FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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Stanley
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

Post by Stanley »

:biggrin2: :good:
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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Cathy wrote: 31 Jan 2026, 04:22 I can still see our Grandma Tillotson (Tillum) behind one of the weaving machines..
And hear that awful noise.
When I was a young child and my parents were both on shift work to pay the rent I can remember my dad taking me with him to Haston Lee Mill in Blackburn to give my mum some lunch. As you say Cathy, an awful noise, what we usually called it was a `din'! Also I can still smell it but can't think how to describe that characteristic smell. Anyone who's been in a working in such a place would know the smell. :smile:

NB: At first I wrote Roe Lee Mill aka Haston Lee Mill because it seems to go under both names on the web when I looked but then I remembered why it gets confused so often. The local area is known as Roe Lee and its on Whalley New Road on the way to Brownhill roundabout. A street goes off to the left, under the railway bridge and round to Roe Lee Mill. Another street goes off the main road to the right and up the hill to Roe Lee Park. Before reaching the park you pass Haston Lee Mill on the left. I'm writing as if they still exist but they might not now.
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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The smell was mainly Raw linseed oil and whale oil, both of which were used in the shed for treating wood and leather connected with the looms.

Image

Mary Wilkin putting a full pirn in a shuttle. Jim Pollard reckoned she was the best weaver in the shed.
The thing that always struck me about her was that she was one of the weavers who looked just as clean and tidy when they went home at night as they were when they started in the morning.....
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

Post by PanBiker »

I used to mend Mary's TV, she lived in Salterforth in one of the houses on the left of Earby Road before the former railway bridge.
Ian
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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Image

Mary always had a clean tablecloth at dinnertime.... :biggrin2:
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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Thanks, Stanley and Ian, for those photos and comments about Mary. My mum was always smart and would have been like Mary in the mill. Of course it was all a bit off a shock for my mum coming to Blackburn after growing up in South Africa and having worked in the equivalent of a John Lewis shop in the Mediterranean climate of Port Elizabeth! :smile:
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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Thanks for commenting Peter. There was a very well established culture in the shed. It always struck me as being an extended family....

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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

Post by Big Kev »

Photos from Abigail Von Essen (via Facebook) from her late mother's collection.
The 1932 Barlick flood
FB_IMG_1770138557274.jpg
FB_IMG_1770138569856.jpg
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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I've not seen any of those before....

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Bancroft dam showing the ruins of Wilds' garage in the field above the dam where they stored the skeps and boxes that washed down and blocked the culverts....
Bancroft was blamed for the debris but nothing was stored outside, it all came from Wilds'
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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Bancroft shed awaiting demolition in 1979. I kept going back to take pictures even though it was all water under the bridge and we had no inkling that anything could be saved.
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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I enjoyed my dogs. Here I am with Joe in 2004. He was a rescue dog and I failed to bond with him. I had to take him back to the kennels but I tried and still have good memories of him.....
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

Post by Stanley »

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There was a time when I wore clogs and did my own repairs at home. Part of the kit was a supply of irons and I still have some even though I will never wear clogs again. They were the best footwear ever and you're feet were always warm and dry in well maintained clogs. The reason I stopped wearing them was when I went in the engine house in 1972.... They would have been dangerous on the surfaces I was walking on. I changed to Doc Martens boots and while they were comfortable and well made they did nothing for my foot health.
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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Image

Sorry about the quality. The only image I have of the Congregationalist Church on Gisburn Road. I can't be sure when this was but it is up for sale in the image. My best results from research are that it was built in 1913 and sold and demolished in 1970.
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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The railway bridge over the canal that carried the branch line into Barnoldswick around 1900
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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Image

Salterforth Bridge in 1900 before Kelbrook New Road was built. The shop in the background is the Co-operative.
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"Beware of certitude" (Jimmy Reid)
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Re: FORGOTTEN CORNERS

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Image

Billy Lambert (Also known as Billy Two Rivers) was a tackler who took up weaving after being injured by carrying beams into the shed on his shoulder. He was my secret weapon in the shed. I used to pop in in the morning and he would let me know whether to speed up or slow the engine a fraction to get the perfect speed for the days weather conditions. it must have worked because Jim Pollard the weaving manager told me I was the most popular bloke in the mill because I had put the weaver's wages up by an average of 30/- a week. Happy days!
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Old age isn't for cissies!
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