Bolton Town, Greater Manchester, UK – Timeline History

Bolton’s evolution from a small moorland settlement to a world-leading industrial powerhouse and modern metropolitan borough is marked by these key milestones:

Early History & Foundations

Civil War & Growth (17th–18th Century) 

Industrial Revolution (19th Century)

  • 1828: The Bolton and Leigh Railway opens, becoming the oldest in Lancashire.
  • 1838: Bolton is incorporated as a municipal borough.
  • 1839: Chartist riots lead to the reading of the Riot Act.
  • 1873: The current Bolton Town Hall is officially opened.
  • 1889: Bolton is granted County Borough status, making it self-governing and independent of Lancashire County Council. 

Modern Era (20th Century–Present)

Bolton Town, Technical Timeline History

Bolton’s technical and industrial evolution shifted it from a medieval market town to a global leader in cotton spinning and engineering, before transitioning into a modern educational and service hub. 

Industrial Revolution & Engineering (1700s – 1800s)

Bolton’s transformation was driven by local inventors whose technical breakthroughs redefined the textile industry. 

  • 1779: Samuel Crompton invented the Spinning Mule at Hall i’ th’ Wood, combining earlier technologies to produce high-quality yarn.
  • 1780: The town’s first spinning mill opened, marking the start of large-scale mechanised production.
  • 1820: Thomas Bonsor Crompton patented a method for continuously drying paper, a major technical breakthrough for the local paper industry.
  • 1828: One of the world’s first railways, the Bolton and Leigh Railway, opened using George Stephenson’s locomotive “The Witch”.
  • 1873: The Bolton Town Hall opened, a massive Victorian architectural project reflecting the town’s industrial wealth. 

Modern Infrastructure & Power (1880 – 1950)

Technical focus shifted toward municipal services, electricity, and the zenith of the cotton industry. 

  • 1880: Horse-drawn municipal transport began, followed by a telephone connection between Bolton and Manchester.
  • 1894: The first electric power station opened at Spa Road on October 31st.
  • 1899: The town launched its first electric tram service.
  • 1914: The Back o’ th’ Bank electricity generating station began supplying the town.
  • 1929: Bolton reached its industrial peak with 216 cotton mills in operation. 

Education & Re-development (1960s – Present)

As the cotton industry declined, Bolton pivoted toward technical education and retail-led regeneration. 

  • 1963: The Bolton Technical College split into Bolton Technical College and the Bolton Institute of Technology (the precursor to the University of Bolton).
  • 1971: The Crompton Place Shopping Centre opened as part of modern town-centre re-development.
  • 1980s: Cotton manufacturing virtually ceased, and the town’s industrial structure diversified into general engineering.
  • 2026: Planning is underway for the demolition of Crompton Place to create a new pedestrian link and modern mixed-use development, scheduled for 2027. 

Bolton Town, Greater Manchester, UK – Timeline History

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Author: Mark Whitfield

Welcome to my site! After graduating in Computing in 1990, I accepted a position as a programmer at a Runcorn based software house specialising in electronic banking software, namely sp/ARCHITECT-BANK on Tandem Computers (now HPE NonStop). This was before the internet became more prevalent and so the notion of enabling desktop access to company accounts for inter-account transfers and book keeping was still quite a cutting edge idea (and smartphones only ever hinted at in Space 1999). The company was called The Software Partnership (which was taken over by Deluxe Data in 1994). I spent 5 years in Runcorn developing code for SP/ARCHITECT for various banks like TSB, Bank of Scotland, Rabobank and Girofon (Denmark) to name but a few. I then moved onto a software house in Salford Quays for further bank facing projects. After a further 23 years in the IT industry and now a Senior IT Project Manager (both Agile and Waterfall delivery), I thought I would echo out my Career Profile in this corner of the internet for quick and easy access.

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