenings and on Sundays travelled to chapels in outlying villages to take services. Shortly before his death, he gave the church a stained glass window.

Aged 73, Spencer had a heart attack and died on August 17th, 1901 at his home Elm House in Waterloo Road, Cobridge. After a civic funeral, in Swan Bank Methodist Church, he was buried in Burslem Cemetery.

Copyright Betty Cooper – The Phoenix Trust 2012

Photograph Copyright David Martin – The Phoenix Trust 2012

 


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Dear Old Burslem – A protest song against amalgamation

August 15th, 2012

The proposals made at the beginning of the 20th century to amalgamate (federate) the “six towns” and form the County Borough of Stoke-on-Trent were radical and controversial.

Passions ran high and there were many heated arguments between those who supported amalgamation and those who opposed it.

“Dear Old Burslem” sung to the tune “Auld Lang Syne” was a song published in 1907 by a group opposed to amalgamation.

DEAR OLD BURSLEM

Shall dear old Burslem be snuffed out,
And banished from our mind,
Oh! no, we’ll never suffer that,
It would be too unkind.
Chorus 
Then good old Burslem, dear old Burslem,
Burslem shall be free;
We will not federate our town,
But keep our liberty.
 
Eight hundred years or so ago,
Our history did begin
In Doomsday Book if  you will look,
Our name you’ll find therein.
(Chorus…)
 
Our schools of Science and of Art,
Are now excelled by none,
Our Baths and Park and Hospital,
And splendid Haywood Home.
(Chorus…)
 
Our Fire Brigade an honour is
For smartness and renown, 
A credit to our native place,
And useful to our town.
(Chorus…)
 
Our slums are cleared, improvements made,
For which you now have paid,
Defend us then my fellow men,
From those that would invade.
(Chorus…)
 
Our Electric Plant and Gasworks too, 
Are now both up to date,
And fifty thousand pounds have gone
Towards reducing rates.
(Chorus…)
 
And when our days come to an end,
As to an end they must,
Our Cemetery’s a splendid place
Wherein may rest our dust.
(Chorus…)
 
PH/B
 
 

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