Saturday 27 December 2014

Salford Militia Barracks, Eccles New Road

See also: Salford Infantry Barracks ; Cross Lane Barracks




Map: J.H. Micklem & Co. 1857
click on images to enlarge


 Militia Barracks (on left) located on Eccles New Road, and Infantry Barracks (on right)
on Regent Road (formerly The Regent's road), Salford
Map 1874

The Salford Militia Barracks was located on Eccles New Road, across from the Salford Union Work House. It was the headquarters of the 6th Lancashire Militia, a regiment formed in response to the Crimean War, which Britain entered on 28th March 1854. We assume that the barracks were built around 1855/56. There is a letter dated 19th December 1854, from Palmerston to the Earl of Sefton, affirming the plan to make Salford the headquarters of the 6th Lancashire Militia. The militia barracks appears on Micklem's 1857 map shown above.

In December 1854Thomas Edward Wilbraham [1] was appointed Lieutenant Colonel of the 6th Lancashire Militia Regiment.  However, the regiment was not embodied until 17 May 1855, and while it had been agreed that Salford would be its headquarter, the regiment was first sent to Ashton on 2 July 1855.  Presumably this was because the barracks at Salford had not been completed. The regiment was actually posted to Salford on 16 May 1856. However, with the signing of the Treaty of Paris on 30 March 1856, which ended the Crimean War, the 6th Lancashire Militia was disembodied at Salford on 27 May 1856.

By 1859, the 6th Lancashire Regiment had been reformed. Staff Sergeants of the regiment had begun to drill the local volunteer rifle corps at the Salford Militia Barracks. In July 1860, a letter was received by Lieutenant Colonel John Henry Pringle, commanding the 6th Regiment, informing him that in future the 6th Lancashire Militia would be restyled as the 6th 'Royal' Lancashire Militia.  By 1861, there were 71 people in the barracks.  In July 1881, following the Childer's Reforms, the 6th Regiment, Royal Lancashire Militia became the 3rd (Reserve) and 4th (Extra Reserve) Battalions of the Manchester Regiment.





Militia List 1879

"Yesterday week Colonel Adams of the 49th Regiment inspected the 6th Royal Lancashire Militia at their barracks Eccles New Road. The regiment numbers 900 men and of these 180 are recruits. The officer complimented Lieutenant Colonel Wilbraham on the soldier-like appearance of the regiment." Illustrated London News 1864

THREATENED FENIAN RAID ON MILITIA BARRACKS.—The Manchester Guardian of Wednesday [22 Dec 1869] says:—Our readers will be startled to hear that Salford has been threatened with a Fenian Raid. We learn, upon authority which we cannot doubt, that on Saturday evening a telegram from the Horse Guards was received by Colonel Reynolds, the assistant adjutant-general for the district, intimating that the Fenians contemplated an attack upon the Militia Barracks at Salford, with the view of obtaining possession of about 800 stand of arms which were stored there. Colonel Reynolds lost no time in adopting measures for the defeat of the plot. The rifles were removed the same night to the Infantry Barracks, where, of course, they lie safe against any sudden surprise. The Tablet 25 December 1869  [2]
"ROYAL LANCASHIRE MILITIA [6th] Permanent Staff Quarters & County Stores Eccles New rd, Salford"   - 1873 Manchester Directory


In 1877, the 6th Royal Lancashire Militia at Salford was part of the 8th Army Corps (Edinburgh), Third Division, 2nd Brigade.  By 1892, there was a proposal to purchase the site.  
The Salford Militia Barracks appears on a map of Salford for 1896, but the installation appears to have been demolished around 1900. Its site had been converted to terraced housing by 1908.

1896

Notes


[1] Colonel Thomas Edward Wilbraham
[2]  The wider historical context of this raid is the intensification of Irish nationalism manifested in the Fenian Rebellion of 1867. See also: The Manchester Martyrs ; Fenian Rising

3 comments:

  1. I grew up at 28 East Wynford St from 1971 onwards. It was a wonderful childhood. Obviously the barracks had long gone but the houses that replaced them were grand.

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  2. You assume assume that the barracks were built around 1855/56. However the birth certificate of my 2xgreat uncle show his father was resident at the Regent Road barrack when the birth was registered in 1845

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    1. Thanks Viv. You may be confusing the Militia Barracks with the Infantry Barracks (see link at the top of page), which was much earlier. Are you willing to share details of your relative in the comments?

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