(Redirected from The Firs)
Chancellors Hotel & Conference Centre
'Chancellors Hotel & Conference Centre' (formerly named 'The Firs'), is a
Grade II listed[1] mansion in
Fallowfield,
Manchester,
England.
The house was built in
1850 for
Sir Joseph Whitworth, by
Edward Walters, who was also responsible for Manchester’s
Free Trade Hall and
Strangeways Prison. The house was surrounded by a estate
2. Whitworth used The Firs mainly as a social, political and business base, entertaining radicals of the age such as
John Bright,
Richard Cobden,
William Forster and
T.H. Huxley at the time of the
Reform Bill of
1867. Whitworth, credited with raising the art of
machine-tool building to a previously-unknown level, supported the new
Mechanics Institute in
Manchester – the birthplace of
UMIST - and helped to found the
Manchester School of Design.
In
1882, having built a new house in
Darley Dale, Whitworth leased The Firs to his friend
C.P. Scott, editor of the
Manchester Guardian[2]. After Scott's
death the house became the property of
Owens College, the forerunner to the modern
University of Manchester, and was the Vice-Chancellor's residence until
1991.
The house was converted into a hotel and re-opened as the western wing of Chancellors Hotel & Conference Centre in 1997. Today the house is surrounded by five and a half acres of gardens.
See also
★
The Firs Botanical Gardens
References
1. http://www.manchester.gov.uk/planning/heritage/listed/streets4.htm
2. http://www.ls.manchester.ac.uk/research/facilities/botanicalgrounds/history/
External links
★
Chancellors Website
★
★
★
Chancellors Hotel & Conference Centre, Fallowfield - Profile on iKnow North West.