Home Forums Chat Forum Manchester tributes – what's with the bees?

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  • Manchester tributes – what's with the bees?
  • IHN
    Full Member

    What do they signify?

    jonnym92
    Full Member

    The City of Manchester has various heraldic emblems, particularly the worker bee which symbolises industry.

    Symbols of Manchester

    unovolo
    Free Member

    I always thought it was something to do with Boddingtons(R.I.P)

    binners
    Full Member

    Workers, innit

    Birthplace of the industrial revolution, and all that. Its a bit better as a symbol than a 6 year old underneath a loom 😉

    SaxonRider
    Free Member

    😆 at binners!

    monksie
    Free Member

    They’re all over the shop….
    http://www.manchesterbicycleclub.org and this weekend, one of the tattoo places in town are doing tattoos of them for £50 each with all funds going to one of the charities supporting the victims and families of the atrocity. My daughter thinks she’s having one. I’m giving the charity £50…she’s not having a tatttoo

    Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    Symbol of the City innit.

    Everywhere from bollards to bins, from the mosaics on the town hall floor to the patterns on Boddington’s beermats.

    …and if you mess about with it too much it will sting you in the face.

    shermer75
    Free Member

    I can’t believe Boddingtons has closed!!

    thisisnotaspoon
    Free Member

    I can’t believe Boddingtons has closed!!

    Step 1, brew great beer
    Step 2, get bought by A-B Inbev
    Step 3, brew shit* beer that people still buy for a while because it used to be great
    Step 4, close.

    *They made a special effort with Meantime, they swapped Meantime Lager for Grolsh!

    unovolo
    Free Member

    Step 1, brew great beer
    Step 2, get bought by A-B Inbev
    Step 3, brew shit* beer that people still buy for a while because it used to be great
    Step 4, close.

    Wonder if they still own the brand name, if not great opportunity to resurrect it for someone with the means.

    That said was in town at the weekend and found myself in the ‘Port Street beer house’had a pint of Espresso Stout from Squawk brewing company, turns out there from Ardwick so not all is lost beer wise.

    B.A.Nana
    Free Member

    Yep inbev still own it, along with all the other Whitbread brands. Whitbread sold all their breweries and beer brands to Inbev (or Interbrew they were called at the time) in 2000.

    bloodynora
    Free Member

    Manchester birthplace of the Industrial Revolution?? Think you’ve got your history very wrong there

    durhambiker
    Free Member

    What was the Boddingtons brewery has for years now been a bit of wasteland used for event parking for the Manchester Arena

    zzjabzz
    Free Member

    Anyone remember the Bodkan?

    duncancallum
    Full Member

    So where did it start?

    Scotland with James watt

    Cornwall with tethvrick?

    You’d be hard pushed to argue against cottonopolis

    Soz for the splenig

    Ps I’m a scouser(ish) we invented IPA

    Scamper
    Free Member

    Ironbridge, Shropshire.

    jonnym92
    Full Member

    Manchester birthplace of the Industrial Revolution?? Think you’ve got your history very wrong there

    Hmm, I’d say Lancashire as a whole (which I include Manchester). For the inventors of the spinning jenny, waterframe and spinning mule where all from the Lancashire area. I think the first power-looms were supposedly installed in mills in Manchester too? Manchester is also credited with being the first ‘industrial city’ so to say very wrong is a bit of a stretch, unless there’s something I’ve missed?

    IHN
    Full Member

    Scamper – Member

    Ironbridge, Shropshire.

    Is the correct answer

    globalti
    Free Member

    Where was the first “manufactory” built? That would be the birth place of the industrial revolution.

    Wiki is good on factories: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Factory_system

    “One of the earliest factories was John Lombe’s water-powered silk mill at Derby, operational by 1721.”

    CaptJon
    Free Member

    The UK is the birthplace, too hard to pin it down to one invention in one place.

    IHN
    Full Member

    If you like your industrial history, get your visual media device of choice tuned to this:

    https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=industrial+revelations

    Great stuff.

    jonnym92
    Full Member

    Interesting, depends how you phrase the question I guess, and that it’s difficult to pin it down as above. Still flying the flag for Lancashire, though might be a bit biased. Cheers for the links.

    binners
    Full Member

    Manchester birthplace of the Industrial Revolution?? Think you’ve got your history very wrong there

    Whatevs. The world’s first great industrial city then. Unless you’re claiming that for Telford too 😉

    On a related note, this is worth a read…

    About Manchester’s huge cultural contribution to the world, as it was the first City to have a large working population with disposable income, time on their hands, and the need to be kept amused and entertained. Even bigger than Telford! A really interesting read.

    IHN
    Full Member

    I starting reading that BinBins, but it was very Dave Haslam, who I find a bit irritating…

    wobbliscott
    Free Member

    I think you’ll find the true birthplace of the industrial revolution was Arkwrights mill in Cromford, Derbyshire. There Arkwright invented the first mechanical production system for cotton textiles and started the very first mass production of a product that was traded globally that ultimately killed off all the ‘cottage industries’.

    There is a museum there at his first mill with an official plaque and everything proclaiming it to be so!

    The model then spread to Birmingham Manchester and beyond.

    I think bodies bitter was always crap. I never took to lager as a yoof, so cut my teeth on Boddy’s but soon moved into Guinness until he real ale revolution. Unfortunately all that there was on offer near me was Boddy’s or robinsons, the latter only good for slug traps.

    binners
    Full Member

    mogrim
    Full Member

    About Manchester’s huge cultural contribution to the world, as it was the first City to have a large working population with disposable income, time on their hands, and the need to be kept amused and entertained.

    Not belittling Manchester’s contributions, but Shakespeare was entertaining the workers a few years before that in London…

    binners
    Full Member

    Didnt he live in Telford?

    IHN
    Full Member

    Nah, you’re thinking of Steven Spielberg

    And anyway, the rest of you can piss off with your facts; Manchester was the home of fire, the wheel, farming and Um Bongo, and that’s that.

    binners
    Full Member

    Though did you know that both the apostrophe and syphilis originated in Telford

    A couple of useful pub quiz facts for you there.

    And here’s a picture of Bez with some bees. Keen beekeeper is Bez….

    ElShalimo
    Full Member

    The only problem is that Bez thinks that they are magic dancing flying beans.

    @IHN – don’t forget Vimto !!

    Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    That ^ is Peak Manc.

    Everything of any use was invented in Manchester. Fact.

    Try coming here and telling us any different.

    Computers
    Splitting the atom
    Graphine
    Vimto
    Electric motors
    The flying shuttle (ok… Bury)
    Music
    The colour yellow
    Helium
    Fridays
    Cheese
    Pen knives
    Albert Finney
    …and Hall’s Mentholyptus

    globalti
    Free Member

    Yes but the Hall’s factory, half a mile from where I’m typing this, has closed and production has been transferred to some massive factory in Yoorup.

    IHN
    Full Member

    Music
    The colour yellow

    Which, when combined, launched the career of Binners’ favourite band 😉

    mahalo
    Full Member

    BUZZIIIIN’

    binners
    Full Member

    Steps?

    chakaping
    Full Member

    I was wondering this too, so thanks for clearing it up.

    Before I moved up here I found the way Mancunians claimed to have invented everything infuriating – and I suspected it came from a cultural inferiority complex.

    Now I reckon they mainly do it as a wind-up.

    binners
    Full Member

    Cultural inferiority complex? Mancs? …..

    Harry_the_Spider
    Full Member

    Now I reckon they mainly do it as a wind-up.

    Shit, we’ve been rumbled.

    lowey
    Full Member
Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 80 total)

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