Toponymy The name of Salford derives from , meaning a
ford by the
willows (also known as sallows), in reference to the trees growing on the banks of the River Irwell. The ford was about where
Victoria Bridge is today. Willow trees are still found in
Lower Broughton. and in the Lancashire Inquisitions of 1226 as "Sainford".
Early history was a
Royal Manor of
Anglo-Saxon origin centred on the
demesne of Salford. The earliest known evidence of human activity in what is now Salford is provided by the
Neolithic flint arrow-heads and workings discovered on
Kersal Moor and the River Irwell, suggesting that the area was inhabited 7–10,000 years ago. The raw material for such tools was scarce and unsuitable for working, and as a result they are not of the quality found elsewhere. Other finds include a Neolithic axe-hammer found near Mode Wheel, during the excavation of the
Manchester Ship Canal in 1890, and a
Bronze Age cremation urn during the construction of a road on the Broughton Hall estate in 1873. The
Brigantes were the major
Celtic tribe in what is now
Northern England. With a stronghold at the sandstone outcrop on which
Manchester Cathedral now stands, opposite Salford's original centre, their territory extended across the fertile lowland by the River Irwell that is now Salford and
Stretford. Following the
Roman conquest of Britain,
General Agricola ordered the construction of a
Roman fort named
Mamucium (Manchester) to protect the routes to
Deva Victrix (
Chester) and
Eboracum (
York) from the Brigantes. Salford was founded when the fort was completed in AD 79, The withdrawal of the Romans in AD 410 left the inhabitants at the mercy of the
Saxons. The
Danes later conquered the area and absorbed what was left of the Brigantes.
Middle Ages Angles settled in the region during the
Early Middle Ages and gave the locality the name
Sealhford, meaning "ford by the willows". Following the emergence of the united
Kingdom of England, Salford became a
caput baroniae or central manor within a broad rural area in part held by the Kings of England, including
Edward the Confessor. The area between the rivers
Mersey and
Ribble was divided into six smaller districts, referred to as "wapentakes", or
hundreds. The south east district became known as the
Hundred of Salford, a division of land administered from Salford for military and judicial purposes. It contained nine large parishes, smaller parts of two others, and the township of
Aspull in the parish of
Wigan. After the defeat of
Harold II during the
Norman conquest of England,
William I granted the Hundred of Salford to
Roger the Poitevin, and in the
Domesday Book of 1086 the Hundred of Salford was recorded as covering an area of with a population of 35,000. Poitevin created the subordinate
Manor of Manchester out of the hundred, which has since in local government been separate from Salford. Poitevin forfeited the manor in 1102 when he was defeated in a failed rebellion attempt against
Henry I. In around 1115, for their support during the rebellion, Henry I placed the Hundred of Salford under the control of the
Earldom of Lancaster, Salford began to emerge as a small town early in the 13th century. In 1228,
Henry III granted the caput of Salford the right to hold a market and an annual fair. The fairs were important to the town; a 17th-century order forced each
burgess – a
freeman of the borough – to attend, but the fairs were abolished during the 19th century. The Earls of Chester aided the development of the caput, and in 1230
Ranulf de Blondeville, 6th Earl of Chester made Salford a
burgage, or free borough. The
charter gave its burgesses certain commercial rights, privileges and advantages over traders living outside Salford; one of the 26 clauses of the charter stated that no one could work in the hundred of Salford unless they also lived in the borough. Salford has a history of textile processing that pre-dates the
Industrial Revolution, and as an old town had been developing for about 700 years. Before the introduction of cotton there was a considerable trade in
woollen goods and
fustians. The changes to
textile manufacture during the Industrial Revolution had a profound effect on both on population and urbanisation, as well as the
socioeconomic and cultural conditions of Salford.
Industrial Revolution The well-established textile processing and trading infrastructure, and the ready supply of water from the River Irwell and its tributaries, attracted entrepreneurs who built
cotton mills along the banks of the river in
Pendleton and
Ordsall. Although Salford followed a similar pattern of industrial development to Manchester, most businesses preferred to build their premises on the Manchester side of the Irwell, and consequently Salford did not develop as a commercial centre in the same way as its neighbour. The large Salford Engine Twist Company mill was built to the west of Salford, between Chapel Street and the Irwell, and in 1806 was the first large cotton mill to use gas lighting. Many engineering companies were established in this area, including
Samuel Ellis and Company at the Irwell Foundry. However, it was outnumbered by the numerous smaller factories and mills throughout the area, including Nathan Gough's steam-driven mule spinning mill, near Oldfield Road, where a serious accident occurred on 13 October 1824 (see illustration). in May 1856 Canal building provided a further stimulus for Salford's industrial development. The opening of the
Bridgewater Canal in 1761 improved the transport of fuel and raw materials, reducing the price of coal by about 50%. The later
Manchester, Bolton & Bury Canal (which terminated at Salford) brought more cheap coal from pits at Pendleton,
Agecroft Colliery and beyond. By 1818 Manchester, Salford and
Eccles had about 80 mills, but it was the completion of the
Manchester Ship Canal in 1894 which triggered Salford's development as a major
inland port. By 1914 the
Port of Manchester, most of whose docks were in Salford, had become one of the largest port authorities in the world, handling 5% of the UK's imports and 4.4% of its exports. Commodities handled included cotton, grain, wool, textile machinery and steam locomotives. For centuries, textiles and related trades were the main source of employment in the town. These industries became more important as Salford faced increasing competition from the nearby towns of
Bolton and
Oldham. As its
cotton spinning industries faltered its economy turned increasingly to other textiles and to the finishing trades, including
rexine and silk dyeing, and fulling and bleaching, at a string of works in Salford. The effect on Salford of the Industrial Revolution has been described as "phenomenal". The area expanded from a small market town into a major industrial
metropolis; factories replaced cottage industries, and the population rose from 12,000 in 1812 to 70,244 within 30 years. By the end of the 19th century it had increased to 220,000. Large-scale building of low quality
Victorian terraced housing did not stop overcrowding, which itself led to chronic social deprivation. The density of housing was as high as 80 homes per acre. Private roads were built for the use of the middle classes moving to the outskirts of Salford. The entrances to such roads, which included Elleray Road in
Irlams o' th' Height, were often gated, and patrolled.
Inventions Salford is credited as the birthplace of the
bush roller chain.
Hans Renold, a Swiss-born engineer, came to Salford in the late 19th century. In 1879 he purchased a small textile-chain making business in Ordsall from James Slater and founded the
Hans Renold Company, what is now Renold, a firm which still produces chains. Renold invented the bush roller chain shortly after and began producing it. It is the type of chain most commonly used for transmission of mechanical power on bicycles, motorbikes, to industrial and
agricultural machinery to uses as varied as rollercoasters and
escalators.
Post-industrial decline s in the city, replacing many of Salford's former
Victorian slums. identified Salford as having areas with
terraced housing unsuited to modern needs. During the early 20th century, improvements in regional transport infrastructure precipitated the decline of Salford's existing industries, including those at the Salford Docks. Increased foreign competition began to undermine the competitiveness of local textile processing businesses. Life in Salford during the early 20th century was described by Robert Roberts, in his study
The Classic Slum. Rising unemployment during the
Great Depression of the 1920s and 1930s, and a significant economic decline in the decades following the Second World War contributed toward a fall in Salford's population. By 1939 local coal mining had almost stopped, and, by 1971, cotton spinning had ceased completely. far greater than the rate of decline within the whole of
North West England. and by the end of 1956 over a thousand families had been rehoused in
overspill estates at
Little Hulton. These clearances have, for some, changed the character of the area to such an extent that "observers in search of the typical Salford may have to look in Eccles and Swinton, for much of the community and townscape ... has gone from Salford, replaced by tall blocks of flats". Large areas of the city were redeveloped in the 1960s and 1970s, with
Victorian era terraced housing estates that inspired painter
L. S. Lowry and soap opera
Coronation Street giving way to concrete
tower blocks and austere architecture. Despite extensive redevelopment, throughout the 1980s and 1990s the area experienced high levels of deprivation and unemployment, particularly during the recessions of the early years of both decades. This social deprivation was a major factor in the increased levels of
gang crime linked to illegal narcotics, firearms and robberies. This was comparable to the similar issues faced in parts of neighbouring
Manchester including
Moss Side, as well as areas of the more distant neighbouring city of
Liverpool.
Organised crime in Salford, particularly in Ordsall and Pendleton, "began to have a disturbing effect on grass roots democracy. Both the Liberal Democrats and the Conservatives announced they would not contest certain Salford wards" because they regarded them as "unsafe" and would put their "party workers at risk". Salford's social amenities and the
night-time economy folded amid criminal "intimidation", "drug use, fights and demands for money". In early 2005, the
government of Latvia appealed to the
European Union to advise people against travelling to Salford after a Latvian man was stabbed in the head in
Lower Broughton. population decline has slowed, In August 2005, a survey by
Channel 4 television rated the city as the 9th worst place to live in the United Kingdom, based on criteria of crime, education, environment, lifestyle and employment.
Regeneration .
Urban renewal in Salford has been focused around
Salford Quays. , the second tallest building in Salford Salford has suffered from high levels of unemployment, housing, and social problems since around the 1960s, although there are regeneration schemes to reverse its fortunes. Many of the high-rise housing blocks from the 1960s and 1970s were demolished during the 1990s, "a sign that the great social engineering schemes (from that period) had failed". However, the high-rises that remain are a striking feature of Salford's landscape. Work was scheduled to begin on the £180 million redevelopment of the Greengate area of Salford in January 2007. The plans include the construction of what will be the two tallest tower blocks in Salford. Plans also include a five-star hotel, a new public square and park, restaurants, cafes and 403 apartments. Work is ongoing to regenerate the area known as Middlewood Locks, with the restored Salford terminus of the
Manchester Bolton & Bury Canal forming the centrepiece of a brand new residential development. As part of the
Pathfinder initiative, Salford was identified in 2002 as one of nine areas in specific need of investment for new homes. Between 2003 and 2006 £115M was invested in the Manchester and City of Salford housing markets, £44M of which was invested in central Salford. Rows of terraces in neighbourhoods such as Seedley and Langworthy – once used for the title sequence of
Coronation Street – are being compulsorily purchased, demolished and replaced by "modern sustainable accommodation". Other schemes such as the Charlestown and
Lower Kersal New deal for Communities have concentrated on renovating existing terraced housing stock by block improvement and alleygating, as well as demolishing unsuitable properties and building new facilities, in consultation with the local community. Salford now has many tourist attractions, such as
Ordsall Hall, the
Bridgewater Canal and the
Lowry Centre, an award-winning theatre and art gallery complex, consisting of two theatres and three art galleries. The centre is named after the artist
L. S. Lowry, who attended Salford School of Art and lived in nearby
Pendlebury for 40 years. Many of his paintings of Salford and Manchester mill scenes, populated with small matchstick-like figures, are on display. A notable regeneration project is
MediaCityUK, located at Salford Quays. The development houses
BBC departments including
CBBC,
BBC Sport and
BBC Radio 5 Live which moved in 2011 and
BBC Breakfast, which moved from London in spring 2012. In recent years, various large residential schemes have been built in Salford. A notable development, the £700m
Middlewood Locks began construction in 2016. A major £16m regeneration of Walkden Town Centre, which is one of seven designated main town centres in the City of Salford, commenced in 2025. The work is due to be finished in November 2026, and the new centre is expected to welcome a number of new retailers in the 'high street style' development. ==Governance==