The
local
hero,
Sir
Clive
Lloyd,
couldn’t
quite
get
in
the
groove.

No matter, round here he does no wrong. The volume is rising. By four o’clock we’re rockin’ from Stretford Precinct to Moss Side Brewery, from Warwick Road to Alexandra Park. Vivian Richards hits an unbeaten 189, the rest of his team hit 83. Sir Vivian Richards’ winning innings at Old Trafford that day remains the highest score in One Day International Cricket. He hit the last ball of the innings, delivered by his friend and Somerset teammate Ian Botham for four. No point piling on the misery. That wouldn’t be cool. 

Beyond
a
Boundary
is
a
book,
The
book
about
cricket,
that
is
also
about
race
and
colonial
history,
by
Cyril
Lionel
Robert
James.

CLR James, Nello to his friends, and a world of admirers. The Trinidadian Marxist philosopher, cultural historian and cricket-mad writer inspired the Windrush generation, their children and grandchildren. When the West Indian neighbourhood has community interests at heart, Nello James is in mind. Hence, the Nello James Centre.

In
the
mid
1970s
West
Indian
communities
were
beginning
to
find
their
Viv
Richards
touch,
Bob
Marley
and
the
Wailers
release
Catch
a
Fire
in
1973,
Jimmy
Cliff
is
starring
in
The
Harder
They
Come
with
two
tracks
in
the
movie,
by
Toots
and
the
Maytals.

Island Records and Trojan release tunes you will hear on the pavements of Withington Road and Alexandra Road. There’s good times vide in Whalley Range and Moss Side. Except its paper thin. Sure, the weekend shebeens are throbbing with bass and draw, but the majority white community, and the authorities aren’t yet with it. Not for a couple of decades, and even then, not entirely. There are community issues in need of mediation and understanding. There is a need for the Nello James Centre. For whatever reason, this important community asset falls into decline and disrepair

wr-3

Back
in
the
day
Whalley
Range
was
brother
to
Victoria
Park,
prosperous
and
middle
class,
streets
lined
with
tall
villas
housing
newly
rich
professionals
and
their
domestic
staff.

They suffered post-war decline and transformed into bed-sit land. There is now a steady reversal in progress, west from Rusholme, through Alexandra Park and on to Chorlton Road. Of course, there is a way to go, there always is. But there’s no shortage of energy and possibilities. That’s what makes these historic townships – Levenshulme, Rusholme, Withington, Fallowfield, Chorlton, Whalley Range, Moss Side and Hulme – exciting. Possibility and heritage.

Cross
Withington
Road
and
walk
up
Wellington
Road
to
Alness
Road.

Here, you are looking at the back of St Bede’s College that used to be a Catholic Grammar School and is now a private prep and secondary school that is favourite for the families of Manchester City footballers. There are plenty of SUV’s and Man City training strips around the school gates after 3pm.

In
the
1970s,
on
the
corner
of
Alness
and
Wellington
was
a
small
struggling
hotel,
the
Clifton
Grange.
This
was
bought
by
Philomena
Lynott
who
rebranded
it
as
a
theatrical
boarding
house
called
The
Showbiz.

At night, the first floor transformed into a glamorous shebeen fondly known as “Phyllis’s”. Admission was strictly at the discretion of the management. The elegant bar was perfumed by fresh freesia year-round, and the jukebox was on free play. Except, all that it played were records by super rockers of the time, Thin Lizzy. Phyllis was mother of Phil Lynott, who often flew in from his Dublin home, when not touring with his band, to enjoy the company of various ventriloquist acts, drag queens, Coronation Street cast, and the first global football superstar George Best.

Whalley Range was well made and well named. Make of the “Whalley” what you will, but “Range” is exactly the word to attach to this extraordinary community of streets and people that has always played hard, and with style. Like Viv Richards on that memorable day in 1984. As someone once said, “just watching Viv Richards walk from the pavilion to the crease was worth a hundred runs”. It is Beyond a Boundary. It is Whalley Range.

This is 136 Withington Road…

Asset type

Asset type

Residential

Quantum

Quantum

35 homes

Status

Status

Planning

Architect

Architect

Ollier Smurthwaite

Planning consultants

Planning consultants

Ashtonhale

Transport

Transport

Curtins