ARI Smart Content - Data Table

Click to show on right, Sources for Song below
Bargery Number 373
Music (Given or Suggested) Palmer says that The London Singer's Magazine gives the tune as 'The Good Old Days of Adam and Eve'
Printer or Publisher John Duncombe & Co
Author Blackshaw, S.
Performer Blackshaw, S.
Earliest Date 1829
Evidence for Earliest Date The Metropolitan Police were established in 1829 (see reference to "raw lobsters"). The Manchester Police were not established until 1839 [Ref: Hansard August 1839 vol 50 cc376-82] but the song was printed in London and could be expected to have a Metropolitan outlook.
Latest Date 1835
Evidence for Latest Date The song was probably written shortly before it was published. A publication date of 1835, is suggested by the British Library. Lardner's 'Steam Engine Familiarly Explained and Illustrated' went through several editions, the 5th being dated 1835. [Note 373.6]
Source of Text Palmer, Roy - A Touch on the Times Songs of Social Change 1770 to 1914 (Penguin Education, 1974) pp 62-63. Palmer cites his source as the London Singer's Magazine pp12-13
Where Printed London
Roud Not in the Roud Index
Source of Music abc.notation.com/tunes
Variant Set No variants found
Comments on Song Although printed in London it shows knowledge of the history of Manchester with references to Manchester's role in the Civil War [Note 373.7] and the Shudehill riots [Note 373.8]. Palmer says that The London Singer's Magazine describes the piece as "'An original comic song written by Mr S. Blackshaw, and sung at the theatres". The surname Blackshaw is particularly common in the Manchester area. [UK Surname Map https://www.surnamemap.eu/unitedkingdom/index.php?sur=Blackshaw&s=Search] (accessed 16May21)
Source Title Scenes of Manchester
Other Imprints No other imprints found
Origin Theatre

Scenes of Manchester

 [373Notation]

The scenes of Manchester I sing
Where the arts and sciences are flourishing;
Where smoke from factory chimneys bring
The air so black, so thick and nourishing. [Note 373.1]
Where factories that by steam are gated¹,
And children work half suffocated,
It makes me made to hear folk, really,
Cry 'Manchester's improving daily'.

There steam-loom weavers and cotton spinner
Have sixty minutes to get their dinners;
And then to make the people thrive
They're rung up in a morning at four and five. [Note 373.2]
Then if you get a drop on a Sunday
To get yourselves in tiff¹ for Monday,
The raw_lobster¹ pops you in the Bailey¹,
Since Manchester's improving daily.

We've coaches now that by steam power
Will take you thirty miles an hour;
And what's still more, the devil's in it,
They killed a parliament man in a minute. [Note 373.3]
They go so fast on the iron rails, O,
To Liverpool with men and bales, O, [Note 373.4]
'Twould make either Newton¹, Locke¹ or Paley¹,
Cry , 'Manchester's improving daily.'

We've building large and grand to view,
Likewise Mechanics' Institutions, too, [Note 373.5]
Where gentlemen go to learn gastronomy,
Gymnastics, optics and physiognomy¹.
Where doctor Lardner¹'s LLD, sir,
A-lecturing on steam power you'll see, sir. [Note 373.6]
'Twould look better on to turn his head,
And teach poor folk to get cheap bread.

In Cromwell¹'s day, by Fairfax¹ led,
The men of Manchester have bled, [Note 373.7]
And what still lives to their fame and glory
Is the famous Shudehill fighting story, [Note 373.8]
But war and fighting's out of fashion,
And patriots grown quite scarce I' the nation;
All that bleed now, good people, hark it,
Are the cows and pigs in Shudehill Market.

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