Christ Church Vicarage. Each year it hosts a wonderful garden party for the community
Carmel College as I remember it from my student days - it's even bigger now!
The entrance to the Carmelite Monastery
The view through the lychgate
A view of the beautiful grounds at Christ Church
Christ Church Parish Hall
Mums and tots group meeting in Christ Church Parish Hall
It's still a nightmare to park outside Christ Church 16 years on!
Flats at Gillars Green
De La Salle RC High School
Mill Dam and the Fire Station
Eccleston Library and the doctors', now a day nursery
Eccleston Mere
Eccleston Mere Primary
Eccleston Wood estate, opposite Christ Church
Gillars Green shops
Howard's Farm, a reminder of the area's rural roots
Kiln Lane junction shops - Thresher's and Flix video shop have now been replaced by BocBoc. Christie's is still going strong!
The Methodist Church, now sadly demolished.
Millbrook Cottages, also known as Chapel Cottages, to the left of the image.
The interior of Christ Church Eccleston
The entrance to Taylor Park and Parkside Residential Home
Post-war housing on Broadway
The Royal Oak (on the far left) on the East Lancs
The Seven Stars
St Julie's RC Church
St Julie's RC Primary
The Stanley Arms - one of the few buildings in these images that still looks the same!
The Griffin Inn
Trapwood Close
Trapwood Community Centre
Triplex site and Eccleston Social Club
The Smithy Heritage Centre and Village Hall
Walmesley Road shops
The exterior of the Smithy as it is now
Our 1891 Ordnance Survey map, one of our most popular exhibits - visitors love finding the location of their house, or rather what used to be where their house is located!
The interior of the Smithy
"Bob" the blacksmith hard at work on our model forge
Wind-up Toy - this is chicken is made of tin, and has a simple clockwork mechanism inside it that would be wound with a key. The chicken then hops around and pecks at the floor. It is made from folded thin pieces of tin that have quite sharp edges.
Whip & Top - you would wrap the whip around the top and pull quick to release it across the floor, then you would thrash it with the whip to make the top spin round on the pointed end. It's very tricky, and quite dangerous too!
Washing Tongs - these would be used to grab the wet washing out of the dolly tub, or the hot water of the burning copper (a huge pot for boiling clothes in).
Swing Toys - these worked by squeezing the bottoms of the handles together, which makes the character on the top flip over, jump, and do tricks depending on how quickly and how hard you squeeze.
Soap - unless you were very wealthy, the same bar of soap would be used to clean everything in the house: your clothes, dirty dishes, the floor, your hair and your body!
Slates & Pencils - these were used by small children to learn to write on, as paper was very expensive in Victorian times - slates could be wiped with a damp cloth and the writing would disappear. The pencils are made from slate too, and it scratches the surface making a horrible screeching sound.
Slate - this one is double-sided, with a plain side and a gridded side, used for arithmatic.
Ink Wells. These would be filled with ink for use with a dip pen.
Icing Syringe and dessert mould. We still use similar items nowadays, but they are made from plastic or silicone rubber. These are tin and copper.
Humming Top - the top handle would be pumped up and down, which makes the top spin. When it is released, the top spins upright, and the tiny holes around the edge make a humming noise as the air goes through them.
Scrubbing Brush - used to clean surfaces, floors, and even the front step. It was hard work. Washing Blue - this was added to water to turn it blue, and the clean white washing would be rinsed in the blue water to make it appear extra-white. Darning Mushroom - this would be put inside a sock or knitted garment to hold its shape while you darned it. Darning is a special type of sewing to fill in the holes in worn-out fabric.
Hoop & Stick - these were outdoor toys, with the stick being used to tap the hoop along to keep it rolling upright along the street, and then the hook end would be used to catch it. They were often made by blacksmiths, and if the hoops were to break they could be repaired by heating the metal and hammering it back into a hoop again, but each time it would be repaired it would get smaller!
Dip Pens - so-called because you had to dip the nibs into ink, and you would only be able to write a few words at a time.
Copybooks - once a child had learned to write on a slate, they would move onto a pen and ink, and they would practise in a copybook, literally copying the alphabet into boxes over and over. As they progress through the copybook, the tasks become harder, and the styles of lettering become more fancy.
Cup & Ball - this is an example of a penny toy, simple wooden toys so-called because they would only have cost one penny. The object of the game is to flip the ball up into the air and catch it in the cup. It sounds easy, but it's quite tricky - and very addictive!
Dolly Pegs - these were used to hang out washing, but many poor Victorian children would turn them into dolls or soldiers to play with.
Fingerstocks - another teachers' tool used in Victorian times. Fidgeting children would be made to put their hands behind their backs and into the fingerstocks. Although the children are not locked into them, they wouldn't dare escape because they'd be given the cane! If a child continued to fidget whilst wearing the fingerstocks, they would become stuck as they gradually work their way up and your fingers swell from the heat - and that means more punishment!
Diablo - a tricky game that many circus performers still use today - flipping the diablo up and catching it on the rope using the handles
Backboard - another Victorian school punishment. If you were slouching, you would be made to hook this underneath your arms, forcing you to sit bolt upright. It is very uncomfortable, and means that you can't get any work done, but it teaches slouching students a lesson!
Chamber Pot - these would be kept in your bedroom before the days of indoor toilets to save you having to walk down the garden path in the middle of the night to use the loo! Back-to-back houses belonging to poor working class Victorians didn't even have their own toilet - they would share one between up to as many as fifteen families - phew!
Cane - naughty schoolchildren would be hit with this by their teacher if they were disobedient in class, and depending on the severity of their naughtiness or the temper of the teacher they would be caned over the palms, knuckles, the backs of the legs, or even on the bottom!
Butter Pats - these would be used to shape butter into blocks
The old stone cottages that stood on the corner of St Helens Road and Burrows Lane, taken in January 1959
January 1961
The old Eccleston Post Office, taken in Autumn 1958
Eccleston Mere Primary, formerly Chapel Lane School, taken in Spring 1974
Almond's, Church Lane, Eccleston, taken in Autumn 1970
Field Day, Eccleston 1930. This "Field Day" was held on the fields off Millbrook Lane. Alder Hey Road is just visible in the background - there were just open fields between the two roads
Chorley's farm, shop and Post Office
Rose Queen celebrations
Sharing memories at Christ Church Eccleston
More of us chatting in the cosy community corner in Christ Church Eccleston
Some of our wonderful participants who shared their stories at Our Lady Help of Christians
Millbrook Cottages, c.1930
Bleak Hill Farm
Charabanc trip to Southport from Christ Church Eccleston
The Smithy when it had fallen into disrepair
The Smithy looking very sorry for itself after the blacksmithing trade ended at Kiln Lane
The Smithy, after it had fallen into disrepair
The playground at Chapel Lane School
Rose Queen celebrations
The Lester Drive Centre memory session
Norman had some wonderful tales to tell
Doreen and Penny gave us over an hour of incredible memories and snippets of information