1
Bricklayers Arms
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 9 Apr 2010
0.10 miles
2
Moston Lane
The EIIR postbox opposite the end of Hillier Street North is M9 276.
Image: © Gerald England
Taken: 7 Jun 2017
0.11 miles
3
Parish Church of the Most Holy Trinity, Blackley
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 9 Apr 2010
0.12 miles
4
The Old Loom
A "Beacon pub" on Moston Lane, Harpurhey seeking new management at the time this photograph was taken. It had at one time been a Bass house. The Chinese takeaway next door is called "Shing Fat".
Image
Image: © Gerald England
Taken: 7 Jun 2017
0.12 miles
5
Sign of the Old Loom
Sign for the Old Loom
Image
Image: © Gerald England
Taken: 7 Jun 2017
0.12 miles
6
Old Loom
Public house on Moston Lane.
Image: © David Dixon
Taken: 9 Apr 2010
0.12 miles
7
Hough Hall, Moston, Manchester
HOUGH HALL was lived in by a family named Halgh or Hough. The last of the line, Captain Robert Hough, took the King's side in the Civil War and had his estate sequestered. It was purchased in 1685 by James Lightbowne, and soon afterwards passed to the Minshulls of Chorlton. In or soon after 1774 it was purchased by Samuel Taylor, by whose representative it was sold about 1880 to the late Robert Ward.
The hall has been a Grade II listed building since 1974.
Hough Hall is a timber and plaster house two storeys high standing on the south side of Moston Lane a little way back from the road. The building has been much restored and the interior is wholly modernized, but the outside retains a good deal of its ancient appearance, though all the windows are new and some of its original features have been lost. The house appears to belong to the end of the 16th or beginning of the 17th century, but has no date or inscription to confirm this.
Currently it appears to be derelict.
Image: © Tricia Neal
Taken: 9 Nov 2012
0.13 miles
8
Hough Hall, Moston, Manchester
HOUGH HALL was lived in by a family named Halgh or Hough. The last of the line, Captain Robert Hough, took the King's side in the Civil War and had his estate sequestered. It was purchased in 1685 by James Lightbowne, and soon afterwards passed to the Minshulls of Chorlton. In or soon after 1774 it was purchased by Samuel Taylor, by whose representative it was sold about 1880 to the late Robert Ward. The hall has been a Grade II listed building since 1974. Hough Hall is a timber and plaster house two storeys high standing on the south side of Moston Lane a little way back from the road. The building has been much restored and the interior is wholly modernized, but the outside retains a good deal of its ancient appearance, though all the windows are new and some of its original features have been lost. The house appears to belong to the end of the 16th or beginning of the 17th century, but has no date or inscription to confirm this. Currently it appears to be derelict.
Image: © Tricia Neal
Taken: 9 Nov 2012
0.13 miles
9
Hough Hall, Hough Hall Road, Manchester
"The only physical reminder of Moston's pre-industrial past". Late C16th or early C17th. Grade II listed.
It was in a pretty parlous state when this photo was taken and subsequently deteriorated markedly. Its purchase in 2020 (for the bargain price of £165,000) may herald a revival.
Image: © Stephen Richards
Taken: 24 May 2016
0.13 miles
10
Pound Busters
Pound Busters on the junction of Wembury Street North with Moston Lane.
Image: © Peter McDermott
Taken: 2 Sep 2024
0.14 miles