Bury
BURY, a township, a town, a parish, two subdistricts, and a district in Lancashire.
The township lies all within the town's assigned boundaries. Acres, 2,370. Real
property, £263,333,-of which £171,785 are in railways, £1,040 in mines, and £80 in
quarries. Pop., in 1841, 20,710: in 1861, 30,397. Houses, 5,971. The town lies on the
river Irwell, 2 miles above its confluence with the Roach, and 8 NNW of Manchester.
A branch canal goes south-westward to the Manchester and Bolton canal; and railways go
westward, northward, eastward, and southward.
The town has a head post office, two railway stations with telegraph, two banking
offices, several chief inns, a weekly market on Saturday, and three annual fairs; is a
seat of petty sessions and county courts, and a polling-place; and publishes four
weekly newspapers. Woollen manufacture was formerly the main industry; and is still
carried on in several large factories. Cotton manufacture, in various departments, is
now the staple; received a great impulse from inventions by two natives, John and
Robert Kay, and from the enterprise of the late Sir Robert Peel's father; and
maintains at present upwards of twelve factories for spinning and weaving, two for
printing and bleaching, and two for dyeing. There are also three large iron foundries,
several smaller ones, machine-making works, hat-making houses, and other manufacturing
establishments.
John Marius Wilson, Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (1870-72) more ...
Bury libraries.
Reference & Information Services,
Central Library, Manchester Road, Bury,
Lancs BL9 0DG - Tel: 0161 253 5871 information@bury.gov.uk
- St Peter's Road, Cemetery
- St John Baptist, Castle Hill Rd, Church of England, Bircle
- St John, The Rock, Church of England
- St Mary the Virgin, Market Place, Church of England
- St Paul, St Paul's St, Church of England
- St Thomas, Rochdale Rd, Church of England, Pimhole
- Castle Croft, Congregational
- Four Lane Ends, Congregational
- Brunswick, North St, Free Methodist
- New Rd, Independent
- Silver St/Bank St, Unitarian
- Holebottom, Unitarian Cemetery
Details about the census records, and indexes for Bury.
"From Dr. V. D. Lipman's inspection of the originals of the census returns of 1851,
it is clear that the 'synagogues' at Bury, Lutterworth and Haslingden (and one of
those at Leeds) were in fact places of worship of a non-Jewish (though perhaps
Judaising) sect who called themselves 'Israelites.' "
from Cecil Roth's history of provincial Jewry published in 1940
- Knowsley St, Baptist
- Manchester Rd, Baptist
- Radcliffe Rd, Baptist
- Ebenezer, Tenterden St, Baptist
- Chesham Rd, Baptist, Chesham
- Baptist, Free Town
- Wood St, Bible Baptist, Elton
- St John Baptist, Castle Hill Rd, Church of England, Bircle
- Holy Trinity, Spring Street, Church of England
- St John, The Rock, Church of England
- St John with St Mark, Sunny Ave, Church of England
- St Mark, Brookshaw St, Church of England
- St Mary the Virgin, Market Place, Church of England
- St Paul, St Paul's St, Church of England
- St Peter, St Peter's Road, Church of England
- St Thomas, Rochdale Rd, Church of England, Pimhole
- Manchester Rd, Congregational, Blackford Bridge
- Castle Croft, Congregational
- Four Lane Ends, Congregational
- Brunswick, North St, Free Methodist
- Benson St, Gospel Chapel, Pimhole
- New Rd, Independent
- Bethel, Henry St, Independent
- Bury Hebrew Congregation, Sunny Bank Road, Jewish
- Boulden Drive, Methodist, Brandlesholme
- Elbut Lane, Jericho, Methodist
- Seedfield, Mosley Avenue, Methodist
- Bolton St, Methodist New Connexion
- Heywood Street, Methodist New Connexion
- Walmersley Rd, New Jerusalem
- Bethesda Church, Parkhills, Pentecostal
- Walmersley Rd, Primitive Methodist
- William St, Primitive Methodist
- St Bede, Rochdale Old Road, Roman Catholic
- St Joseph, Peter Street, Roman Catholic
- St Marie, Manchester Road, Roman Catholic
- Our Lady Queen of Poland, Back East Street, Roman Catholic (Polish)
- Parkhills Road, Seventh-day Adventist, Fishpool
- Silver St/Bank St, Unitarian
- Halstead St, Unitarian, Chesham
- Parkhills, United Methodist Free Church
- Zion, Warth, United Methodist Free Church
- Wood St, United Methodist Free Church, Elton
- United Methodist Free Church, Limefield
- Parsons Lane, United Reformed
- Ingham St, Welsh Calvinistic Methodist
- Benson St, Welsh Presbyterian, Pimhole
- Union Street, Wesleyan Methodist
- Pits-o'-th'-Moor, Bell Lane, Wesleyan Methodist
- Pits-o'-th'-Moor, Pine St, Wesleyan Methodist
- Fairy St, Wesleyan Methodist, Elton
- Walshaw Lane, Wesleyan Methodist, Elton
- Rochdale Rd, Wesleyan Methodist, Pimhole
You can also perform a more selective search for
churches in the Bury area
that are recorded in the GENUKI church database. This will also help
identify churches in nearby townships and/or parishes. You also have the option to see the
location
of the churches marked marked on a map.
If you keep this page loaded for a very long time and the database is updated
since loading it, the church links above may become stale and may display the wrong
church. If this happens, reloading this page will correct them.
The Register Office covering the Bury area is
Bury.
David Greenhalgh has extracted entries from
Pigot's 1828 Directory.
In 1835 the parish of Bury contained the townships of Bury,
Tottington Higher End,
Tottington Lower End,
Walmersley and Shuttleworth,
Cowpe, Lench, Newhall Hey and Hall Carr,
Elton and
Heap.
A description of
Bury in the 19th century.
View maps of Bury and places within its boundaries.
The Workhouse site
has an interesting description of
Bury
workhouse.
For probate purposes prior to 1858, Bury was in the Archdeaconry of Chester, in the Diocese of Chester.
The original Lancashire wills for the Archdeaconry of Chester are held at the
Lancashire Record Office.
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[Last updated: Wednesday, 03Sep2008 11:33:52 BST - Phil Stringer]