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England (Counties as in 1851-1901) => England => Cheshire => Topic started by: Wilbs on Monday 21 June 10 02:09 BST (UK)

Title: Fair Eastham Ferry mid 1920s
Post by: Wilbs on Monday 21 June 10 02:09 BST (UK)
My grandfather William Thomas Bagby (born Wolverhampton 1900) met his future wife Marie Louisa Green (born Liverpool 1904) at a fair at Eastham Ferry in the mid 1920s.  (The couple married 1927).  Marie Louisa traveled across the Mersey by Ferry and William was living by the docks in Ellesmere Port at the time.

Were these fairs agricultural (like the Cheshire Show) or pure pleasure with rides, candy floss and sideshows?

Has anyone any details of the fairs that were held around about that date.  Photographs or a web article would be wonderful.

Thank you

Wilbs

Title: Re: Fair Eastham Ferry mid 1920s
Post by: Hollander on Monday 21 June 10 03:09 BST (UK)
Hi Wilbs.

There were pleasure gardens at Eastham Ferry until the 1930s, and it used to be a popular resort for a day trip for people from Liverpool and the Wirral area.
Title: Re: Fair Eastham Ferry mid 1920s
Post by: Wilbs on Monday 21 June 10 03:44 BST (UK)
Thank you Finbar.

Yes, I agree that they probably met at the Pleasure Gardens and Google has masses of information on it.  It appears that the Gardens contained a zoo, with "rare and tropical birds, Arctic Seals & Polar Bears, African Lions, Indian Leopards, Elks, Ocelots, Cassowaries, Black, brown & silver bears, Aviary, Monkey House," as well as landscaped gardens with Rhododendrons, Azaleas, ornamental trees and fountains.

Also an open air stage, tea rooms, bandstand, ballroom, boating lake, water chute and a loop-the loop roller coaster. Entertainers performed in the gardens during summer, and included Blondin, the famous tight-rope walker who once wheeled a local boy across a high wire in a wheelbarrow.

What a day out!

Best wishes

Wilbs
Title: Re: Fair Eastham Ferry mid 1920s
Post by: Colin D Gronow on Monday 21 June 10 10:08 BST (UK)
Some pictures of what it looked like when your Grandfather went, and what it looks like now can be found here:
http://www.wikiwirral.co.uk/forums/ubbthreads.php/topics/367580/1.html
Title: Re: Fair Eastham Ferry mid 1920s
Post by: Certacito on Monday 21 June 10 20:22 BST (UK)
Did your grandfather have anything to do with canals?  Just wondering why he was in Eport and came from Wolverhampton?
Title: Re: Fair Eastham Ferry mid 1920s
Post by: Wilbs on Tuesday 22 June 10 00:11 BST (UK)
Hi Certacito

My (maternal) Granddad was an only child, having lost his mother at a very early age.  In 1905 great granddad (his father) was one of the workers at the Wolverhampton Corrugated Iron Company that moved to Ellesmere Port to the newly created Mersey Iron Works (later to be renamed Burnells Iron & Steel Company and in the 1960s British Steel).

http://www.scars.org.uk/cuttings/volume6/issue6-12/corrugated.html

When old enough (12-13?) granddad went and worked with his father.

The company chose Ellesmere Port because of the canal, so to answer your questions, yes, the canal played a major part in relocating our family.

Incidentally, the canal also moved my other (paternal) grandfather from Frodsham.  He was a brick maker and moved to Ellesmere Port  to make the bricks to build not only the canal but also Cambridge Road School.
Title: Re: Fair Eastham Ferry mid 1920s
Post by: Certacito on Tuesday 22 June 10 11:34 BST (UK)
Fascinating stuff. Never realised there was a mass migration from Wolverhampton.  Thanks for that.
Title: Re: Fair Eastham Ferry mid 1920s
Post by: WarwickD on Friday 24 September 10 09:33 BST (UK)
Hi
picked this chat up rather late. I am interested in any information on families coming to the steelworks at Ellesmere Port in the early 1900's. The story was of my grandfather William Hampton moved from Wolverhamton by way of the Shropshire Union Canal.
Title: Re: Fair Eastham Ferry mid 1920s
Post by: Wilbs on Sunday 26 September 10 02:14 BST (UK)
Hi Warwick

In 1994 I bought a book "The Old Photographs Series - Ellesmere Port" compiled by Pat O'Brien for just under 8 pounds.  I don't know if this book is still in print, or available from the library, but it has several photographs that relate to the Iron Works and the "bottom end of the Port".

It also shows some of the streets that housed the workforce, including Shropshire Row and the canal basin at the end of Cromwell Road.  It was 1919 before Ellesmere Port Council build any houses so with the large influx of workers into the town it was up to the individual companies to provide accommodation. 

My family was living in Woodfield Road at the time of the 1911 census, which shows 7 people occupying 4 rooms.  All the adult males were born in Wolverhampton and worked at the Iron Works, so it's fairly safe to say that the area around there was its housing.

Do you know where your grandfather lived in 1911?  This may confirm some of the family story.

Best wishes

Wilbs
Title: Re: Fair Eastham Ferry mid 1920s
Post by: Cath Hy on Friday 08 October 10 10:37 BST (UK)
As a member of the Boat Museum Society which supports the national Waterways Museum at Ellesmere Port, I am doing some research on the history of Wolverhampton Corrugated iron Co at Ellesmere Port and am very interested in families which moved with the company from Wolverhampton.
Do you know how your family came to the Port? Do you know if they walked the tow path as some are reputed to have done? Where did they live after they arrived?

I know that Stan Cullis's family was one of those than came to EP from W/hampton - he later played football for Wolves & England.