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Strangeways, Manchester
from Wikipedia

Strangeways is an area of inner north Manchester, England, around Strangeways Prison just north of the city centre.

Toponymy

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Strangeways Prison, seen from Derby Street, looking down Blacklock Street

Strangeways was recorded in 1322 as Strangwas, from the Anglo-Saxon Strang and gewæsc meaning "[a place by] a stream with a strong current". It was also recorded as Stranways (1323), Strangways (1326), Strangewayes (1546), Strangwyshe (1551), and Strang wayes (1577).[1] The Strangways family, which originated in the village, adopted the earlier spelling as a surname.[2]

Until the 19th century, Strangeways was a rural village, with Strangeways Hall, Park and Gardens.

Strangeways Brewery

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The chimney of Strangeways Brewery in 2005

Strangeways Brewery was famous as the home of Boddingtons Bitter. It closed in 2005 and was demolished in 2007.[3]

Timeline

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  • 1459: First known mention of the de Strangeways family in the area.
  • 1544: A settlement document describes widespread property attached to Strangeways Hall, including 24 houses, 20 town properties, 20 cottages, and various land up to several miles away.
  • 1641: Strangeways Hall appears on a map. It was in Elizabethan or Jacobean style.
  • 1624: John Hartley (1609–1655) bought Strangeways Hall. His father Nicholas Hartley and elder brother Richard were wool merchants in Manchester.
  • Early 18th century: A grey stucco, palladian-style addition to Strangeways Hall was built.
  • 1713: The Reynolds family took over the hall.
  • 1768: Francis Reynolds granted a lease to Robert Norton to build a house and silk dyeing works by the Hall's fish pond.
  • 1777: Strangeways Hall first known to be let to a tenant (Hugh Oldham).
  • 1788: Strangeways Hall was run as a girls' boarding school.
  • 1816: Start of the area being built over with houses.
  • 1838: Land in Strangeways area was sold to the Manchester and Leeds Railway Company; Manchester Victoria station is there now.
  • 1858: Strangeways Hall demolished and its materials sold
  • 1859: A newspaper report that the Hall was "several times rebuilt".
  • 1864: Completion of building of the Assize Courts on the site of Strangeways Hall. (It was destroyed in the 1939–1945 Blitz and its site is now a car park on Great Ducie Street).
  • 1868: Strangeways Prison opened. It was built on the site of Strangeways Hall's fish ponds.
  • late 19th century: Jewish immigration to the area, fleeing from violence in Russia.

References

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