See also
List of people from Manchester , home of
William and
Elizabeth Gaskell, from 1850
19th century •
William Worby Beaumont (1848–1929), automotive engineer and inventor •
Maud Boyd (1867–1929), actress and operatic singer •
James Braid 1795–1860, Scottish born surgeon and hypnotist, lived and died at 212 Oxford Street (on the exact site of the quadrangle of Manchester University). •
Walter Arthur Copinger, lawyer and scholar, lived in Greenheys. •
Thomas De Quincey, writer, also lived at Greenheys: he was born at Cross Street, Manchester. •
Friedrich Engels (1820–1895), German
social scientist and philosopher; the site of his lodging is commemorated by a plaque on Aberdeen House, Whitworth Park Halls of Residence. •
Elizabeth Gaskell lived in a house at
84 Plymouth Grove for the last 15 years of her life. •
William Gaskell, Nonconformist minister and writer, husband of Elizabeth Gaskell •
David Lloyd George, British
Prime Minister, was born here in 1863 but his family soon returned to Wales. •
George Gissing 1857–1903, writer, lived on Grafton Street when he was a student at Owens College in 1876. •
Charles Hallé, musician, lived at Greenheys for a time. •
Alfred Lucas, analytical chemist, involved in the excavation of Tutankhamun's tomb •
Lilly Maxwell, first woman to vote in Britain after the
Reform Act 1832, at the Chorlton Town Hall in 1868 •
Samuel Mendel, businessman, later built
Manley Hall. •
John Owens the merchant (after whom
Owens College was named) lived in Nelson Street. •
Robert Angus Smith, Scottish chemist, had his laboratory in Grosvenor Square. •
Lily Elsie, noted Edwardian stage actress, singer, spent part of her childhood here. *Photos of Elsie, arranged by show •
Leslie Stuart, composer of Edwardian musicals, lived at 18 Lime Grove for a time, he was organist at the Church of the Holy Name. •
Jerome Caminada, police detective and supposed inspiration for Sherlock Holmes, lived on Cecil Street Greenheys. •
Annie Swynnerton, symbolist artist, lived on 44 Dover Street. •
Ellen Wilkinson, Labour Party politician, was born here at 44 Coral Street in 1891. In 1913 she graduated from the University of Manchester, Oxford Road. •
Eddowes Bowman, Educationalist and
astronomer, was buried at
Upper Brook Street Chapel. •
John Edward Taylor (1791–1844), founder of
The Manchester Guardian newspaper in 1820, renamed
The Guardian in 1959, was buried in the former Rusholme Road Cemetery, now called Gartside Gardens. •
Frederick Crace Calvert (1819–1873), London born
chemist. Calvert contributed to the commercial feasibility of
phenol production, thus facilitating
hygiene worldwide and saving lives. He is buried in St Saviours churchyard.
20th century •
James Bernard, reciter, elocutionist, author, born in Chorlton-on-Medlock in 1874 •
John Cassidy, sculptor, worked at a studio in Lincoln Grove, also lodged in the district. •
Johnny Roadhouse (1921–2009), British saxophonist, opened the music shop Johnny Roadhouse Music in 1955 on Oxford Road. •
Catherine Chisholm, general practitioner and paediatrician: the first woman to study medicine at
Manchester Medical School, practised in Oxford Road and was medical officer of the
Manchester High School for Girls in Dover Street, 1908–38. She retired in 1948 having founded the
Manchester Babies' Hospital (afterwards the Duchess of York Hospital) in 1914. Originally this was in Chorlton-on-Medlock but soon moved to Levenshulme and then to Burnage. •
Arthur Delaney (1927–1987), artist, was born at 30 Clifford Street, Chorlton-on-Medlock. He was inspired by the work of
L. S. Lowry and the memories of the happy years he spent as a boy in the Manchester of the 1930s with its smoke-laden skies, rattling trams and gas lamps. •
Eugene Halliday (1911–1987), artist, founder of the Institute for the Study of
Hierological Values (now Eugene Halliday Society), lived as a child in Chorlton-on-Medlock. He studied at the Manchester School of Art in All Saints (see Landmarks above). A prolific writer, during the mid-1950s he wrote for the
Cavendish Magazine, published by the Congregational Chapel on Cavendish Street, Chorlton-on-Medlock (see Religion, above). •
Emmeline Pankhurst, a founder of the British
suffragette movement, lived in Nelson Street, Chorlton-on-Medlock, following her husband's death; the house is now the
Pankhurst Centre. •
Ellen Wilkinson, Labour politician, Cabinet minister •
L. S. Lowry, artist, attended
Manchester School of Art in Chorlton-on-Medlock in 1905 and studied under
Pierre Adolphe Valette. File:Student Health Centre, Chorlton-on-Medlock.jpg|Waterloo Place, 176-188 Oxford Road File:ManchesterMetUni-AllSaintsBldg-20070421.jpg|The All Saints Building on the Manchester Campus of the Metropolitan University File:Mancunian Way UMIST.jpg|A view of the Mancunian Way elevated motorway near what was
UMIST campus File:Manchester Academy 1.jpg|Manchester Academy, south of
University of Manchester Students' Union, Oxford Road File:The Salutation, Manchester.jpg|The Salutation public house in Higher Chatham Street File:Robert Angus Smith blue plaque .jpg|A
Royal Society of Chemistry Blue plaque commemorating Smith in Grosvenor Square, the site of R. Angus Smith's laboratory ==See also==