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 150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
This page is a series of weekly articles that describe llfe in the Lancashire town in the 1870s and which are updated every Sunday morning.
150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK
This page is a series of weekly articles that describe llfe in St Helens in Lancashire in the 1870s and which are updated every Sunday morning.
Sandfield Crescent St Helens summary

150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (11th - 17th MAY 1870)

This week's stories include the performing bears in St Helens, the runaway horse in Liverpool Road, a brutal assault takes place on a Whiston wife, the widening of Ormskirk Street, the St Helens train that hit a horse, a Prescot publican is charged with harbouring a policeman, the bullyragged woman from Sandfield Crescent and the "idle, drunken and disorderly" woman charged with sleeping in the open air at Windle.
READ FULL ARTICLE
Gas works St Helens summary

150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (4th - 10th MAY 1870)

This week's stories include the Parr woman violently assaulted by her husband, a succession of accidents take place at Farnworth, the woman who was removed from the court dock howling terribly and tearing her bonnet, the Worshippers of the Rosy God appear in court, the gruesome case of the wandering cow, Greenalls annual dinner for their tenants at the Fleece and why St Helens folk were worked up over gas.
READ FULL ARTICLE
Pilkington Glass St Helens summary

150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (27th APRIL - 3rd MAY 1870)

This week's many stories include the freaks of nature at the St Helens Fair, an update on the Pilkington glassblowers' strike, the Rainford miner's family that were in complete destitution, the annual May Day horse and cart parade in St Helens, the Rainhill drunk who thought Yorkshire was another country and the fearfully cold man who was in a police cell because he had found a fork and spoon on an Eccleston road.
READ FULL ARTICLE
Old St Helens Town Hall summary

150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (20th - 26th APRIL 1870)

This week's many stories include the drunken cook in Whiston Workhouse, an update on the Pilkington glass strike, the deadly joke that was played on a female tramp at Haydock, an arson attack on land at Eccleston, the lodgers in the old Baldwin Street workhouse, another wandering cow story, the annual distribution of the Windle Dole and the man who blamed being "beerified" for thieving from Rainford's Bridge Inn.
READ FULL ARTICLE
Prescot Parish Church summary

150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (13th - 19th APRIL 1870)

This week's stories include the "obnoxious individual" mobbed by a crowd of angry women outside St Helens courthouse, the drunken row of the two Prescot carters, the opening of Victoria Pleasure Gardens in Thatto Heath, the start of a long strike at Pilkingtons over a cut in wages, the St Helens solicitor's clerk who did a runner with his boss's cash and the controversial issue of a Sunday offertory at Prescot Church.
READ FULL ARTICLE
Citadel

150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (6th - 12th APRIL 1870)

This week's many stories include the "contemptible set of adventurers" performing at the Theatre Royal, the woman who went back to live with her violent husband in Moss Bank, a poker assault in a lodging house in Tontine Street, two women battle it out in Greenbank, two more women battle it out in Parr, the girl who stole a child's sovereign in Pocket Nook and concern over the danger of drowning in St Helens Canal.
READ FULL ARTICLE
Crown Glassworks Summary

150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (30th MARCH - 5th APRIL 1870)

This week's stories include the Bridge Street butcher's wife who said her husband threatened to cut her heart out, the "shocking immorality and depraved habits" revealed in court, an inquest jury calls for human life at St Helens Canal to be protected, a savage assault on an "old man" of fifty at Peasley Cross, the man prosecuted for wasting water and why the copper workers in Sutton had presented a bible to their boss.
READ FULL ARTICLE
Ell Bess Arms Summary

150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (23rd - 29th MARCH 1870)

This week's stories include the Park Road woman who claimed a policeman made her return to her abusive husband, the Fingerpost baby that died after catching a cold, the noxious fumes from Sutton Copper Works that damaged the Bold Hall estate, the Rainhill love letter, the Free Town Hall Breakfast Table and the Waterloo Street cannon explosion when workmen celebrated the 21st birthday of their boss's son.
READ FULL ARTICLE
St Annes Summary

150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (16th - 22nd MARCH 1870)

This week's many stories include the madman inside St. Anne's monastery, why cannons were being fired in celebration in Rainhill, two women scrap like bulldogs in Pocket Nook, the depraved young girl from Napier Street, the scandalous slander charge against a couple from Rainhill, the Parr woman who forgave her husband for assaulting her and the bare-knuckle prize fighter that brutally attacked a Prescot woman.
READ FULL ARTICLE
Prescot Penny Bank

150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (9th - 15th MARCH 1870)

This week's stories include the dirty, ragged children causing pandemonium outside the Prescot Penny Bank, the "undaycent" name-calling by a woman in Parr, trespassing in pursuit of game in Moss Bank, the brainless watch-stealing lodger in Rainford, the excitable woman in the St Helens County Court and concern that the Rivers Pollution Commissioners would ban St Helens factories from polluting streams.
READ FULL ARTICLE
Whiston Workhouse

150 YEARS AGO THIS WEEK (2nd - 8th MARCH 1870)

This week's stories include the Irish Fenians that would meet in a Parr Street beerhouse, a three-year-old Sutton boy is summoned to court for smashing a window, the St Helens' works that made candles for coal mines, the Parr man who walked out on his family leaving them penniless, the fees for lunatics in Rainhill Asylum, the infestation of burglars in St Helens, and a setback for plans to widen Church Street.
READ FULL ARTICLE