town in Greater Manchester, England, UK

Bury (pronounced "Berry") is a town and borough in Greater Manchester, in the North West of England, ten miles north of central Manchester. Bury is a former mill town known for manufacturing textiles. Now it is known for the open-air Bury Market and black pudding, the traditional local dish. In 2021 its population was 81,000.

Understand

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Bury Town Hall

Bury grew rapidly from the 18th century as a textile town, at first for wool but later chiefly for cotton. Sir Robert Peel (1788-1850) was born here to a wealthy textile family, and founded the modern police force and served as British prime minister. The lot of Bury's mill workers was less fortunate, as the 19th-century town became overcrowded, squalid and rife with disease. Still they made a living, until the mid 20th century when the cotton industry collapsed, and much of the town became derelict. Historically within Lancashire, in 1974 Bury became part of Greater Manchester, and is nowadays primarily a commuter town. The borough also includes the more affluent suburbs of Prestwich and Whitefield (with long-established Jewish populations), Radcliffe, and (the most scenic) Ramsbottom on the edge of the Pennines.

Bury is indelibly linked to the black pudding, produced and consumed here in industrial quantities, and hurled over record-breaking distances at an annual contest in Ramsbottom.

Get in

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See Manchester#Get_in for long-distance travel options. From Manchester Airport (MAN IATA) take the train or bus to Piccadilly then Bus 135 or tram to Bury.

By tram

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Bury no longer has mainline trains, but it's a terminus of the Metrolink trams, green and yellow lines. These run downtown via Whitefield and Prestwich to Manchester Victoria station; the yellow line forks south to Piccadilly station, while the green line crosses city centre westwards and out to Old Trafford, Stretford, Sale and Altrincham. Change in city centre for the other lines to Salford Quays, Media City and Eccles, to Etihad Stadium and Ashton-under-Lyne, to Imperial War Museum and Trafford Centre (this line opened in Match 2020), to Wythenshawe and the airport, and to East Didsbury.

Trams normally run every 10 min or so between 6AM and 11:30PM. See TGM Metrolink website for fare deals, service updates and travel planner; you must buy your ticket before boarding.

1 Bury Interchange Bury Interchange on Wikipedia, off Haymarket Street, is in Fare Zone 4, so a ride to city centre costs £4.60 single. The same ticket would actually take you all the way to the airport, 90 min.

By bus

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Castle Armoury is still used by the Territorial Army

First Manchester Bus 135 runs between Manchester Piccadilly and Bury every 10 min or so, taking 50 min. It also operates as a night bus late on Friday and Saturday. Bus 471 bus runs from Bolton, taking 30 min.

By car

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Bury lies at the junction of the A56 and A58. From the M60, exit J17 to join the A56 (Manchester Road/Bury New Road). From the M66, exit J2 to join the A58 (Bolton Road).

There is plenty of parking available in and around Bury. Prices vary, according to the type of parking offered (e.g. private, council-run, multi-story, on-street) but they are pretty reasonable compared to city prices. Free parking is available for Metrolink users at most stops, so it may be an idea to leave the car and hop-on a tram for the day instead.

Get around

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See Manchester#Get_around for ticket deals and passes for the bus & tram network.

By foot

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Being a small town, most places in Bury are within walking distance (i.e. it will take you less than 20 min to walk from one side of the town to the other). If you are planning on venturing a little further out of the centre, then a bus may be useful.

By bicycle

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There are many cycle lanes throughout Bury. For cycling enthusiasts, the TFGM website provides information on a few scenic routes around the more 'rural' outskirts. The National Cycle Route 6 Passes through Bury, continuing along the old railway lines to Greenmount and Ramsbottom

By bus

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Bus services in the Bury area:

To Bolton: 471 via Breightmet, 480 via Greenmount, 511 via Ainsworth, 524 via Radcliffe

To Rochdale: 467/468 via Fairfield Hospital, 471 via Heywood

To Ramsbottom: 472 via Walmersley & 474 via Holcombe Brook (Circular route), B1 via Summerseat

To Manchester: 97 via Unsworth, 98 via Radcliffe, 135 via Whitefield, 163 via Middleton

To Farnworth: 512 via Ainsworth, 513 via Radcliffe

Other Buses: 94 to NMGH, 95 to Salford, 469 to Tottington, 481 to Blackburn, 483 to Burnley, B2 to Nangreves, B3 to Norden, B4 to Hopwood

By taxi

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Private-hire taxis and black cabs are available within and around Bury. Private hire taxis cannot be hailed, they must be booked either in person from a taxi rank, or over the phone, or else the car's insurance is void. Prices on private hire taxis are quite reasonable and if there is more than one person travelling short distances, they often end up being cheaper than the equivalent bus fares.

Bury Parish Church
  • 1 Church of St Mary the Virgin, The Rock, Bury BL9 0AH. Anglican parish church on a high point just north of town centre. The previous 16th-century church was replaced in two stages, so the present spire dates from 1842 and the rest from 1876. Note the hammerbeam and tiebeam roof, mosaics, and stain-glass windows. It's a regimental church of the Lancashire Fusiliers, and in 2013 the military funeral of the murdered Fusilier Lee Rigby was held here. Church of St Mary the Virgin, Bury (Q5117588) on Wikidata Church of St Mary the Virgin, Bury on Wikipedia
  • 2 Bury Art Museum & Sculpture Centre, Moss St, Bury BL9 0DR. Tu-F 10AM-5PM, Sa 10AM-4:30PM. Small but impressive collection of pre-Raphaelite and neoclassical painting, plus new sculpture centre, and various exhibitions. Big names include JMW Turner's Calais Sands, Sir Edwin Landseer's The Random Shot, and John Constable's Hampstead Heath. Free. Bury Art Museum (Q5001071) on Wikidata Bury Art Museum on Wikipedia
  • 3 Radcliffe is a village two miles south of Bury, on the same tram route. It's post-industrial and run-down, but see the 14th- to 15th-century Church of St Mary (Anglican) and the crumbling remnants of 15th-century Radcliffe Tower.
  • 4 Ramsbottom is a well-preserved mill village six miles north of Bury, hemmed in by the steep Pennine slopes, where streams surged down to power the mills. Its 19th-century Grant family may have been the model for the Cheeryble brothers in Charles Dickens' Nicholas Nickleby. They practised a rapaciously efficient "Truck System": employees were not paid in cash but in tokens that could only be spent on beer in the company-owned pub.
Bolton Street - Ramsbottom's main thoroughfare.
  • 1 The Met, Market St BL9 0BW (within Mill Gate shopping centre), +44 161 761-2216. This small space hosts theatre and comedy, but is mostly a live music venue. The Met (Q7751157) on Wikidata The Met (arts centre) on Wikipedia
  • 2 Burrs Country Park is a park and caravan site on the riverside two miles north of town. It has canoeing, kayaking, angling, other water activities, climbing, ropes, adventure playground and obstacle course. Steam trains of the East Lancashire Railway chuff through.
  • Irwell Sculpture Trail is a 30 miles (50 km) in length footpath from The Quays to Bacup dotted with large sculptures. On the section around Bury find Trinity, Our Seats Are Almost Touching, the Outwood Colliery group, Nailing Home, the barge in the bulrushes, As if I Were a River, Seek and You Will Find, In the Picture, Remnant Kings, Whispering Wall, Gateway, Willow Tree, Bocholt Tree, and Logarhythms.
  • 3 Peel Monument on Harcles (or Holcombe) Hill commemorates Sir Robert Peel (1788-1850); the 39 m (128 ft) tower has a viewing platform and you may be able to ascend further. Lots of footpaths with valley views all around. While historians would recommend you don't call it the "Peel tower" [as that refers to a type of stubby medieval fort common across northern England and lowland Scotland], residents prefer to use this name. In both Holcombe and Ramsbottom, you may see a lot of memorabilia to commemorate what they commonly refer to as “Peel tower”.
  • Hiking: lots of other hikes in the West Pennine Moors. Use OS Landranger map 109 Manchester and 103 Blackburn.
  • 4 East Lancashire Railway, Bolton St, Bury BL9 0EY, +44 161 764-7790. Oct-Mar: Sa Su; Apr-Sep: W-Su. Heritage standard-gauge railway which plies between Heywood, Bury, Ramsbottom and Rawtenstall, a 12 mile run, often steam-hauled. They also have occasional steam excursions on the UK mainline. Ticket includes admission to Bury Transport Museum. Adult day ticket £16, family (2+3) £42. East Lancashire Railway (Q5328784) on Wikidata East Lancashire Railway on Wikipedia
  • Watch football but alas not at Bury FC, you'll have to head into Manchester. In 2019 Bury won promotion to League One, the third tier of English soccer, but they collapsed financially and were thrown out of the League before they'd even kicked a ball in the 2019/20 season.
  • World Black Pudding Hurling Championships are held on the second Sunday of September outside The Oaks pub on Bridge St, Ramsbottom. The format is like a coconut-shy: a pile of Yorkshire puddings are mounted on a 20-foot plinth, and the aim is to knock over the maximum number in three underarm shots. The next event is on Sun 13 Sept 2020.
Market Place in the centre of Ramsbottom.
  • 1 Bury Market. Open air markets are W, F and Sa, with the Market Hall open M-Sa. There's a grand variety of stalls. Bury Market (Q5001097) on Wikidata Bury Market on Wikipedia
  • 2 Mill Gate Shopping Centre. Usual high street chains.
  • 3 The Rock. The town's newest shopping centre, mostly fashion and clothing outlets.
  • Leckenbys (formerly Chocoholics), 27 Minden Parade, Mill Gate Shopping Centre, +44 161 761-1191. M-F 9:30AM-4:30PM, Sa 9:30AM-5:30PM, Su 11AM-4PM. Cafe and tea room. Service is excellent and the salads, sandwiches and cakes are superb. The whole place is spotless.
  • TGI Fridays, Valley Park Rd, Prestwich M25 3TG (next to Premier Inn at Junction 17 of M60). M-Sa 11:30AM-11AM, Su 11:30AM-10:30PM. Chain diner.
  • 1 Peppe's Pizzeria, 264 Bury New Rd, Whitefield M45 8GS, +44 161 766-2557. Tu-Th Su 5-9:30PM, F Sa 5-10:30PM. A tiny, family-run Italian restaurant. Good pizza & pasta, cash only.
  • 2 Forts of India, 7-11 Radcliffe New Rd, Whitefield M45 7QX, +44 161 766-5873. Gets very mixed reviews for quality of food and price. M-Sa 5-11PM, Su 1-10PM.
  • 3 Roma, 268 Bury New Rd, Whitefield M45 8QS, +44 161 766-2941. M-Th Sa 9AM-6PM, F 9AM-8PM. Good during the day for coffee and lunch.
  • 4 Slattery's, 197 Bury New Road, Whitefield M45 6GE, +44 161 767-9303. M-F 9AM-5:30PM, Sa 9AM-5PM. Cake shop & bakery with big cafe on the first floor, good for lunch and afternoon teas. Ample parking.
  • 5 Owens, 10 Railway Street, Ramsbottom BL0 9AL, +44 1706 821821. serving Su-Th 9AM-8:30PM, F Sa 9AM-9PM. Good restaurant serving English fare.
  • The restaurant at The Village Hotel offers good food and friendly service.
  • The Rock incorporates apartments, a cinema, a 25-lane bowling complex and many high street stores, bars, cafes and restaurants.
  • The restaurant and cafe bar at the Bury Met Theatre is good and also popular, as a bar, in the evenings.

Drink

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East Lancashire Railway at Ramsbottom
  • The Bank (formerly Yates), 20 Market St, Bury BL9 0AJ. M-W 10AM-11PM, Th-Sa 10AM-3AM, Su noon-2AM. A large bar behind the Robert Peel statue. Fair selection of food and drinks at a good price, live TV sport.
  • 1 The Duckworth Arms, 416 Whalley Road, Ramsbottom BL0 0EG, +44 1706 823336. Daily noon-11PM. Good country pub with decent eats.
  • 2 [dead link] Shoulder of Mutton, Lumb Carr Road, Ramsbottom BL8 4LZ, +44 1706 822001. Daily noon-11PM. Good trad pub with food, dog friendly, at the foot of the walk to the Peel Tower.
  • 3 Irwell Works Brewery, Irwell St, Ramsbottom BL0 9YQ, +44 1706 825019. Tu-Th Su noon-11PM, F noon-midnight, Sa 11AM-midnight. In the former 'Steam, Tin, Iron and Copper' works, opposite the Ramsbottom Morrisons. The brewery brews all of its beers on site, examples of which are 'Copper Plate', 'Steam Plate' and 'Mad Dogs & Englishmen'. Friendly, but it's a small bar and the place gets very full, difficult to get served.
  • 4 Eagle & Child, 3 Whalley Rd, Ramsbottom BL0 0DL (on A56), +44 1706 824477. M-Th noon-3PM, 5-11PM; F Sa noon-11PM, Su noon-7PM. Slick country pub with beer garden and really good food, has rooms. B&B double £80.

Sleep

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  • 1 Village Hotel, Waterford Business Park, Rochdale Rd, Bury BL9 7BQ (just off Junction 2 of M66), +44 161 674-0136. Hotel with decent facilities, pool & gym. No a/c against hot weather. On riverside so some rooms bosky with nice views, but most just get to look at the M66 traffic. B&B double £125.
  • 2 Old Mill Hotel & Leisure Club (Best Western), Springwood St, Ramsbottom BL0 9DT, +44 1706 822991. Decent franchise hotel with spa. Lacks a/c, a problem in hot summers, and no lift. B&B double £55.
  • There are two Premier Inns. The Manchester Bury Premier Inn is 200 yards south of Bury town centre, off Duke St by the junction of A58 ring road and A56.
The Manchester Prestwich Premier Inn is on Bury New Road A56 just south of Junction 17 of M60, midway between Prestwich and Whitefield and next to TGI Fridays.

Connect

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As of June 2021, Bury has 4G from O2, Three and Vodafone, and 5G from EE.

Go next

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All the sights of Greater Manchester, Lancashire and Cheshire are within an hour of Bury. Leeds, Bradford, Brontë Country and Liverpool are also under an hour away.

Routes through Bury
Burnley merges with  N  S  Central Manchester
Burnley Rossendale  N Manchester Road SE  Prestwich Central Manchester
Wigan Bolton  W  E  Rochdale Leeds


This city travel guide to Bury is a usable article. It has information on how to get there and on restaurants and hotels. An adventurous person could use this article, but please feel free to improve it by editing the page.