New communities


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Photograph of some boys playing cricket on View Street taken by Richard RollonNew communities have always come to settle in Bolton.

Flemish weavers settled in Bolton in 1330s introducing spinning and weaving to the area, as well as bringing clogs, which were absorbed into the local culture. 

There are many reasons why people settle in Bolton. Some people come for a better way of life and work. Others come to marry. Some people flee their own countries because of war or persecution.
 
This section of the exhibition looks at some of the reasons why people have made Bolton their home and how areas have changed to reflect these new groups.


Photograph of Yu Min Kang

Yu Min Kang's story

‘My name is Yu Min Kang and I am seventeen. I have lived in Bolton for ten months.’

‘I was born in North Korea but left my country because there is no freedom there. You cannot say what you want or make your own choices. If you do not agree with the government they send you to prison. Two of my uncles went to prison; we have not heard from them since and I do not know if they are alive.’

‘To get to England, my brother, mother and I had to cross the border into China. We were very scared; if you are caught then you would be sent to prison.’

‘I am surprised at how many types of people live in Bolton. I feel safer because I am not just one.’


Mr and Mrs Atcha. Mr Atcha was Bolton's first halal butcher

Mr and Mrs Atcha's story

‘I arrived in England in 1967; ten years after my husband came to live in Bolton. My husband and I came from the village of Barbodhan in India.’

‘We first lived in Deane Road, above my husband’s shop, which he set up with his brother in 1964. It was the first halal butcher’s shop in Bolton. Before that Muslims had to go to farms to buy chickens and prepare them according to their faith. The shop on Deane Road was knocked down but we still have a halal butchers, it is a family business.’

‘I had no idea what Bolton was like before I came here. When I first arrived I did not like it. It was cold and the houses had no heating. I missed Barbodhan and still think of it now but Bolton is my home. I like the area that I live in now there are more Indian shops it is easier. In the 1960s I used to wear crimpoline trousers and Polo necks because I could not get Indian clothes.’