Butler Green

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Butler Green
Butler Green is located in Greater Manchester
Butler Green
Butler Green
 Butler Green shown within Greater Manchester
OS grid reference SD 90450 03767
   – London    
Metropolitan borough Oldham
Metropolitan county Greater Manchester
Region North West
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town OLDHAM
Postcode district OL9
Dialling code 0161
Police Greater Manchester
Fire Greater Manchester
Ambulance North West
EU Parliament North West England
UK Parliament Oldham West and Royton
List of places
UK
England
Greater Manchester

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Butler Green is a locality in the town of Chadderton in Greater Manchester. The area is also known as Washbrook.[1]

It is located in the south east of the town, contiguous with Coalshaw Green, Whitegate, Nimble Nook, Block Lane and Hollinwood.[2]

Hollinwood Rugby League Club are based at Butler Green on Melrose Fields, the site of the former Melrose Mill.[3]

History

File:Gem Mill, Chadderton - geograph.org.uk - 216409.jpg
The now demolished Gem Mill, Butler Green

Formerly a hamlet consisting of a number of homesteads and other property, Butler Green lies on the network of ancient roads that linked the various hamlets and villages of Chadderton to the manor houses at Foxdenton and Chadderton Hall.[4] The hamlet was also archaically known as Butler Fold.[5]

Butler Green along with the neighbouring hamlet of Old Lane, became a centre of industrial activity in the late 18th century with the construction in 1792 of the Werneth Branch Canal in an area called Jig Brow. It lay at the intersection of Washbrook and Old Lane.

The two hamlets were separated by Washbrook, a short stretch of road and surrounding area which got its name because of the brooks which flowed from the higher ground of nearby Werneth.

The Canal terminated at a basin known as Hollinwood Top Wharf and was a privately built extension of the Hollinwood Branch Canal to facilitate the transportation of coal from the Werneth Collieries to Manchester and other industrial centres. The New Engine Pit at Old Lane dates to 1803. By 1875 these collieries were no longer producing coal and the canal fell into disuse.[6]

In 1876 the northern section of the Werneth Branch Canal was destroyed with the construction of an embankment at Washbrook for the Oldham Loop Line railway which opened in 1880.[6][7]

A "Primitive Methodist" Society had begun meeting in Butler Green in 1862 in a disused loom house in the wake of what was known as the "cotton famine revival." In 1869 they erected their first building at the corner of Butler Green and Coalshaw Green Road with its three clock faces looking out from its tower across the road junction. [8]

In common with other areas of Chadderton, the late 19th century saw Butler Green expand into a cotton mill district with the construction of Butler Green Mill (1863), Melrose Mill (1869), Gem Mill (1901) and others. These mills have now been demolished and replaced with housing developments. See List of mills in Chadderton.

A network of new roads was built during this period - Coalshaw Green Road leading to the hamlet of that name, Stanley Road connecting the area to Manchester Road, Hollinwood and Fields New Road leading to Cowhill through the former Fields Farm. Spencer Street, linking Old Lane to the Top of Hollinwood was also constructed during this period, spawing a major industrial district stretching to Manchester Road. The new roads were a major factor in the urbanisation of the east side of Chadderton, resulting in agglomeration between the former hamlets and villages and the rapidly expanding district of Freehold lying immediately to the north in the town of Oldham.

Stanley Road School is a long standing educational establishment first built in 1903 and has been used by a variety of primary and secondary schools since including South Chadderton School and Freehold Community School. For a period up to 1988 it housed Butler Green Primary School before reverting to its original name of Stanley Road.[9]

Butler Green was quite a substantial village until redevelopment took place in the 1970s. A cluster of shops stood at the crossroads whilst Washbrook Methodist Church, with its public clock, formed the focal point for the community.[10] In the post-war period and on into the 1960s shops on Butler Green included Patch the chemist at no. 8, Monaghan the draper's at 10-12, Spence Bros. butcher's at 13, Whittam the baker at 20, Stafford's fish, fruit, flowers and veg at 22, not forgetting the Clock Corner Restaurant and Dyson's undertaker's.[11]

File:Chadderton - Higher House Close (geograph 1675950).jpg
Higher House Close, location of the former Higher House Farm

There are three long standing public houses remaining in the Washbrook area. The Washbrook Tavern, formerly called the Britannia Hotel, which was first licensed in 1868, The Owd Tatts, originally called The Commercial Inn, which dates from the 1850s and the Colliers Arms which dates from around 1803 and the opening of New Engine Colliery.[4]

Butler Green once had its own police station. Located at the junction of Thompson Lane and Butler Green the building is now used as a hostel.[12]

A new parade of shops, including Butler Green sub post office, was built at Butler Green in 1974. [13]

Religion

Since 1870 the area has been a part of the ecclesiastical parish of Christ Church, Chadderton, the parish church being on Block Lane.[14]

South Chadderton Methodist Church

The present church at Butler Green came into existence in January 1966, with the amalgamation of 4 churches, (Cowhill, Eaves Lane, Washbrook and Turf Lane) with members from Edward Street (Werneth) joining following the closure of their church in 1967. The amalgamation came about primarily because of ageing and declining congregations, lack of finance and poor maintenance of the buildings.

Washbrook Church came into being in the autumn and winter of 1861-62 as a result of the outreach by evangelists from the Primitive Methodist church in Bourne Street, Hollinwood.

Accommodation in the form of the Loom House, situated adjacent to the railway bridge on Washbrook, was acquired. This building became too small for the increasing congregation and Sunday school.

A site was acquired at the junction of Washbrook, Coalshaw Green Road and Butler Green and by 1869 a chapel and schoolroom were erected.

The Washbrook church that many people would recognise, complete with clock tower, was opened on the 11th March 1893.

The churches that formed the new South Chadderton Methodist church from January 1966 to December 1969, held their meetings in the premises that had been the Washbrook church until the present day church was opened in 1970.[15][16]

Corpus Christi (Roman Catholic)

A growing Irish population in the south Chadderton and Hollinwood area saw the need for a Catholic church to be established there.

The first effort to set up a chapel came through Fr. John Baste in 1877. Two small cottages in Maple Street were rented and a poorly furnished chapel received the few Catholics.

The Rev. C. Muller took charge and was helped by Dean Brindle to buy land in Old Lane and to build a school-chapel. This was opened in 1878 by Canon Sheehan, Vicar-General.

Fr. Thos. Walsh was here from 1879 to 1888, and built the presbytery.

Fr. B. Flynn was forced to raise funds to enlarge the schools. and this new school-chapel was opened in 1903.

The current church building was built in 1933.[17]

Transport

First Greater Manchester operate the following bus services -

81/81a to Manchester City Centre via Moston and Harpurhey and to Holts Estate and Derker via Oldham

415 to Lees via Oldham and to Middleton via Alkrington[18]

Service 159 operated by Manchester Community Transport provides links to Oldham via Chadderton town centre and to Middleton via Hollinwood, Woodhouses, Failsworth and New Moston.

References

  1. http://www.chadderton-hs.freeuk.com/page4-events-2001-ToDate.htm | Chadderton Historical Society Retrieved 01 April 2016.
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  4. 4.0 4.1 Chadderton Pubs And Their Licencees 1750 - 1999, Magee Rob (1986) ISBN 978 185216 134 7
  5. https://archive.org/stream/historicaldescri00butt#page/n3/mode/2up
  6. 6.0 6.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  7. http://www.pittdixon.go-plus.net/ac-hollinwood-top/ac-hollinwood-top.htm
  8. pp2-11, "The Story of Primitive Methodism in Washbrook, 1862 - 1915", 1916.
  9. http://www.oldham-chronicle.co.uk/news-features/8/news-headlines/13911/stanley-pupils-journey-back-in-time
  10. P.125 Lawson, Michael; Johnson, Mark (1997), Images of England: Chadderton, Tempus, ISBN 0-7524-0714-7
  11. Washbrook Methodist Church Centenary leaflet 1962
  12. P.118 Lawson, Michael; Johnson, Mark (1997), Images of England: Chadderton, Tempus, ISBN 0-7524-0714-7
  13. P.120 Lawson, Michael; Johnson, Mark (1997), Images of England: Chadderton, Tempus, ISBN 0-7524-0714-7
  14. http://www.achurchnearyou.com retrieved 29.7.14
  15. http://www.southchad.org.uk/Washbrook.html
  16. http://mymethodisthistory.org.uk/page/a_short_history_of_south_chaderton_methodist_church
  17. http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/LAN/Hollinwood/CorpusChristi.shtml
  18. http://www.traveline-northwest.co.uk/cms/content/welcome.xhtml

External links

Christ Church parish church, Block Lane: http://www.christchurchchadderton.co.uk

South Chadderton Methodist Church: http://www.southchad.webspace.virginmedia.com/

Washbrook Primitive Methodist Church, Butler Green: http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/LAN/Chadderton/ButlerGreenWashbrookPrimitiveMethodist.shtml

Hollinwood Rugby League Club: http://www.freewebs.com/hollinwoodarlfc/

Corpus Christi School: http://corpuschristi.oldham.sch.uk/

Stanley Road School http://www.stanleyroad.oldham.sch.uk/