Burnage was always more country than town, more farmyard than backyard.
The Victorian city was doubling in size every decade, and it needed to be fed, and watered. The old farmhouse that stands on Burnage Lane, opposite Shawcross Road and the library, is white rendered now and has an array of solar panels on the roof. Not long ago it had a milk churn stand out front. Behind The Farmers Arms is Bibby Lane and Hyde Fold Farm, a neatly preserved Georgian farmhouse that’s a couple of centuries old. According to a plaque on the wall, it was home to tenant farmer John Bibby’s family for a hundred years.
No cars around in John Bibby’s farming days but American Henry Ford changed all that when he opened his first Model T assembly plant outside the US, in Trafford Park in 1912. The Motorcar Age is underway, and soon heading north-south on Kingsway, built in the late 1920s by cutting four lanes of unbending carriageway between Levenshulme and Parrs Wood and bedding a tramline down the middle. Trolley buses, trams and cars jostled their way into and out of the city ever after.