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Williamsons Fire and Rescue Equipment - Oldham – April 2015
Saturday Strolling with Ojay.
Having lived in the Oldham area for well over 25 years Williamsons was a well known institution. Think of the BBC sitcom ‘Open All Hours’ with Albert Arkwright and Granville, add a dodgy till, replace the groceries with an Aladdin’s cave of engineering, DIY, Fire Fighting, Rescue Equipment and conveyors and you’d end up with this place.
If you needed a rear mounting screw for your Sprocket Undulator, this place had it, in stainless steel, carbon steel, titanium, aluminium, brass, copper and duplex, it would also come plastic coated, galvanised, zinc coated, powder coated, acid etched. Every size and grade you could ever dream of and many more which didn’t even appear in your nightmares. Metric, imperial, US, and every other measurement on the planet.
Rumour has it that a UFO crashed into Oldham in the mid 50’s, the spacecraft was extensively damaged with no hope of flying again. That was until they paid Williamsons a visit, within 24 hours they had all the parts they needed and managed a full upgrade on the spacecraft as the technology in the store was about 500 light years ahead of the planet they came from.
My last visit here was for a 7” cast iron drain cover, they were on form as ever, a plastic, cast iron and aluminium drain cover - 6”. 7” and 8” all came out from round the back and cost me pennies. I now wish I’d bought 2 of them.
History
Williamsons had been trading from the same premises in Mumps Bridge Oldham since 1920. A private family business was still run by members of the Williamson family. The business had grown considerably since the outset and covered over two acres of warehouse space. Since 1969 they became a major supplier of Fire Fighting and Rescue Equipment much of this equipment was to Home Office Specification and was available in both new and refurbished condition. Since 1975 they also were suppliers of all variant types of new and refurbished conveyor systems; and held considerable stocks of equipment, and manufacture bespoke items to customer specification.
From the Oldham Chronicle - 05 June 2013 “MYSTERY surrounds a landmark business in Mumps as its approaches its centenary year. Oldham family business Williamsons, established in 1920, supplies fire and rescue equipment, tools and industrial machinery. But on Monday workers were sent home at lunch time and told the company had ceased trading. Calls and emails to the business have gone unanswered, and yesterday the business was closed.”
Williamsons seems to have been another long established Oldham company to fall fowl of the huge disruption, traffic jams and road carnage caused by building the Metrolink to Oldham, which at the end of the day takes shoppers out of Oldham and into Manchester for their shopping, this is good as there are now no shops in Oldham due to building the Metrolink!
Having said that the area where Williamsons is located is destined for a huge multi-million pound redevelopment, including a Marks and Spencer’s, Wine Bars, Bistros, open air dinning outside trendy café’s. I may have lived for only 26 years in Oldham; but see 2 flaws in this cunning redevelopment plan; 1 - The people of Oldham and 2 – the weather.
This was first visited by Host in January, been wanting to head in myself ever since. Due to the location and history I thought it would be on the tourist trail by now, alas Camalot still seems to be the place for young trendy Urbexors to be seen. I am surprised that no one else has been here in the last 3 months, it was a quality report from Host.
My Visit
Where to start with this one, as usual a few plans thrown about the evening before after many beers and the usual banter online I wasn’t sure if Ojay would turn up, I set off early and quickly established the access had changed and was wondering if it was possible at all. I managed to get into a small section which had a nice collection of conveyor belt photos. No order to the report apart from the order I took them in.
It was at this point I got the text to confirm Ojay had managed to get out of bed and was lurking somewhere outside. After locating each other we had a comedy entry into the building proper.
I have to be honest now, at this point even though it was a historically significant place for me with many fond memories I was just a tad disappointed. The place seemed stripped; an empty shell with little evidence of its halcyon days.
Had the place deteriorated that much in the 3 months since Host had visited it, should have read his report before heading in just to refresh my memory, but do like going places with an open mind. Anyway enough waffle, we found the cellar.
The date on the tea-chests was 1978, been down there a couple of years. Wish there were 4 candles in the box marked candles, this place would have had fork handles stored elsewhere.
Now it’s not often a simple white board stops me in my tracks and gets me grinning from ear to ear, this is what Williamsons was all about – Nipper Rat Traps, log splitting grenades, ear muffs, Grubbins Mattocks, Flap Discs, 12” metal funnels and Dutch Hoes to name a few, this white board epitomises Williamsons far better that I ever could.
Back in the front of shop thinking we had seen it all, nice safe.
I left Ojay here farting about with his 50mm lens and his new found love of everything that is a DERP (think he’s been down South too long). A step through a plastic curtain and the whole place opened up, and there was the upstairs too, far, far bigger than it looked and something of interest at each turn.
This is the main warehouse area, the section of the building is old with brick arch vaulted ceilings and remains of Lancashire flag floors.
Seemed to have missed the Lucky Dip, everything in the 2 acres of storage was auctioned off in 2013, there was a lot of unique items.
Upstairs storage racks, now empty.
A nicely framed white door, nice to see Host also took a similar photo on rereading his report.
The odd bit of interest still live on the shelves up here.
Plus some specialist equipment, 48” waist overalls for the pie cognisor.
Apart from the white board this was my favourite place in here, the old stables. Cobblestones and still some of the feeders, dated back to when the company delivered its goods to the local mills my horse and carriage.
Looking back to the main warehouse now we have a bit of sun.
There’s probably enough Dubbin here to waterproof all the boots in the British Army, must be 25 years since I last Dubbined my Sunday stroll boots as we now have Goretex.
More or less back to the start now, but would have been rude not to have had a quick look around the offices. A Derpers dream.
A discarded rupture belt.
Well that’s it, from what started as a poor trashed explore, it soon metamorphosed into a very enjoyable few hours. The place just goes on and on and has hidden gems at most turns.
Hopefully this won’t be the last report on here before it get demolished for better things!/redevelopment; but as long as Camelot is just up the road I doubt it.
Cheers,
TLR.
Saturday Strolling with Ojay.
Having lived in the Oldham area for well over 25 years Williamsons was a well known institution. Think of the BBC sitcom ‘Open All Hours’ with Albert Arkwright and Granville, add a dodgy till, replace the groceries with an Aladdin’s cave of engineering, DIY, Fire Fighting, Rescue Equipment and conveyors and you’d end up with this place.
If you needed a rear mounting screw for your Sprocket Undulator, this place had it, in stainless steel, carbon steel, titanium, aluminium, brass, copper and duplex, it would also come plastic coated, galvanised, zinc coated, powder coated, acid etched. Every size and grade you could ever dream of and many more which didn’t even appear in your nightmares. Metric, imperial, US, and every other measurement on the planet.
Rumour has it that a UFO crashed into Oldham in the mid 50’s, the spacecraft was extensively damaged with no hope of flying again. That was until they paid Williamsons a visit, within 24 hours they had all the parts they needed and managed a full upgrade on the spacecraft as the technology in the store was about 500 light years ahead of the planet they came from.
My last visit here was for a 7” cast iron drain cover, they were on form as ever, a plastic, cast iron and aluminium drain cover - 6”. 7” and 8” all came out from round the back and cost me pennies. I now wish I’d bought 2 of them.
History
Williamsons had been trading from the same premises in Mumps Bridge Oldham since 1920. A private family business was still run by members of the Williamson family. The business had grown considerably since the outset and covered over two acres of warehouse space. Since 1969 they became a major supplier of Fire Fighting and Rescue Equipment much of this equipment was to Home Office Specification and was available in both new and refurbished condition. Since 1975 they also were suppliers of all variant types of new and refurbished conveyor systems; and held considerable stocks of equipment, and manufacture bespoke items to customer specification.
From the Oldham Chronicle - 05 June 2013 “MYSTERY surrounds a landmark business in Mumps as its approaches its centenary year. Oldham family business Williamsons, established in 1920, supplies fire and rescue equipment, tools and industrial machinery. But on Monday workers were sent home at lunch time and told the company had ceased trading. Calls and emails to the business have gone unanswered, and yesterday the business was closed.”
Williamsons seems to have been another long established Oldham company to fall fowl of the huge disruption, traffic jams and road carnage caused by building the Metrolink to Oldham, which at the end of the day takes shoppers out of Oldham and into Manchester for their shopping, this is good as there are now no shops in Oldham due to building the Metrolink!
Having said that the area where Williamsons is located is destined for a huge multi-million pound redevelopment, including a Marks and Spencer’s, Wine Bars, Bistros, open air dinning outside trendy café’s. I may have lived for only 26 years in Oldham; but see 2 flaws in this cunning redevelopment plan; 1 - The people of Oldham and 2 – the weather.
This was first visited by Host in January, been wanting to head in myself ever since. Due to the location and history I thought it would be on the tourist trail by now, alas Camalot still seems to be the place for young trendy Urbexors to be seen. I am surprised that no one else has been here in the last 3 months, it was a quality report from Host.
My Visit
Where to start with this one, as usual a few plans thrown about the evening before after many beers and the usual banter online I wasn’t sure if Ojay would turn up, I set off early and quickly established the access had changed and was wondering if it was possible at all. I managed to get into a small section which had a nice collection of conveyor belt photos. No order to the report apart from the order I took them in.
It was at this point I got the text to confirm Ojay had managed to get out of bed and was lurking somewhere outside. After locating each other we had a comedy entry into the building proper.
I have to be honest now, at this point even though it was a historically significant place for me with many fond memories I was just a tad disappointed. The place seemed stripped; an empty shell with little evidence of its halcyon days.
Had the place deteriorated that much in the 3 months since Host had visited it, should have read his report before heading in just to refresh my memory, but do like going places with an open mind. Anyway enough waffle, we found the cellar.
The date on the tea-chests was 1978, been down there a couple of years. Wish there were 4 candles in the box marked candles, this place would have had fork handles stored elsewhere.
Now it’s not often a simple white board stops me in my tracks and gets me grinning from ear to ear, this is what Williamsons was all about – Nipper Rat Traps, log splitting grenades, ear muffs, Grubbins Mattocks, Flap Discs, 12” metal funnels and Dutch Hoes to name a few, this white board epitomises Williamsons far better that I ever could.
Back in the front of shop thinking we had seen it all, nice safe.
I left Ojay here farting about with his 50mm lens and his new found love of everything that is a DERP (think he’s been down South too long). A step through a plastic curtain and the whole place opened up, and there was the upstairs too, far, far bigger than it looked and something of interest at each turn.
This is the main warehouse area, the section of the building is old with brick arch vaulted ceilings and remains of Lancashire flag floors.
Seemed to have missed the Lucky Dip, everything in the 2 acres of storage was auctioned off in 2013, there was a lot of unique items.
Upstairs storage racks, now empty.
A nicely framed white door, nice to see Host also took a similar photo on rereading his report.
The odd bit of interest still live on the shelves up here.
Plus some specialist equipment, 48” waist overalls for the pie cognisor.
Apart from the white board this was my favourite place in here, the old stables. Cobblestones and still some of the feeders, dated back to when the company delivered its goods to the local mills my horse and carriage.
Looking back to the main warehouse now we have a bit of sun.
There’s probably enough Dubbin here to waterproof all the boots in the British Army, must be 25 years since I last Dubbined my Sunday stroll boots as we now have Goretex.
More or less back to the start now, but would have been rude not to have had a quick look around the offices. A Derpers dream.
A discarded rupture belt.
Well that’s it, from what started as a poor trashed explore, it soon metamorphosed into a very enjoyable few hours. The place just goes on and on and has hidden gems at most turns.
Hopefully this won’t be the last report on here before it get demolished for better things!/redevelopment; but as long as Camelot is just up the road I doubt it.
Cheers,
TLR.
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