Saturday, 12 August 2023

Toad Lane, Rochdale, and The Story of the Co-operative Pioneers Movement.

On December 21st, 1844, the first Co-operative Pioneers trading store opened its door at No. 31 Toad Lane, Rochdale, when a group of sixty local men decided to help the working class people of Rochdale to be able to buy items of food at discounted prices. They actually began their venture, though, thirteen years earlier in 1830 at No.15, just down the road from their main Co-operative Pioneers store, which is now the Rochdale Pioneers Museum. From then on the Co-operative Pioneers Movement slowly began to gather pace and other stores were to eventually open in nearby towns, including Oldham, but Oldham itself had already had its very own co-operative movement in 1795 when some local weavers established a supply company there, and, there had been other attempts to set up co-operative movements eleswhere, especially in the London area in the late 18th-century when some corn mills and a Co-op store were established, however these were not particularly successsful.
Memories of Rochdale (1996) gives the following historical information called 'Cradle of the Co-operative Movement' and says: "Rochdale is famous for being the 'home' of the worldwide Co-operative Movement, which started life at No 31 Toad Lane in the humble premises first opened as a shop by the Rochdale Equitable Pioneers Society in December 1844.
"The little store established by the Pioneers began by selling only a basic stock of commodities such as butter, sugar, flour, oatmeal and candles, a reflection of the desperate conditions for most working people at the time. Trade developed rapidly however, and within a few years the Pioneers Society was able to open branch shops in other parts of the town - the first was in Oldham Road - and to move into an imposing four storey 'central store' higher up Toad Lane. Unfortunately this building was demolished to make way for a new road system. But an even more imposing symbol of the Cooperative Movement's success during the intervening years has arrived in Rochdale with the opening in 1996 of a spectacular new headquarters at Sandbrook Park for the largest independent consumer-owned society, CRS Ltd. This has brought hundreds of new jobs to the town and provided a significant boost to the local economy.
"The Co-operative Movement that was born in Rochdale has spread throughout the United Kingdom and today it is one of the country's biggest retail organisations, providing eight million members with a vast range of shopping facilities and services, extending from banking and insurance to travel and funerals. The idea has flourished too as an international network of 750 million members in more than 100 countries, with the 'Rochdale Principles' - the decisions and practices of the first Pioneers - still referred to as a guide to setting up and running co-operative enterprises.
"The original Toad Lane premises meanwhile have been lovingly restored as part of a conservation area. Now the Rochdale Pioneers Museum is a source of interest and inspiration for co-operators everywhere attracting thousands of visitors from the UK and abroad each year."
Memories of Rochdale (1996) adds to the above and says of the Museum in Toad Lane:"Visitors to the Rochdale Pioneers Museum are struck by the basic simplicity of the original Co-operative store, where the goods initially sold were few. Close inspection of the poster on the wall reveals the Pioneer Principles, which included: open membership, democratic control and political and religious neutrality."
Sources & References:
Memories Of Rochdale with Forward by Phil Holland (Publisher), True North Publishing, Halifax, December 1996.
Cole, John, Rochdale Revisited - A Town And Its People, George Kelsall, Littleborough, Lancashire, 1988.
https://www.visitrochdale.com/things-to-do/rochdale-pioneers-museum-p85681
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