Catalogue

ent 13 Wakes Annual Workers Holiday

£3.00

By the early 19th century, this annual event had become a festive period in so much as the “Wakes” fairgrounds, amusements, side-shows etc’ to which came thousands over the week August holiday. Many press reports exist which all describe in great detail as workers, for those occasion appeared clean and smart wearing their Sunday best, and for the women – well they turned out frequently in new dresses, many home made for the occasion.

So, if you want to learn and without doubt settle down to read this fascinating true story of potteries folk having a ‘good old-fashioned knees-up, this is an article not to miss. A good study of the social history of Stoke-on-Trent.

ent 14 The Newcastle & Potteries Theatre, 1788 to 1957

Original price was: £10.00.Current price is: £5.00.

That’s entertainment is not a history of the building, it’s a complete package of several disciplines’ which will attract local inhabitants, students of theatre history and development, social history of the period and how this addressed itself in theatre attendance. Not only that, but Dr. Talbot also expands his work by using examples within the limits of theatre development at the time. For most shows they consisted of several short plays followed by community singing. Many stars of the day also appeared at the theatre in a wide range of acts from opera to recitations but also included a two nights performance of Paganini, the international violinist in 1833.
The study of the early theatres captures the moment by illustrating the type of acts which trod the boards in its early years, then, gradually, to the demands of society moved forward towards music and even promenade concerts and the involvement of local musicians and minstrels even attracting the Sutherlands from Trentham as Patrons. It is also a fine example how the class-society of Newcastle, a weathy professional town operated and how servants were treated.

This study illustrates the challenges of competition and how that was tied into the social fabric of the town, followed by improvements in transport from the mid-1900s. In fact, it is a complete social history combining theatre, localities, social habits, and class distinction which was an integral part of society for most of the theatres existence.

A5 size 76 pages and loads of photographs includes the price of UK postage

ent 15 The Royal Manor of Penkhull and Newcastle under Lyme. 5000 years of history.

Original price was: £29.95.Current price is: £20.00.

Interested in history? Then this book on the ancient manor and village of Penkhull will be a must for your bookshelf. In contains more than 300,000 words, 496 pictures, maps and diagrams. This is a proper history book to read not a book of a few words of history and photos. All original research.

This is a book for reading, not a book just of pictures with a few captions. It is a book packed with information about the area commencing from the Ice Age, the Iron Age, the Roman occupation, the Bronze Age, the Middle Ages, the industrial revolution right up to the present-day containing information researched over the last twenty years and two years in the making. The early invaders into this area have left evidence dating from the middle Neolithic period in the form of a flint arrowhead, bronze-age incense cup and a stone axe head.

It was from a period of nearly 5,000 years ago that the village of Penkhull was created, probable because of its elevated and defensive situation standing above the River Trent and the Lyme Brook. Penkhull was a Royal Manor from the time of William the Conqueror to at least 1308, the time of Edwards II before it became absorbed into the Royal Manor of Newcastle-under-Lyme. The men of Penkhull provided guard at the castle as a form of rental.

The book is Hard Back, A 4 size containing 5,000 years of history, its unique as no other book contains so much original research material.

Cost now reduced to just £20 inc PP (UK) only 69 comies remain.

ent 2 Barnum and Bailey – the killing of an elephant 1898.

£3.00

Barnum and Bailey ‘s Greatest Show on Earth came to Stoke in 1898 and sadly the leading elephant had to be executed – by strangulation!

Sounds a strange title but it is a fact that the only method agreed by the USA with regards to the execution of elephants was by this method.  The most interesting thig is what actually happened to it once the elephant was dead. A great and interesting read.

ent 3 Buffalo Bills visit to Stoke 1891.

£3.00

Buffalo Bills Wils West visited twice to Stoke on Trent. Potteries folk came in their thousnds to see one of the worlds most amazing events of the time, ever to be witnessed in a poor, hardworking towns like Stoke untill Buffalo Bills Wild West Extravaganza  arrived at the County Cricket Ground, Shelton in August 1891 for six days. It travelled the city in its pre-show exhibition with all the razzermataz expected and probably attracted tens of thousands over its six day run. For those who have seen the film Annie Get Your Gun the title roll of Annie Oakley was to to be seen in action at the old County Cricket Ground. And yet it’s from this background and just the name of Col. Bill Cody that brought thousands from the far-flung corners of North Staffordshire to the first event in the Potteries. When the Deadwood coach was finally brought into the arena, first there was uproar from the crowd as the story of this part of the performance had been circulated previously. The coach was drawn by four mules, and a feature in the afternoon’s entertainment was an attack upon it by Indians, and in the rescue by no less than Buffalo Bill.

In addition, which enriching the potteries folk there was a buffalo hunt, a representation of the attack on a settled cabin by Indians, and Indian settlement and illustration of the old post express being attacked. The last suing and riding of the bucking horses by the Cowboys was an exciting scene which the applause of which could have shaken the very foundations of the cricket ground. Here Buffalo Bill took part and showed himself as an expert in shooting. The skill and pluck of the Cowboys was truly surprising. Altogether the entertainment was most satisfactory. In the evening there was another big gathering, of Indians around a campfire bringing the day to a triumphant end enriching people of the Potteries and raising their inner-being as never before.

ent 4 The Empire Theatre Longton.

£3.00

The Empire situated in Longton has for many decades been just a memory, destroyed by fire whilst up for sale. One of the most interesting items to come my way was an unpublished work by the late Rev. V.G. Aston who, during his curacy at a nearby parish became the local Actor’s Church Union Chaplain.

On one such occasion visiting the theatre he decided to catch the main attraction which was when wrestling challenges were offered to anyone in the audience live on stage, with a financial reward of £5 if they wone the fight – which in those days was an established form of entertainment, similar to what frequently happened at fairgrounds. The events turned out to be an audience punch-up – a great read in early music hall  entertainment.

ent 5 The Gordon Theatre – a new enterprise for the people of Stoke.

£5.00

The first theatre in the town of Stoke was a wooden one by the name of the Crown in what is Kingsway. It was built as a trial and struggled to obtain planning permission but achieved this as the owners stated it was to test the market in Stoke to see if people would attend. Following one year and a proven success it was quickly demolished and rebuilt as a stunning building with the benefits of luxury and art making it the most prestigious theatre of the district. Follow it life story until converted to a cinema and all the features removed to make it look a modern building.

ent 7 – Majestic Cinema, Stoke Children’s Matinee

£3.00

In the early 1950s children’s cinema matinees had become the norm and for the town of Stoke it was the ABC (Associated British Cinemas). Over a thousand children packed into the ‘ABC Minors Club’ at the old Majestic Cinema in Campbell Place, where children would hand over their precious six pence for a seat in the stalls and for the better-off nine pence for the circle. In the 1950’s these Saturday matinees became popular throughout the UK.
This article is a personal reflection of the author on the Saturday morning matinee at the Majestic cinema in Stoke. Quite a few surprises, even a letter from the once cinema manager who was called Aunty May who I traced living in Devon since retirement.
Memories kept flooding back regarding so many activities held, fancy dress, Christmas party, on state for a free ticket to celebrate the birthday children and much more. So, if interested in what the 1950s children got up to in those days, a great read and an eye opener.

ent 8 Majestic Cinema Stoke, History from 1914

£3.00

At the height of cinema growth in 1914, and with luck the area in Campbell Place had been cleared from the old pottery pot-bank and vacant for commercial development. And so, the thought of a brand-new purpose luxury cinema in the middle of Stoke town became a reality and opened on Monday 13th April 1914.

The new Majestic in the town of Stoke was one of the most popular of the four cinemas in the town. Designed with the best architecture and facilities of the time, even had its own orchestra not just a solo piano as most picture houses to accompany silent movies. It also boosted ‘upturn seats’ and the best ventilation system available (remember people smoked a lot in those days)

As such it was a success from the day of opening, the staff all in uniforms and a welcoming steward at the door. In fact, they all formed a kind of a second family if you were to attend twice a week as films changed on a Monday and Thursday. This article of two pages will no doubt bring back many memories of early cinema days. Contains four pahes of information on the advancement of cinema history with first talkies then in the mid-1950s the re-opening of the Majestic by the Lady Mayoress and many civic dignatories of CinemaScope in June 1955 which was sadly closed only a few years later as a result of many former patrons turing to television.

ent 9 Rock Around Clock (film) article

£3.00

This is an accout phenomenal success, Rock around the Clock, released in 1954 and show first in the Potteries at the Gaumont Cinema in Hanley. To packed houses, dancing is the isles, it was like a musical revolution never seen since the 1920s.  Bill Haley and the Comets recorded Rock around the Clock and created nothing less than a cultural revolution in the USA and Europe. This film and its music will go down in history as the one song that gave total freedom to the art of dancing.

exe 1 The horror of three executions at Stafford.

Executions used to be held in public, normally outside the goal gates and here hundreds of people from many parts of Staffordshire would arrive in Stafford to watch such an event and determined to get a good view. Why, perhaps psychologists can explain why you would wish to watch the last breaths taken by a fellow human being creates so much pleasure.

I guess that reading such an article regarding three executions one following the other remains a fascination to people like it did in times past. This one from 1834 refers to a good-looking lad of sixteen, Charles Shaw who was charged with the wilful murder of John Oldcroft, aged 16. For a lad of that age to have committed such a murder for the price of one shilling firstly illustrates the circumstances of poverty which his family lived. The other executions are recorded in full in the article available.

But who knows of his home life, for at 16 he may have been the breadwinner if his mother was a widow and he is perhaps the only one capable of earning anything at all just to survive and not being admitted to the workhouse. All three present a truly sad picture of the early years of the 19th century.

 

exe 2 The Abbots Bromley Murder 1857

£3.00

What was known as the Abbot’s Bromley Murder commenced in May 1857 at the Coach and Horses Inn, situated in the village of Bromley Hurst, a short walk from Abbots Bromley. At the bar stood William Charlesworth, a farmer aged sixty-seven who had been to market to sell cattle and had money on his person. Two young men were also in the bar, George Jackson aged twenty and Charles Brown aged twenty-one. At around midnight Charlesworth left with a friend but were followed by Jackson and Brown who were overheard before they left that they were going to have some fun with him. Charlesworth and his friend soon went their separate ways. Charlesworth had not walked far before he was knocked face down by Jackson. Brown then turned the body over and searching his pockets found a purse containing a large amount of money.
In this case the press reports seem to focus on the serious state of mind of Jackson as he awaits his coming ordeal in goal at Stafford. The writer spends some time in explaining the state of mind of Jackson, the involvement of the prison Chaplin and the final visit of his family.
As customary on these occasions the streets were flooded with visitors, many from miles away and were excited at the thought until Jackson was led to the high platform and the noose placed over his head. Despite the involvement of the prison Chaplin to console Jackson and then the final visit of his family to say goodbye was traumatic and he could not be consoled.
As customary on these occasions the streets were flooded with visitors, many from miles away and were excited at the thought until Jackson was led to the high platform and the noose placed over his head.

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