User:Mr Stephen/sandbox 2

1st January 1990

2nd April 1990

isbn=978123456789X

isbn=123456789X

ISBN 978123456789X

ISBN 123456789X

isbn=978-1-84217-271-1

ISBN 9781842172711

ISBN 978-1-84217-271-1

AG Hallsworth - Environment and Planning A, 1996 - environmentandplanning.com Shopping Environments By Peter Coleman x The Property Masters By Peter Scott y http://www.icsc.org/srch/sct/sct0106/features_manchester.php Arnold Hagenbach "Arndale" in lib cat


 * http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Manchester&oldid=155188663
 * 30% Irish

trivial
 * confluence Tib/Medlock
 * Reddish Vale
 * Longnor
 * Moss side

Jottings for the 2CUK page.


 * Manchester has been successful in the 1990s in attracting the right sort of firms and people, and has consolidated the long-held view that Manchester is a stable city in which to invest. The 1990s have seen Manchester re-establish itself as Britain's unofficial second city. 'What is now recognised as the second financial centre in the UK… Manchester is now the UK's second city for insurance, leap-frogging Leeds and Birmingham…  It used to be said that Leeds was the North's major legal marketplace: but not any longer'  Quote reffed to Investors Chronicle, 26 Sept 1997, p8.


 * ... Brummies riposted, pointing out that their city's population of almost 1m compared with just 430,000 for Manchester, de facto capital of the North-West. ... Most Britons have better things to do than study local authority boundaries. They simply see two big conurbations of around 2.5m people, jockeying for position. But bodies such as Birmingham Forward are nevertheless noisily banging the drum for ethnic recruit ment. If they fail, growth could suffer and Brummies would have less grounds for beefing the next time a bumbling cabinet minister flatters Manchester by calling it "the second city".





(Multiple uses of "first industrial city".)

(apparently: Peck J,Ward K (Eds), 2002 City of Revolution: Restructuring Manchester (Manchester University Press, Manchester))

Reservoir,year,dam length (m),capacity (Ml),area (ha) Brushes,1870,183,237,3 Swineshaw Higher,1870,350,768,11 Swineshaw Lower,1870,238,252,3 Walkerwood,1870,305,919,11 Dowry,1880,189,740,9 Yeoman Hey,1880,259,936,11 Crooksgate,1883,101,186,3 New Years Bridge,1883,136,413,6 Readycon Dean,1883,160,377,6 Castleshaw Upper,1891,399,1151,12 Castleshaw Lower,1891,448,618,11 Greenfield,1902,206,464,5 Chew,1914,382,936,16 Doveston,1967,561,5046,36 Thirlmere,1894,224,40714,329

http://area23.brightbyte.de/csv2wp.php

http://content-www.cricinfo.com/netherlands/content/story/309351.html

Quayle p7 - 24 million gallons per day from L res, 6.6m consumed in Hyde & Denton. p24 - Mottram T, 6ft dia, 3100 yards long, up to 200ft deep, p46 - first watered 17 October 1850, took a bota through it 19 October.