I have recently come across an old newspaper advertisement announcing that a man intended to apply for a full public house licence for a beerhouse he owned in Stanley, North West Durham. Nothing strange in that - except it was called "The Isle of Man"- which was a pretty exotic name for a pub serving some of the poorest people in England and none of the locals could ever afford to travel there.
Later, I found a group of at least four streets, and possibly more, which all had IOM names as well as others that showed no names. I think you will agree that Douglas Street, Laxey Street, Ramsay Street and Peel Street are IOM names and the people who lived in them were probably from your island and were working in the coal mines here. These houses were built before 1895 and were demolished in the 1950s and were not in any way luxurious.
Can anyone please tell me if it is likely that Manx people would travel this far for mine work? Would they feel a strong enough urge to come this far for difficult, dangerous and dirty work? Would they have mining experience? And, specifically, are there any typical surnames I should look for when trying to trace them?
I would also like to know when there was a larger scale migration from the island as there were a lot of houses in these streets and the beerhouse mentioned above was built around 1870.
Thank you in advance.
Elliven