St Helens History This Week

Bringing History to Life from 50, 100 and 150 Years Ago!

Bringing History to Life from 50, 100 and 150 Years Ago!

ST HELENS 100 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
This page is a series of weekly articles that describe llfe in the Lancashire town in the 1920s and which are updated every Sunday morning.
100 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
This page is a series of weekly articles that describe llfe in St Helens in Lancashire in the 1920s and which are updated every Sunday morning.
Wellington Hotel summary

IOO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (13th - 19th DECEMBER 1921)

This week's stories include complaints from Higher Parr Street residents over vibrations from passing lorries shaking pictures on walls, the West Park hens theft, a Christmas treat is planned for the poorest children of the borough, the Reporter Man goes round the town, more houses on the pioneering Windlehurst council estate are ready for occupation and the Parr girls being prepared for domesticity in the home.
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Hardshaw Street summary

IOO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (6th - 12th DECEMBER 1921)

This week's stories include the boy that found a baby's body inside a Croppers Hill dustbin, St Helens Ladies reflect on an FA ban on women's football being played on member grounds, the boy thieves who were caught through examining their ill-gotten gains in Hardshaw Street, the tragic unemployed old man's demise in St Helens Canal and the Russian Pole that moved to St Helens in order to avoid paying income tax.
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Sacred Heart summary

IOO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (29th NOV. - 5th DEC. 1921)

This week's stories include the unnecessary lurid details contained within the Stanhope Street divorce case, the bookie heavily fined for running a church lottery, the Church Street stealing by finding of a gold medallion, the special all star matinee at the Theatre Royal in aid of crippled children, the little Indian girls on a world tour who came to St Helens and why Great Britain was losing the toy war with the defeated Germany.
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Robb Wilton summary

IOO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (22nd - 28th NOVEMBER 1921)

This week's stories include the woman in a child neglect case labelled a dirty, filthy, useless person, a grisly discovery is made in Eccleston, Saints play the Australian rugby league team at Knowsley Road, St Helens Council's Highways Committee goes green, the famous comic Robb Wilton performs at the Hippodrome and the one-legged ex-miner who the Sutton Heath Colliery Co. was taking to the House of Lords.
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Motor bike racing summary

IOO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (15th - 21st NOVEMBER 1921)

This week's many stories include how a strict family upbringing had led to the Dentons Green birth concealment case, the motorbike in Church Street that was travelling at a big speed, a Peasley Cross bookie is brought to book, the council's Health Committee criticise Jewish animal slaughter methods, how mistaking poison for peppermint cost a man his life and the wandering Spanish alien and his donkey and organ.
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Co-op stores summary

IOO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (8th - 14th NOVEMBER 1921)

This week's stories include the general apathy in St Helens over Remembrance Day, the inaugural Poppy Day collection takes place, a horse-driven lorry and motor van battle it out in Parr Stocks Road, the woman who claimed to have been assaulted by filthy talk in Sutton, the thought-reading act called Rungamah at the Hippodrome and the man prosecuted after being given the wrong change in a pub.
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Bishops Keating Chavasse summary

IOO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (1st - 7th NOVEMBER 1921)

This week's stories include the St Helens public's opportunity to saw a woman in half at the Hippodrome, the abused wife who said she'd been covered in gores of blood, success for Labour in council elections, a St Helens soldier's divorce through his wife's misconduct and the unveiling of war memorials at Rainford Parish Church, St Thomas's Church and in aid of the tramway men who had lost their lives in the conflict.
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Sutton Bond summary

IOO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (25th - 31st OCTOBER 1921)

This week's stories include the Nutgrove miner who thought he didn't have to pay any rent while he was out on strike, the dead Dentons Green baby that was hidden inside a tin box, the Sutton man who sued his own son-in-law, the Windle Motor Company of Duke Street advertise the Ford Sedan, the Sutton army surplus thieves receive lenient sentences and there's good news for the rising rugby star of Lingholme Road.
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Chaplin the Kid summary

IOO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (18th - 24th OCTOBER 1921)

This week's many stories include the unruly scenes as Communists and counter-Communists clash in St Helens Town Hall, the alcoholic woman who was found to be saturated in spirits, the wife and niece-beating Westfield Street tobacconist, Charlie Chaplin's highly-rated film 'The Kid' comes to two cinemas in St Helens, Rainford's first public market opens for business and Lord Derby unveils Rainhill's war memorial.
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Sexton Brighouse summary

IOO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (11th - 17th OCTOBER 1921)

This week's stories include the dastardly attack by Communists on the St Helens' MP's motorcar, the motorbike road racing in Eccleston, the 15-year-old from Leeds on the run in Rainford, an update on the appeal to find the mother of the abandoned Rainford baby and the tragedy of the desperate out of work miner who accidentally drowned in St Helens Canal while attempting to flee from the police after stealing coal.
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Plaza summary

IOO YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (4th - 10th OCTOBER 1921)

This week's stories include the baby abandoned at the side of a busy road in Rainford, there's a settlement of the Clock Face relief work dispute, more street betting takes place in Sutton, the Oxford Picturedrome's serial thriller, the turns performing at the Hippodrome, a coroner criticises St Helens' roads as unfit to cope with heavy motor wagons and the pawnbrokers in Liverpool that had never had it so good.
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