Time team dig deep at old bleach works
9:16am Wednesday 30th January 2013 in Local
ARCHAEOLOGISTS from the University of Salford will be digging in Moss Bank Park in a bid to uncover Bolton’s industrial past.
Now volunteers are needed to help with the dig, in March, which aims to find the remains of a series of homes linked to the Halliwell Bleach Works. University researchers want to shed light on how people lived during the industrial revolution and will be looking for the remains of workers’ cottages and a mansion, which was built by owners of the works in 1786 and was demolished in 1951.
Halliwell Bleach Works was founded in 1739 by Peter Ainsworth who acquired a bleach croft on the site of an older farm. Successive Ainsworths expanded the facility and a huge chimney built by John Horrocks Ainsworth still stands today.
Moss Bank Park is also thought to have a holy well, which gave Halliwell its name.
The well was a source of fresh water in medieval times but was filled in 1743 after the three-year-old daughter of bleacher Peter Ainsworth fell in and died.
The university is appealing for volunteers of all ages and abilities to help take part in the dig.
It is part of a larger four-year project called Dig Greater Manchester which university bosses say will help communities understand their local history.
Brian Grimsditch, from the centre for applied archaeology at the university, said: “We hope that the dig in Bolton will show us the contrasting lives of workers and managers during the industrial revolution by revealing how they lived side-by-side, but very different lives.”
A Bolton Council spokesman said: “Moss Bank Park has a rich and varied history as the site of the Halliwell Bleach Works and the chimney still stands as a testament to the area’s industrial heritage.
“We are delighted to give the university permission to excavate in the park and hope that they uncover some interesting evidence of the workers’ lives on this site.”
For more information, contact Vicky Nash on: 0161 2954009 or email v.nash@ salford.ac.uk.
Comments(4)
berushka
says...
11:09am Wed 30 Jan 13
Phil from Smithills
says...
1:11pm Wed 30 Jan 13
berushka
says...
10:36am Thu 31 Jan 13
Phil from Smithills wrote:spot on Phil, I think you and I are from the same era and may even have known each other. Used to love the smell of the stables and the farrier making shoes. Now I have two horses of my own, and still love the smell. Pity everything has gone to housing down that way.
The newish stone houses facing Barrow Bridge chimney, is where the stables where. As a little lad, my father would show me the stable ( now a house ) where my grandfather stabled his horse when he worked as a cartier for the bleach works.

Phil from Smithills says...
10:52am Wed 30 Jan 13
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This was for the horse carts to rest when being used to transport bleached cotton from the bleach works nearby.