Cotton Town - Blackburn with Darwen
 
Owd Road Menders tale Left Link Cooartin' i' th handloom weaven' days
Heritage trails go interactive...
Heritage trail
Blackburn's old Market Place...
William Woodruff 1916 - 2008...
Blackburn Royal Infirmary War Memorial Wing opened 1928…

Cottontown tells the story of a manufacturing process that started in isolated cottages on the wind and rain swept West Pennines and ended with derelict weaving sheds and the demolition of tall, soot blackened mill chimneys.  In between was the boom time, when Cotton was King and Blackburn was the weaving capital of the world, when millionaire magnates lived in country mansions and the workers made the best of it in overcrowded, uncomfortable, unsanitary conditions.

It's a journey back in time, made possible by means of maps, manuscripts, photos, books, pamphlets and posters, many thousands of which have been copied scanned and abstracted especially for the Cottontown site.  It's a journey back in time in more ways than one...

If you're too young to remember the trams, if you never experienced the thrill of riding the clanging cars on their iron rails, then here's a chance for you to try it out.  The site features a virtual reality tram ride to Darwen with an interactive quiz to test your local knowledge. For those of you who prefer a slower pace, there's a trip along the Leeds and Liverpool Canal in the company of a crew and their horse plying their trade along Blackburn's waterway in its early days.  

 This is your town, your history and your heritage. If you have any information, recollections and photographs or just a story to tell, we want to hear from you.Take a look at our Down Memory Lane feature to read about people's memories of growing up in Blackburn and Darwen. The Blackburn and Darwen Heritage Trails  leaflets are available at all libraries in Blackburn and Darwen. Virtual trails are now on the site, so click here to view them.To find out how you can contribute to Cotton Town or for more information, please contact us in person on the 2nd floor of Blackburn Central Library or by email or telephone: Email: community.history@blackburn.gov.uk Telephone: 01254 587959/7919.


Subscribe to our newsletter: