It rained in the night. It rained cats and dogs, or more likely elephants and hippos! It was still bucketing down when I went out to catch a bus into the town centre to collect a new pair of glasses. The sun was shining when I made my homeward journey but it didn’t last long. Clearly the warm and sunny weather of a few weeks ago and the relatively dry, if gloomy weather of the last week or so were intended to lull us into a false sense of security. Winter cold and wet is back! It’s cold. I have taken to wearing layers of clothing and I’ve dug out the winter weight socks that Input away a few weeks ago. So it goes!
I took the opportunity of being in the town centre to visit the recently opened new venue for Oldham Market at one end of the Spindles shopping centre. On the bus I heard people commenting on the new market which opened at the end of March. While people seemed generally satisfied, there was an air of nostalgia for a flourishing outdoor market now disappeared and an indoor market of character replaced by something not quite so special. But most of the stalls seem to have moved successfully. There’s a good fresh fish stall. Looking at a map of the market, however, it looks as though the shoe repair stall has gone, as has the stall selling knitting patterns and yarn. Maybe people don’t have shoes re-soled any more but I was given to to understand that knitting had made a comeback.
Anyway, here’s some information from the internet!
“Oldham has had a market since 1788. The original market was held on land owned by Thomas Whittaker, near Albion Street — and over time that land became known simply as Tommyfield. A name that became synonymous with community, commerce, and a good Saturday morning out.
In 1860, Tommyfield gained national fame as the first place in Britain to sell fried chips and there's a blue plaque to prove it.”
(One soirce said Thomas Whittaker was a pig farmer, known kocally as “Owd Tommy”, hence the name Tommyfield.)
“At its height, the indoor Victoria Market was among the largest of its kind in the country, home to around 500 stalls. When fire destroyed it in 1974, the council had traders back in a temporary building within four months. That's how much this market meant to Oldham.
The Tommyfield site served the town for over two centuries. But as part of Oldham's £450m town centre regeneration, the market has moved — around 200 metres down the road — into a purpose-built home inside The Spindles. The traders who made Tommyfield special are still here. They've just got a space that does them justice.
And the Tommyfield name lives on — in the new five-acre Tommyfield Park taking shape nearby, a green space for the next generation of Oldham people to call their own.”
The old Tommyfield Market, or maybe the indoor market hall, was reputed to be the home of the first fish and chip shop in England. How true that is has been questioned but there was once a blue plaque to that effect. I wonder what has become of the plaque.
Once the old indoor market has been demolished I hear that it is to become a town centre car park. Is this progress? We shall see.
Life goes on. Stay safe and well, everyone!




















