Pubs of Manchester

All pubs within the city centre and beyond.
A history of Manchester's hundreds of lost pubs.

Wednesday 26 February 2014

Tatton Arms / Boat House Inn, Boat Lane

Tatton Arms, Boat Lane, Northenden, 2007. (c) Keith Williamson at geograph under Creative Commons.

The Tatton Arms is a huge old pub on the banks of the River Mersey on Boat Lane at Northenden, but sadly it's been closed since 2007.  It's in a sorry state having been vandalised - possibly by the same rough lot who frequented the pub towards the end - and left to rot by its irresponsible owners.

Tatton Arms, Boat Lane. (c) David Dixon at geograph under Creative Commons.

The Tatton Arms was originally known as the Boat House Inn, as shown in these two photos from 1898.  The boat house that gave the inn its original name still stands today and was last known to be in good repair and in use by a local theatre company.

Boat House Inn, Boat Lane, 1898. (c) Manchester Local Image Collection. Click here to view full image [1].

It is a well-photographed landmark in South Manchester, seen here in 1937, in 1967 from the other side of the River Mersey, and twice in 1971 with that looks like a Wilsons sign.  The Tatton Arms later became a Chef & Brewer house.  From some angles, like looking at the Northenden Wier, the Tatton Arms resembles a remote country pub.

Tatton Arms, Boat Lane. (c) laivakoira blog.

The Tatton Arms gives its name to the footbridge which crosses the River Mersey in front of the old pub, which is still in use today despite the car park to which it leads being fenced off. 

Tatton Arms, Boat Lane. (c) Gerald England at geograph under Creative Commons.

There used to be a rope-pulled ferry across the Mersey here, and then when the bridge was built, it was a toll-bridge with toll-booths at each end [2].

Tatton Arms from Tatton Arms Footbridge. (c) Gerald England at geograph under Creative Commons.

The Tatton Arms faces an uncertain future, and with an apparent lack of protected status, will surely face demolition like most of the other giant Wythenshawe pubs have.  You can catch a glimpse of the old Tatton Arms without going to Northenden if you keep an eye out when passing on the M60 (as a passenger of course).

Tatton Arms, Boat Lane, 1930s. (c) With permission from Northenden Old & New [3].

8 comments:

  1. I was sad to see its state when I photographed it in 2010 - I was wondering what had happened to it since.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. My father in law and myself drank in there a few times during the day through the week if we were off on the same days. In the late 80,s it did attract trouble at the weekend and they put door staff on. Northenden lost it's best pubs one after the other. It always left me wondering why they found use for old church Inn on Church Road but couldn't rescue a listed building like the Tatton Arms. Once one decent pub went they all followed suit,it literally killed trade off in Northenden. Now its cheap looking bars and pound shops with no character. Pretty much the same all over Wythenshawe.

      Delete
  2. Still standing, unoccupied, looked in good repair though, crying shame, great Building.

    ReplyDelete
  3. It looks a fantastic building and surprised it didn't get reasonable trade by the river. My great, great grandfather was the licencee in 1911 so sad to see it in such a state.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Built in 1873 by the tatton family, wrecked 145 years later by Britannia property group

    ReplyDelete
  5. https://www.placenorthwest.co.uk/news/fresh-plans-for-tatton-arms-lodged/

    ReplyDelete
  6. block of flats there now.

    ReplyDelete
  7. It would make a lovely hotel, all the golf courses round there and the river🤔

    ReplyDelete