Showing posts with label Station Street. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Station Street. Show all posts

Wednesday, 16 August 2023

My Lockdown Project: Paget Street, Loughborough


House name plaque bearing the words 'Paget Cottages 1884'
Paget Cottages - some of the earliest to be built on Paget Street

The lockdown periods of 2020-21-22 (depending on where you lived!) were probably the most shocking thing to have happened to us all, for a very long time, and so are still in our memory. During that time, while some people were getting to grips with working from home, and all the trials and tribulations that brought with it, others found themselves with more free time, stuck at home, unable to do the things they usually did, so might have embarked on some kind of project.

Sharon is one such person who took up a project. This involved researching a very interesting part of Loughborough and its history, and provided so much information that she wrote up her research in a book [1]! In the article below, Sharon tells us how she went about doing her research, and shares some of her discoveries with us …

My Lockdown Project

Paget Street, Loughborough 1891. A Glimpse into History

Sharon Gray

Lockdown came as a bit of a shock to me. As a Volunteer, I had been on duty in Loughborough Library Local Studies two days a week. I had also been working on projects for exhibitions and spending many hours researching family history for customers both in the library and at home. With Lockdown, these activities all came to an abrupt halt. I needed something to keep my mind active.

About two years previously I had begun investigating the Loughborough street where I grew up – Paget Street in the “Golden Triangle”. Paget Street is in the centre of a set of streets including Station Street and Storer Road. They were built in the late 1800s to house workers in the local factories, mainly Messengers, hence it was known as “Messenger’s Village”. [2]

View along part of Paget Street to Derby Road

View along part of Paget Street to Storer Road and St Peter's Church
View along part of Paget Street to Storer Road and St Peter's Church

Knowing that construction for all the houses on Paget Street would have been completed by 1891, I began by looking in the Census for that year. The Census would provide me with a complete record of the terraced houses and their occupants. The land had been donated by local landowners such as Mr. Paget and Mr. Storer. The site was then divided into plots, allowing spaces for three or four houses, all to be built as a terrace. These plots were then sold off to private landlords and builders.

Row of cottages called Albany Terrace, likely built by one builder, the roof levels being different only because of the slope of the street
Row of cottages called Albany Terrace, likely built by one builder, the roof levels being different only because of the slope of the street

As the houses were completed in blocks of three and four, all of them followed a similar but not exact design to the houses on adjacent plots. For example, some would have had different windowsills or roof heights, some were given builder’s plaques with house names such as “Nelson Houses 1890”. As the landlords and builders began to offer the houses for rent, it emerged that in most instances they were too expensive for low-paid factory workers. Consequently, skilled workers such as plasterers and bricklayers, bakers, clerks and teachers moved in. It turned out that Messenger’s workers were not among the first occupants of these houses in the numbers that had been predicted.

Houses called 'Nelson Houses' on Paget Street
Nelson Houses on Paget Street

Nelson House plaque, showing construction date of 1890
Nelson House plaque, showing construction date of 1890

My mind was kept active and occupied by working through the 1891 Census house by house, numbers 1 to 150. Finding out what happened to these families in the years after they moved into Paget Street appealed to my family historian curiosity. Most of the tenants were transient, staying for only a few years until they moved on to another house or another town.

My research then expanded into the occupations of the people who lived there in 1891, and how this contributed to Loughborough’s industrial scene. They worked for Morris’s, Cotton’s, Cartwright and Warner to name but a few. There was a plethora of small businesses such as grocers and tailors. I also looked at how the war impacted the families and found stories about soldiers and their exploits.

A shop on the corner of Oxford Street and Paget Street now converted to housing
A shop on the corner of Oxford Street and Paget Street now converted to housing

The estate pub, the Paget Arms
The estate pub, the Paget Arms

In 1956 my father, who had been a German POW, was offered work at William Hammond’s needle factory. The chance to buy no. 119 Paget Street with a council mortgage, was too good an opportunity to miss. My parents, my brother and I, packed up our goods and moved from rural Lincolnshire to Loughborough. My parents were both very proud when 25 years later they owned their house on Paget Street. My mother described it to me as a palace, compared with the prefab they lived in before they moved to Loughborough. Today an outside toilet and coalhouse would not be regarded as ideal. I have memories of an idyllic childhood, playing football in streets with no traffic, bike rides in the countryside and going to the “rec” with friends. I wonder what the children in 1891 thought of Paget Street?

The house I lived in for 23 years has now been refurbished and modernised and is home to new people. They will no doubt have completely different memories to mine of living in Paget Street – hopefully happy ones.

Red brick terraced houses
No. 119 Paget Street, left


Sharon Gray

Loughborough Library Local Studies Volunteer Group

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Biography

Sharon is a volunteer with the Loughborough Library Local Studies Volunteer Group, where her skills and experience in genealogy are put to good use, helping visitors to unlock some of their family history. Along with other volunteers, Sharon also gets involved in – and indeed organises – other research activity into various aspects of Loughborough’s history, is involved with preparation and hosting of the varied displays in the local history part of the library, looks after the books for the group (financial books, that is!), and is often seen promoting the work of the group at various heritage events. Before becoming a volunteer, Sharon, along with her husband, ran a hosiery company in the town.

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Notes

[1] The book is available to purchase from the Loughborough and Family History Centre, which can be found towards the rear of the older part of the Loughborough Public Library on Granby Street.

A selection of books published by the Loughborough Library Local Studies Volunteers
A selection of publications by the Loughborough Library Local Studies Volunteers

[2] A complementary article about this area appears in my post about Fearon Street and there is a similar, shorter study of Middleton Place

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Posted by lynneaboutloughborough

With apologies for typos which are all mine!

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Sunday, 27 January 2019

Lost buildings of 2018 Charnwood Forest Railway Goods Shed

The blog in 2019 seems to have started with a bit of a theme - lost buildings of 2018. Surely there can't be that many, can there?! Last week we had a look at the poor building on Granby Street (I've added a photo of how the site looks in January 2019) and the week before we looked at the demise of the Royal George pub on Nottingham Road. 

Today there follows a pictorial history of the remnants of the Charnwood Forest Railway buildings (I hope I've got it right and it is the goods shed!) and the re-development of the site up to this week, when the new Lidl supermarket seems to be close to being ready to open. 

It was in August 2018 when I visited the site that the foreman told me the story of the two German brothers who fell out and created rival supermarkets (Aldi and Lidl) which is why you often find both supermarkets close to each other. Well, since I was told this, I've checked it out and it turns out to be one of those urban myths!! In reality there are 2 branches of Aldi, run by brothers who may have fallen out about something, while Lidl is a completely different company.  


From March 2015:










From August 2018:























From January 2019:











You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2019). Lost buildings of 2018: Charnwood Forest Railway goods shed. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2019/01/lost-buildings-of-2018-charnwood-forest.html [Accessed 27 January 2019]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.
Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne