Walter Greenwood was not the only writer whose work has almost immortalized the link between Salford and the image of the ‘slum’. Robert Roberts, born two years after Greenwood in 1905, wrote one the most influential historical accounts of working-class life in early 20th century Salford in The Classic Slum: Salford life in the First Quarter of the Century, first published in 1971, followed by his autobiographical account, A Ragged Schooling published in 1976.
I recently read both The Classic Slum and A Ragged Schooling back-to-back, with the purpose of looking for descriptions of the housing and clues for how it shaped people’s lives and sense of identity. In the preface to the 1990 edition of The Classic Slum, Roberts is described as being ‘born in a Salford slum’, and he lived for most of his youth above the corner shop his parents ran on Waterloo Street, off Liverpool Street.
This was a different Salford ‘slum’ to that immortalized in Greenwood’s Love on the Dole, and Roberts described how each slum ‘had its own cachet and fighting reputation’:
I find Roberts’ comparison between ‘slums’ interesting as it offers another tier of representation of Salford in the first half of the 20th century, showing how the city was, and indeed still is, a collection of communities and neighbourhoods which exist side by side. Roberts suggests these communities had discrete identities and clearly drawn boundaries.
By the time The Classic Slum and A Ragged Schooling were published in the early to mid-1970s, the built environment of Salford, or at least the areas he was describing had changed. The majority of the back-to-back and terraced housing, and narrow streets of Hanky Park had been replaced by high rise blocks of flats separated by broad streets and roadways; although the area ‘round the gasworks’ had experienced less of a transformation. I would describe its character today as industrial although new private high rise apartment blocks are perhaps set to change that.
The University of Salford Library Archives hold a typescript copy of Robert Robert’s A Ragged Schooling. Curiously the original working title for the book was Sweet Irwell, Run Softly.