I have begun to bribe Neil with meatballs and cake so he
will actually step foot inside IKEA these days.
After one trip we decided to go to St Helens, just because we've never
been and I’d also been asked many moons ago to do a Life in Northern Towns
review of this town.
Getting to St Helens is simple - we headed down the M62,
past the Dream statue, exited at junction 7, negotiated the many roundabouts of
the A570 and passed the out of town retail parks into St Helens.
The Dream statue on the edge of St Helens was built to commemorate
the mining history of the place. Whilst
I don’t have a problem with public art, as I think landmarks are important as
it gives a sense of place, the Dream is too subtle as a gateway piece of
art. On a dull day with grey skies you
will miss it as it’s white and blends in.
Obviously on a clear blue sky day you can’t miss it, but how many blue
sky days do you get in the north of England?
Nice idea, but I don’t think it has the same impact as the Angel of the
North. Possibly it’s a bit too literal and
lacks ambition for my tastes.
Back to the town centre - we parked in an old style multi-storey
car park with very tight turns. However
on the upside it was cheap at £1.20 for two hours parking.
St Helens is a mix of big name high street stores
interspersed with lots of random independently owned stores. The town is dominated by a large precinct with
the major high street chains, whilst most of the independent shops occupy the
side streets around the edge of it. Credit
needs to be given to St Helens Council as the streets were clean and the
buildings seemed well maintained. On a
scale I would say it was better than Leigh, but not as good as Wigan in terms
of shopping experiences go.
There were lots of little cafes dotted about the streets and
seemed quite popular. However they
tended to be your liver and onion specials type of cafes you’d have found in
the 60s and 70s, rather than your posh panini type. If you wanted to film a Ken Loach type film
set in the 70s or 80s these type of cafes would be perfect period locations.
The pubs seemed rather old school, although I did notice
Havana seemed to be more up-to-date had embraced the food aspect of modern pub
culture in a northern style. You could
see people through the windows having their English breakfast with a pint or a
pot of tea.
We obviously hit the charity shops and there were lots of
them. Most, if not all, were very well
maintained shops and therefore easy to navigate. Although if memory serves me correctly we
couldn’t find an Oxfam. I found the
books were cheap to pick up and Neil picked up a couple of collectable vinyl
records. The lady in the charity shop
struck up a conversation with Neil about how vinyl was becoming collectable, although
Neil hadn’t the heart to explain to her this depends on the artist and
condition of the record and not the fact it was on vinyl.
If you are looking to kit out a new home with furniture on a
budget I always recommend visiting your local hospice charity shop. If you don’t mind doing some sanding and
painting you can get some fab pieces of cheap furniture. In St Helens I found Willowbrook Hospice Charity Shop and if you are looking for a fire surround type mantelpiece this a
place for you and they had a good selection.
I absolutely regret not picking up one for £35 as I hadn’t the
dimensions of my fireplace. You can save
yourself lots of money for sure looking in the Hospice shops.
Thankfully in St Helens there still remained some cultural
independent shops including Kaleidoscope Records where you could find new and
used records. Neil did actually browse
in here as the prices they charged were Kingbee reasonable, which is cheap by
most record shop standards. Opposite Kaleidoscope was Wardleworths bookshop,
which was nice and friendly. RenniesArts and Crafts shop manages to serve the local art community too. It maybe helps there is a local college in the
heart of the town that helps keeps these shops ticking over, but it’s great to
see them survive in this day and age.
Architecturally St Helens is quite interesting when you get
away from the precinct. There are quite
a few buildings from its Victorian heyday.
The Clocktower building, which is part of the college, stands proud with
a carving of a scary looking man with a moustache staring down at passers-by. Havana seems to have taken over a former
department store and interestingly it has a zodiac clock on the side of the
building. The Yorkshire Bank now
occupies the grand white building that used to house The Manchester and County
Bank Ltd building opposite the precinct.
It’s so important to look up in northern towns and see the history
contained within these buildings.
Familiarity of a town often blinkers you to the pockets of beauty that are
contained within the place.
St Helens was very quiet the day we went. Maybe it was the bad weather putting people
off or maybe people had scooted off to nearby Liverpool to do their shopping. However I did notice it was one of the least ethnically
diverse places I’ve been to for some time.
St Helens is an ex-mining town between Manchester and Liverpool and
obviously with the decline in the industry it has experienced some economic
issues. Maybe that is a reason why
people from different ethnic backgrounds haven’t moved into St Helens as there aren’t
that many economic opportunities in the town.
I know efforts have been made to address the local economy, but when you
visit nearby Liverpool and Manchester, they are worlds apart in terms of
regeneration.
What else struck me was how ‘old’ the older people
looked. When I worked in Wythenshawe I
noticed the older people had their hard lives etched in their faces and St
Helens is no different. Obviously
working down mines and in industry takes it out of people physically in the
long term with poorer health and shorter lives.
However the physical gap between young and old is immense in this town.
Whilst the young are sporting scouse brows and fake tan with no cares in the
world, the older people are hunched over with arthritis and grey with heart and
lung disease. My Dad looks positively
spritely compared to some of the people we saw here. Whilst he worked hard throughout his working
life and he has had health issues, at least he worked outside and wasn't
exposed to the harsh underground conditions miners had to face.
It was interesting to visit St Helens, although the weather
seriously didn't help matters. You could
not help but see the issues that affect the people here in terms of health and
economy. I do wonder what the future has
to offer St Helens as it is caught between the cities of Manchester and
Liverpool. Maybe its future is that of a
commuter town or maybe it will get caught in the regeneration effect that flows
out of Liverpool and Manchester. However
I don’t have a crystal ball and can’t predict the future. What I did see was a northern town struggling
with the impacts of its industrial past, but dealing with it as positively as
it can with regeneration projects and a large college educating its young
people.
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