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Collyhurst

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Coordinates: 53°29′48″N 2°13′04″W / 53.496703°N 2.217846°W / 53.496703; -2.217846

Collyhurst


High rises at Collyhurst

Collyhurst is located in Greater Manchester
Collyhurst

Collyhurst shown within Greater Manchester
OS grid reference SD855000
Metropolitan borough Manchester
Metropolitan county Greater Manchester
Region North West
Constituent country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town MANCHESTER
Postcode district M40
Dialling code 0161
Police Greater Manchester
Fire Greater Manchester
Ambulance North West
European Parliament North West England
UK Parliament Manchester Blackley
List of places: UKEnglandGreater Manchester

Collyhurst is an area of the Manchester, a city in North West England. It is 1.5 miles (2.4 km) northeast of Manchester City Centre, on Rochdale Road and Oldham Road. The River Irk passes through the area.

Prominent buildings in Collyhurst could be said to include its local police station, Billy Greens pub which featured on the TV show "Toughest Pubs in the UK" - it also features in the video for The Beautiful South's single "Manchester", two Catholic churches St Patrick's and St Malachys.

For a brief period in the mid 1970s, The Electric Circus, a run down venue on Collyhurst st was formally The Palladium variety club found itself at the centre of Manchester's punk rock scene. It played host to bands such as the Sex Pistols, The Jam, Joy Division—then known as Warsaw— the Buzzcocks, Slaughter and the dogs and The Clash's "White Riot tour" before its closure in 1977. It has now been demolished.

Contents

[edit] Collyhurst sandstone and quarry

Sandstone at Collyhurst quarry
Entrance to Sandhills

Much of the red sandstone used for building in Manchester and the surrounding area, including the stone for the Roman fort at Castlefield, St Ann's Church, the roof of the Collegiate Church and the original buildings of Chetham's Hospital, came from Collyhurst Quarry.[1] Geologists use the term Collyhurst Sandstone for this type of soft red sandstone, which occurs in north-west England.[2] It is a fine to medium grained sedimentary rock, created from desert sands blown into dune formations during the Early Permian period, when the area which now constitutes the British Isles occupied a location within the desert belts to the north of the equator. The rock is not very resistant to weathering and erosion and disintegrates relatively quickly. The quarry was mentioned by John Leland in the description of Manchester in his book. The Itinerary of John Leland in or about the years 1535 to 1543, saying that there was " a goodly quarre hard by the towne".[3] The stone was transported the short distance into Manchester by river on barges or rafts.[1] The quarry is now disused and the area around it has been turned into a park called "Sandhills"[4] as part of Manchester City Council's Irk Valley Project.[5][6]

[edit] War memorial

There is a memorial on Rochdale Road next to what used to be Collyhurst Flats, erected by public subscription and unveiled by the Rt. Hon. Earl of Derby KG (Secretary of State for war) on 23 May 1923 to remember the men who fell in the First World War.

Collyhurst war memorial

[edit] Notable people

Although the area is one of the poorest in the city, it has been home to a number of sport stars and entertainers, which include:

[edit] References

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