BLACKLEY
AND BLACKLEY HALL.
By Allen P. Blakeley
Note:
In the foregoing article, the Town, and the Hall of Blakeley
or Blackley, the pronunciation of Blackley and Blakelegh is
the same as Blakeley. The spellings varied throughout the
centuries.
In
the year in which Herculaneum and Pompeii were buried under
the ashes and lava emitted by Vesuvius, Mamucium [Manchester]
was born. Mamucium , meaning-breast shaped hill, stood on
a sandstone ridge near the junction of two salmon-rich rivers,
the Irwell and the Medlock.
The
Romans founded the township in 79 AD. The Roman army of Titus,
under their General, Governor Julius Agricola, came to Mamucium
from Chester. The local peoples of the area, the Brigantes,
a loosely confederated group constantly warring amongst themselves
were easily defeated by the invading army.
The
forest of Arden (or the Great Wood), where the boar and the
deer roamed freely, surrounded the five-acre fort built by
the Roman. This forest curved around the town in a large "amphitheatre
of woods" and "it covered all the hills of Broughton
[an area of Salford] and Blackley".
The
fort had natural water defences and was a vital refueling
stop for the legions - a sort of motorway junction with roads
heading north, south and west from the fort to Ribchester,
York, Buxton, Glossop and Chester. The original fort was constructed
of turf and wood and was occupied by some 500 inhabitants,
who mainly came, not from Rome but from other parts of Europe.
The
Romans remained in Mamucium until 411 when the legions withdrew
from England. Modern historians believe that only 20% of the
troops ever left the area.
The
tiny town on the banks of the Irwell was left defenseless.
There were no soldiers or fighting men to defend it from the
warlike Picts and Scots and it became an easy target for the
hordes from the north who attacked and plundered the town
in the year 429.
Other
invaders came, saw and conquered in the first millennium.
King Edwin of Northumbria, for instance, subdued Mamucium
in 620. The Danes came in 870, destroying the town after a
desperate and bloody struggle.
In
923, the town came under the dominion of the West Saxon kings,
when it was occupied by troops of Edward the Elder sent to
"repair and garrison it", presumably against the
Vikings. The Saxons rebuilt the town, approximately one mile
north of the original site, near to the junction of the rivers
Irwell and Irk.
A
relic from those days, the Angel Stone, is still visible in
Manchester Cathedral. The Stone, measuring 13in. by 8in.,
is believed to be a typical piece of Anglo-Saxon workmanship
of the 9th century, which probably marked part of the Church
of St. Mary mentioned in the Doomsday Book of 1086.
It
was almost the only remaining relic of Saxon times - until
the IRA bomb of June 1996 ripped the heart out of the city
centre. Archaeologists then discovered that Manchester had
a much grander Saxon and Medieval past than historians had
suspected.
The
name Blakeley is believed to be of Anglo-Saxon origin and,
until this time, was no more than an expanse of forest and
land to the north of Manchester. In Blakeley the Saxons 'made
good use of its river [the Irk], its open lands and extensive
forests".
Until
the time of the Industrial Revolution, Salford was a more
important place than 'that upstart on the other side of the
Irwell' [Manchester]. After the conquest of 1066, the land
between the Ribble and the Mersey was divided into six Hundreds
(an administrative term) of which Manchester belonged to the
Salford Hundred. To reward the devotion of his followers,
William the Conqueror, bestowed upon his knights, the 'landed
possessions of the Saxons'.
To
Nigellus, a Norman knight, he gave land within the boundaries
of the Salford Hundred, which included the Manor of Mamecestre,
and within that the township of Blakeley. Nigellus defected
and the property reverted to the Crown, although Mamecestre
was still held by the knight.
NOTE:
According to Mrs G. Linnaeus Banks in her book "The
Manchester Man", Manchester was written as 'Mamecestre'
until the end of the 14th Century.
The
family of Greslet, as they are styled in the Domesday Survey,
or Gresley or Gressy as designated in the Battle Roll Catalogue
of Hastings Abbey, also came to England with the conqueror.
At times this family were also known by the name of Grelle.
By
an alliance of marriage between Albert de Gresley and Maud,
daughter of William Fitz-Nigel (Nigellus?), Baron of Halton
and Widness, the Manor of Mamecestre came into the family
of the Gresleys
In
1086, Albert de Gresley obtained a grant of the Manor of Mamecestre,
which became a part of the Barony of Gresley. Albert was,
therefore, the first Baron of Mamecestre. Albert, his son,
succeeded him, and Robert de Gresley eventually succeeded
him.
In
1215, Robert, a knight of the King, had a warrant for six
harts [stags] to be taken in the Royal Forest of Clive for
restocking his park at Blackley and/or Horwich Chase. The
Lord's Deer Park was located at Blackley.
Robert
was described as a patriotic Baron whose name ranks high in
the annals of the county. In 1215, he was one of a number
of Northern Barons who who who went to London to demand from
[King] John, the laws of Edward the Confessor and the rights
and privileges of Henry the First.
After
a struggle, the Barons were successful in extorting the Charter
of Liberties [Magna Carta] from the King, for which cause,
towards the end of 1215, the Pope excommunicated Robert and
his estates were seized. The King placed Adam de Yealand in
charge of the castle of Mamecestre and the Lords dependent
on it.
King
John survived for only a year after the signing of the Magna
Carta and was succeeded by Henry III. The sentence in 1215
was repealed soon after the accession of Henry. From 1216,
Robert carried a letter from the King, which granted him safe
conduct.
Robert
obtained from the King a Grant that allowed Mamecestre the
right to hold an annual fair. Robert died in 1222 and was
succeeded by Thomas de Gresley, the fourth Baron of Mamecestre.
Thomas died in 1247 and was succeeded by his grandson Thomas.
This Thomas died in 1281 and was succeeded by his son Thomas.
In
1249 Henry III granted to Thomas de Gresley the exclusive
right of fishing in the waters of the Irk.
In
1281, the Park of Blakeley was described as being with trees
and eyries of sparrow-hawks. During this period the wild white
cattle of Britain were bred at Blakeley. Tradition has it
that the white cattle were transferred to the Abbot's Park
at Whalley and this continued until the dissolution. After
this time they were removed to Gisburn Park, where there descendants
remained until the 18th Century.
The
value of the park, in 1282, was £6 13s 4d for herbage,
dead wood, pannage (acorns and mast for the feeding of pigs)
and eyries of sparrow hawks.
In
1301, Thomas granted a charter to Mamecestre which made it
a 'free borough'. Amongst the benefits,this allowed the burgesses
of the township permission to 'nourish swine of their own
breeding in the woods of the Lord, except in the forest or
parks (Blakeley and Horwich) used by him, until the pannage
(the feeding time of swine), free of all licence'.
This charter forms the groundwork for the Great Charter of
Mamecestre (1657).
The
death of Thomas de Gresley in 1313 ended over two centuries
of de Gresley rule. Thomas never married, and had no brothers
but had a sister who married into the la Warre family. In
accordance with the will of Thomas, the Manor of Mamecestre,
including the Township of Blakeley, was granted to Sir John
and Lady Joan la Warre.
In
1320, the sporting rights of the Manor of Mamecestre in Blakeley
were strictly reserved for the Lord of the Manor. Reference
to the land at that time states that at Blakeley, three and
a half miles north of his Hall, in the rough uplands on the
left bank of the Irk, the Lord had an enclosed deer park,
more than seven miles in circuit, with room for 200 deer and
two deer leaps. Cattle were admitted to pasture in its glades
on payment of sixpence per head. Iron was worked to some small
extent.
In
accordance with the 'Extent of the Manor of Mamecestre' taken
by Edward II in 1322, it was noted that Blakeley had:
1.] "13 acres of heath land valued at 8s 8d."
2.] "Under [Within] the pales of Blakelegh [the park],
4 acres worth 2d."
NOTE: This was probably coarse land and was , therefore, only
valued at a ha'penny per acre.
3.] "Blakeley is pasture, in wood and plain, which is
not measured by the acre, but it can graze 200 cattle by the
large hundred (i.e. 240) the feeding of which number is worth
yearly £6 at 6d per head. And besides this, it can feed
200 fallow deer and that sort of wild animals, which is not
extended here (not being used) except for games (or sport)
and the deer with the deer leap (enclosure for shelter)"
NOTE: Pasture partly in woods was not measured by the acre
but by the number of cattle.
4.] "The Park of Blakeley is worth in pannage (acorns
- feed for pigs), aeries of eagles (Ospreys or Sea-Eagles),
herons and hawks, bees' honey, mineral earths, burned ashes
and other issues 53s 4d."
NOTE: "aeries of eagles was a privilege granted only
to great persons". This infers that some such persons
lived in Blakeley at that time who were able to command the
favour of the reigning sovereign.
5.] "The vestures of oaks with the total covert is worth
in gross 200 marks (£133.6s.8d) for destruction and
it comprises seven miles in circuit with two deer-leaps, of
the grant of kings."
NOTE: 7 miles must have included other townships as Blakeley
only had an area of 1,840 acres.
[ Unlikely - 1,840 acres /640 = 2.88 square miles. - 7 miles
in circumference = 2.05 miles diameter, slightly smaller than
Blakeley! In actuality the size of an acre varied over the
ages so the above areas were probably, in reality, the same
size- Ed.)
6.] "And there are there the stream (or water) of Irk
(running) from above Mamecestre and Blakeley the banks of
which on both sides are the Lord's soil; in which [stream]
it is unlawful for anyone to fish without licence of the Lord,
for that it is his warren. It is worth 12d [yearly]."
NOTE: As granted by Henry II in 1249.
The
two deer leaps in the park were probably cloughs or ravines.
According to Wentworth evidence from the above Extent directly
points to Boggart Hole Clough and probably Alkrington Wood
as being the site of these leaps.
In
1355, by an indenture dated the 31st May signed at Swineshead,
Lincoln, Roger la Warre granted to "our beloved Thurston
Holand, our kinsman for life the pasture at our park at Blakelegh,
with the meadows in the same park for feeding in the said
pasture his own cattle as well as those of others in the same
place, on agreement, by his leave and for the ploughing of
the said land and also the inclosing the end of the said park,
as it was wont to be inclosed"
For this right, Thurstan had to 'yield' 100 shillings (£5)
annually, payable on the feast of St. Michael.
In
1411, "Sir John Assheton, being then Lord of the Manor,
by favour of Thomas, Lord de la Warre, by whom the estate
was conditionally conveyed, was bound by the agreement to
render annually twenty-two shillings and one hawk, or forty
shillings and a contribution called "putura", to
the maintenance of the foresters of Horwich and Blackley as
part of the Manor of Manchester."
The
Manor was held in turn by four la Warres until the last one
died in 1426, a period of 113 years.
Following
the death of the last la Warre, the Manor was taken over by
Sir Reginald West, knight, the fifth Baron West. He was styled
by Parliament as 'Sir Reginald West, Lord de la Warre'
On
Mayday 1430, (Monday 1st of May), "Sir Reginald, by deed
or charter, gave, granted and confirmed to William Chauntrell,
sergeant-at-law, and Master John Huntyngdon, clerk (the first
warden of the Church of Manchester) the whole of his park
at Blakeley and all of his lands, woods and tenements called
Blakeley feldes (fields), with all woods or underwoods in
the said park and being to them and their heirs and assigns
for ever. Paying to Reginald and his heirs yearly for the
first 20 years, 39 marks, 6s.8d. yearly. (£26. 6s. 8d.)
afterwards 50 marks 6s.8d. yearly (£33. 6s. 8d.)
A
clause in the above indenture provided that if the lands were
seized by the King for any cause, then the rents payable to
the Lord or his heirs should cease as long as the land remained
in the Kings hands. If William or John spent any money in
endeavouring to get the estate out of the Kings hands then
they were to be reimbursed by Reginald or his heirs.
William
Chaunterell transferred the lands to Sir John Byron in 1433
for a term of seventeen years at a peppercorn rent. The Byrons
continued to hold the estates until the beginning of the 17th
Century.
In
1473, the parks of Blakeley were held as a fee-farm. The rental
of the lands was still £33.6s.8d and was paid by John
Byron to Sir Thomas West, son and heir of Richard West. Richard,
a knight of the King, died in 1482 and an inquisition taken
at that time estimated the value of the whole estate to be
approximately £100 per annum.
In
1538, Leland in "Leland's itinerary" bore testament
to the changing face of Blakeley. He stated that 'wild bores,
bulls, and falcons' were bred in times past at Blakeley but
due to cultivation and the clearing of the woods this was
no longer the case. As a result of this blacksmiths shops
were no longer required there.
Evidence
based on the design of Blakeley Hall and its grounds suggest
that this was built in the early years of the reign of Henry
VIII (l509-1547). "The Hall was a spacious black and
white half-timbered mansion in the post and petrel style.
It was a structure of considerable antiquity and consisted
of a centre and two projecting wings, an arrangement frequently
met in the more ancient manor houses of this county and bore
evidence of having been erected at two distinct periods. The
older portion was constructed of timber and plaster, gabled
and originally protected by a bargeboard with ornamental hip
knob.
The other wing, erected probably about the end of the sixteenth
or the beginning of the seventeenth century, was of brick
with quoins and dressings of stone. The windows were all square
headed, chiefly of three lights, divided by mullions, and
having the addition of a label or weather table"
The
Hall was about 500 square yards in area and had several very
large rooms. It was situated about 150 yard from the junction
of the Manchester and the Rochdale road, with the road that
leads to Blackley Church and what was formerly a part of the
old road from Middleton to Manchester.
An
oratory existed in Blackley as early as 1360. It was probably
on this site that in 1548 the Byrons built a Chapel dedicated
to St. Peter. The Chapel was sold to the inhabitants by Sir
John Byron of Newstead in May 1611, end was then entirely
rebuilt at a cost of £245 that was raised by voluntary
subscription. It was enlarged in 1741, demolished in 1844
and then rebuilt on land north of the former site in 1844
at a cost of £3,300. In 1800 it was again enlarged.
In
1593, Sir John Byron of Newstead, Co. Notts, granted a lease
to John Samond of Blackley, Co. Lancs, a gentleman who was
Sir John's servant, Elizabeth his wife and Charles Nuttall
son of Roger Nuttall Clarke for good and faithful service,
for land at Blackley. Charles Nutall was to have nothing during
the lives of John and Elizabeth Samond.
The
'Manor' of Blackley, consisting of seventy messuages, (dwelling
house with outbuildings and land), two fulling mills, a water
mill and 1,000 acres of land in Blackley, Blackley Fields
and Bottomley, was in 1598, either sold or mortgaged by Sir
John Byron and his heir John Byron to Richard and William
Assheton.
Blackley
continued to be held "in the hands of the Byrons, as
its subinfeudatory lords, until the commencement of the 17th
century, when, in consequence of the "improvidence of
Sir John Byron', it was 'resolved to sacrifice a portion of
the family estate to save the rest'.
In
1604 the Blackley estate was invested in the hands of trustees.
These trustees were Sir Peter Legh of Lyme, Sir Richard Assheton
of Middleton and his son Richard and John Holt of Stubley.
From this time, according to John Booker, the estate underwent
a gradual alienation. Blackley was still, however, mentioned
in the Byron Manors in 1608.
On
the dispersal of the Byron estate, Blackley was sold in parcels
to a number of owners. James
Assheton of Chadderton acquired Blackley Hall and demesne
and sold it to Sir Richard Assheton of Middleton.
"The
eldest son of Sir Richard Assheton, Richard Assheton Esq.
(born 1577) lived, during his fathers lifetime, at Mostyn
Hall near Manchester, and Blackley Hall near Middleton, and
married Mary, daughter of Sir Thomas Venebles, Baron of Kinderton,
a lady of exemplary piety and of great domestic virtue."
Richard died on November 17th 1618 and was buried at Middleton.
Francis
Nuttal, who died in 1519, was described as being of Blackley
Hall near Middleton, but in the parish of Manchester. He was
a lawyer and was the successor of William Assheton of Clegg
Hall in the high local office of steward of the court leet
and court Baron of Sir John Byron, the Manorial Lord of Rochdale.
On his death he left his lands and messuages at Blackley to
his son and heir, John Nuttall.
In
1623, John Nuttall leased lands in Blackley to Edward Holland
of Heaton for 299 years. Amongst the field names were Howgate
meadow Blackfield and Gladen Croft.
On
the 30th December 1630 the brother of John Nuttall died and
was buried in Middleton. This brother was referred to as Mr
James Nuttall de Blackeley.
By
indenture dated 16th March 1636, Ralph Assheton, Elizabeth,
his wife, and Mary, his mother, sold the Hall and closes called
Bottomley, Hunt Green, Ashenhurst, Hazelbottom &c. to
Francis Leigh of Lyme for £2,000. These remained in
the Leigh family until 1814. This indenture stated that this
included "the mansion howse ....... comonly called or
knowen by the name of Blakeley hall or the hall of Blakeley,
sytuate and being in Blakely in the said county of Lancaster".
'In
1650, in Blackley near Manchester, in one John Pendleton's
ground, as one was reaping, the corn being cut seemed to bleed;
drops fell out of it like to blood. Multitudes of people went
to see it, and the straws thereof, though of a kindly colour
without, were within reddish and as it were bloody.'
In
1666, there were four houses in Blackley having ten hearths
each. These belonged to Mr Legh, Ralph Bowker, Mr Bowker and
Edward Dawson. No other dwellirg had more than 5 hearths.
The population of Blackley at that time was 107 persons.
In
1714, the population of Blackley was 89 families or 'about
445 persons' .
For
many years Blakeley Hall was occupied by tenants and sub-tenants
as distinguished from owners, who ceased to reside there near
to the end of the 17th century. Following this time it was
occupied by a family named Shaw or Shay who probably resided
there until 1749.
In
1749, Blakeley Hall and 70 Cheshire acres (about 80 acres)
of the estate was leased to Joseph Scholes, a farmer of Ferney
Field, Chadderton, for the sum of £70 yearly to be held
for and during the life of his brother Robert, who was then
18 years of age. The Scholes lived in Blakeley Hall and farmed
the land until the lease expired on the death of Robert in
1815.
Around
1760 a schoolmaster named Nicholson rented a large room in
Blackley Hall from the Scholes family and kept a school for
150 pupils. Nicholson was the first person to report seeing
a 'boggart' (ghost) in the Hall.
This
ghost was reputed to be the wife of "Old Shay', a tenant
of the hall in the early 18th century, who, if rumours were
correct, had been murdered in the Hall and walked the deserted
rooms at night accompanied by a black dog making unearthly
noises in the dead of night, and taking liberties with the
crockery ware and doors of the rooms"
By
1774 the population of Blackley had grown to 270 families
or about 1,474 persons'.
When
Mr Nicholson died (around 1803), the school in the Hall was
taken over by Mr James Hall. At this time the school had no
less than 150 pupils and was well patronised by the village
children
In
1788-9 Mr Robert Rayson in conjunction with the Rev. Mr Griffiths,
the minister of St. Peter's Blackley, opened a Sunday school
in Blackley Hall.
In 1814 Blackley Hall and demesne held by the Leighs, was
sold in 34 lots. William Grant of Ramsbottom purchased, and
then in March 1815 demolished the Hall. This same month was
reputed to be the time of the last appearance of the ghost.
William
Grant and his brother, Charles (who were sterling millionaires),
were responsible for the building of most of Ramsbottom, a
market town near Bury, which is now best known for a restored
railway station belonging to and operated by the East Lancashire
Railway Preservation Society.
The
Grants were 'cheery' brothers who were well known for their
"benevolence and kindness" such that they were immortalised
by Charles Dickens as the Cheeryble Brothers in his novel,
Nicholas Nickleby.
The
Grants erected a printworks on the site of the old Hall, which
was occupied for the first few years by Edmund Taylor and
then by Messrs Wilson and Chreighton who employed about 200
hands. After Christmas 1839 the printworks closed.
"The
ghost of Shay's wife, or some other evil spirit had cursed
the place, for nothing appearance to prosper on the spot."
The
population of Blackley (acreage 1, 840), in 10-year periods
from 1801-1901 was as follows:
2361, 2389, 2911, 3020, 3202, 3503, 4112, 5174 (2,417 males,
2,757 females), 6075 (2,933 males, 3,142 females). 7332 (3,472
males, 3,860 females), 9012.
The
wedding dress for Queen Victoria, was made, by royal order,
at the Asshenhurst Works in Blackley by the firm of Messrs
James Houldsworth and Co, in accordance with the designs "drawn
and painted in the Queen's own hand".
In
accordance with an Act of Parliament in 1890, the "City
of Manchester Order", Blackley became part of the City
and six years later became part of the new township of North
Manchester.
The
first Municipal Election for the combined townships of Blackey
and Moston took place on Saturday 1st November 1890.
Bibliography
"The
History and annals of Blackley and Neighbourhood"
by Peter Wentworth (Peter Ball).
"The
Victorian History of England the County of Lancaster"
edited by W Farrer and J Brownhill.
"Mamecestre"
issued by the Chetham Society.
"History
of the Ancient Chapel of Blackley" by Rev.
John Booker.
"Antiquarian
Notes on Blackley and Moston" by Henry Thomas
Crofton.
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