Everything But A Beach
Exploring Manchester’s hidden history. Dr Dean Kirby, author of best-selling book, Angel Meadow: Victorian Britain’s Most Savage Slum, and journalists Chris Osuh and Yakub Qureshi delve into offbeat, hidden and unreported stories from the past. Discover compelling stories about the world’s first industrial city, from its Roman origins to the present day, and how its inhabitants created a template for modern music, sport, and culture.
Episodes

Saturday Mar 21, 2026
Saturday Mar 21, 2026
What was life actually like working in Victorian Manchester's cotton mills?
We discuss how young couples might tie the knot in mass 'penny weddings', often with disastrous results.
We'll talk about the immense pride working families took in their homes - and how 'donkey stones' were an essential part of the weekly cleaning ritual.
We'll also delve into the precarious conditions of factory life - and the impossible choices that women faced of going without work or leaving newborn infants in the care of nurses all too eager to pacify them with 'Mother's Blessing'.
Special thanks: Manchester BIPC
Image: Lancashire Creative
Our podcast music was provided by The Podcast Host and Alitu: The Podcast Maker app.

Saturday Feb 21, 2026
Saturday Feb 21, 2026
Manchester's cotton industry created a blueprint for modern, industrial life.
But who were the men, women and children that lived in the shadows of the city's towering brick factories?
Chris, Dean and Yakub focus on the human stories from inside the mills - contrasting the uncompromising hardship of factory life in Victorian Manchester with the flickers of hope that kept people going.
We discuss how ordinary people enjoyed their time off, found friendship and sought love and marriage - despite exhausting shifts, crushing poverty and treacherous conditions, where danger lurked in every corner.
Special thanks: Manchester BIPC
Image: Lancashire Creative
Our podcast music was provided by The Podcast Host and Alitu: The Podcast Maker app.

Saturday Jul 20, 2024
Saturday Jul 20, 2024
James Anderton has declared that AIDS patients are ‘swirling in a cesspool of their own making’. Days later, he makes cryptic remarks that he might be a prophet ‘being used by God’. Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government scrambles to deal with the fallout. In this episode, we discuss how civil servants and fellow police chiefs were openly questioning his sanity - and the documents that show how Mrs Thatcher directly intervened in his case. We also explore the background of prejudice and fear which existed in 80s Britain - and how controversial Section 28 laws, coupled with Anderton’s incendiary remarks, saw Manchester stage one of the largest LGBTQ+ rallies ever seen in Britain. In this final episode, Chris, Dean and Yakub also discuss the legacy of James Anderton’s tenure - and whether his hardline policies inspired Manchester bands, artists and social movements in opposition.
Special thanks: Manchester BIPC; Image: Hardman Creative; Our podcast music was provided by The Podcast Host and Alitu: The Podcast Maker app.

Saturday Jul 13, 2024
Saturday Jul 13, 2024
It's Britain in the 1980s. Manchester's police chief is a household name. Satirised on TV comedy shows for his conservative Christian views. Celebrated by government ministers for his robust approach to crime. He is rarely out of the headlines for his clashes with politicians. But the crisis of the Stalker Affair is about to propel both Anderton and his force onto an international stage - threatening to derail hopes for a peaceful end to Northern Ireland's Troubles. We’ll also explore the reopening of the investigation into the Moors Murder case - and James Anderton’s decision to greenlight the clandestine operation to take killer Myra Hindley back to Saddleworth Moors to trace unfound victims.
Content: This episode contains descriptions of the Moors Murder case, which, while avoiding graphic detail, some listeners may find disturbing.
Special thanks: Manchester BIPC Music; Image: Hardman Creative; Our podcast music was provided by The Podcast Host and Alitu: The Podcast Maker app.

Saturday Jul 06, 2024
Saturday Jul 06, 2024
God's Cop James Anderton has brought his crusade to the streets of Manchester. His officers have launched a crackdown on pornography, gay bars and clubs, and businesses selling ‘immoral’ material. But the new chief constable faces opposition at every turn. Running battles with the city’s politicians, the unruly threat of National Front marches, the explosive unrest of the Moss Side riots. We to explore the controversial early years of Anderton’s tenure in the Manchester of the 70s and 80s - including his force’s crackdown on independent publisher Savoy Press, ultimately leading to an extraordinary case of Lord Horror, Britain's last banned book.
Special thanks: Manchester BIPC; Image: Hardman Creative; Our podcast music was provided by The Podcast Host and Alitu: The Podcast Maker app.

Saturday Jun 29, 2024
Saturday Jun 29, 2024
James Anderton was the most controversial police officer in modern British history. A hero to some. A reactionary menace to others. This is the story of how the chief constable of Greater Manchester Police brought a moral crusade to the streets of 1980s Britain, becoming an electrifying public figure famed for his outspoken views and religious zeal. His outrageous comments about AIDS and cryptic remarks about being ‘used by God’ - prompted a crisis for Margaret Thatcher’s Government and brought the police force to breaking point. In this episode, Yakub, Dean and Chris discuss James Anderton’s childhood in a Wigan mining community, the origin of his profound religious worldview, his early years as a beat cop in south Manchester and meteoric rise to become chief constable of Britain’s largest provincial police force.
Special thanks: Manchester BIPC Music; Image: Hardman Creative; Our podcast music was provided by The Podcast Host and Alitu: The Podcast Maker app.

Saturday Jun 22, 2024
Saturday Jun 22, 2024
Buffalo Bill has packed up his travelling show, taking hundreds of performers back on the road. But what legacy has been left behind in Greater Manchester? Historian Dean delves into the truth of whether Sioux performers from North Dakota slipped into the Salford streets and ended up make their homes in Victorian England. Using archive material and family records, we close in on the truth to this enduring local legend - making a surprising discovery.
Special thanks: Manchester BIPC; Image: Hardman Creative; our podcast music was provided by The Podcast Host and Alitu: The Podcast Maker app.

Saturday Jun 15, 2024
Saturday Jun 15, 2024
American promoter Buffalo Bill Cody brings the greatest show on earth to a racecourse ground in Salford, where an army of performers and crew construct ‘the largest theatre ever seen in the world’. The Wild West show thrills England’s Victorian millworkers and is remembered for decades to come. But did, according to local legend, hundreds of native American performers disappear into the smog-cloaked streets of Victorian England, never to be seen again? In this episode, we explore the legend of the Salford Sioux. We’ll discuss the performers who took part in the show, the tumultuous and violent period in American history, and the impact this enormous wild west touring performance had on the imagination of workers in Victorian England’s powerhouse city.
Special thanks: Manchester BIPC; Image: Hardman Creative; Music: Our podcast music was provided by The Podcast Host and Alitu: The Podcast Maker app.

Saturday Jun 08, 2024
Saturday Jun 08, 2024
Which Manc words have survived over time? We look at the work of journalist and poet Samuel Bamford, who created an ambitious collection of words from the Victorian city and its surrounding towns, and we also make some surprising discoveries about expressions that are still used today. We’ll talk about the poets, actors, comedians and singers - from Gracie Fields to Victoria Wood to Liam Gallagher - who have kept Greater Manchester idioms at the forefront of popular British culture. Finally, Chris, Dean and Yakub also try to separate stereotypical expressions (do people still say ‘mad for it’?) from the real language used by Mancunians in the 21st century..
Special thanks: Manchester BIPC Music; Image: Hardman Creative; Our podcast music was provided by The Podcast Host and Alitu: The Podcast Maker app.

Saturday Jun 01, 2024
Saturday Jun 01, 2024
Are you a choughin-yed? Do you feel wambly? Does someone you know talk too much flother? In this episode, we look back at the language used by 19th century Mancunians, whose dialect was championed by novelist Elizabeth Gaskell in her novels Mary Barton and North and South. We’ll discuss how Gaskell challenged lazy stereotypes about women writers, becoming a literary superstar and important social campaigner. Dean, Chris and Yakub discuss how she introduced expressions used by everyday working people to a wider Victorian audience - as well as delving into the meaning of words used in the thriving industrial city of Manchester - including ‘nesh’, ‘frabbit’ and ‘baggin-time’.
Special thanks: Manchester BIPC; Image: Hardman Creative; Our podcast music was provided by The Podcast Host and Alitu: The Podcast Maker app.

"Manchester has got everything except a beach,"
Ian Brown
Discover fascinating stories from Manchester’s past.
We discuss the heroes and villians, pioneers and visionaries who turned an anonymous Roman outpost into the world’s first modern city – giving birth to new ideas, technologies and social movements.
It’s the tale of how a city partied, dreamed and experimented its way through 2,000 years.
Learn about innovators, scientists and believers whose bold ideas have changed the world – as well as the loves, lives and struggles of ordinary people who give the city its indomitable character.
Whether you are a Manc or not, we hope to persuade you that a single city can – and has – changed the world.





