Empire Cinema

Old Brow and Abney Road,
Mossley, OL5 0AD

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Firms: A.W. Howcroft & Son

Styles: Art Deco

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Empire Cinema

Located in Mossley, Lancashire (today Thameside, Greater Manchester), to the northeast of Ashton-under-Lyne. The Empire Cinema was opened in 1912. The 1927 edition of Kine Yearbook gives an address of the Empire Cinema as Aspley Gardens. It had a 30ft wide proscenium and had a Picturetone sound system, later replaced by a Western Electric(WE) sound system.

It was badly damaged by a fire in 1940 and later plans by architectural firm A.W. Howcroft & Son of Oldham were submitted to restore the building and there were designs for a new Art Deco style façade. Due to wartime conditions and building material shortage after the end of World War II, the Empire Cinema was finally reopened in 1950. It was closed in 1973 with Roger Moore in “Live and Let Die”. It became the Cosmo Bingo Club for a while and was also used as a rehearsal space for a local amateur dramatic society. It was later demolished and housing was built on the site in 1990.

Contributed by the joke bloke

Recent comments (view all 3 comments)

thejokebloke1
thejokebloke1 on December 13, 2020 at 7:20 pm

The Empire cinema opened circa 1912/13. Charles and Ada Wilkinson were the owners, Charles had made his fortune as a musical hall act: “Zellini” the Human Chimney - he did tricks with cigarette smoke. He was still performing as “Zellini” at the Empire in the 1920’s. Charles and Ada’s daughter Edith Wilkinson, was born in 1910, and she married Benjamin Downs in 1931, at St Chads, Uppermill. In the 1939 Register, Charles, Ada, and Benjamin are all Cinema Proprietors, and Edith is a Cinema Cashier, of the Royal Pavilion and the Empire cinema’s both of which were in Mossley. In 1939 all four were living together on Abney Road in Mossley. This is on the same street as the cinema and about a minute walk to Mossley Town Hall which was handy for Benjamin Downs who went on to become the Mayor of Mossley.

After it was closed it was used as a bingo hall and a practice space for the local amateur dramatic society.

thejokebloke1
thejokebloke1 on January 10, 2021 at 8:51 pm

There was a brutal murder at this cinema. The details are below.

Terence O’Brien’s marriage was unhappy right from the start, and his 20-year-old wife left him on July 2nd, 1939, to live with her mother at Mossley, near Oldham.

Fifteen days later, on JULY 17th, O’Brien had just taken his seat in a local cinema when his wife passed him and sat in the row in front of him. He promptly moved to join her, intimating that he wanted to speak to her. Because he was deaf, they left the cinema to talk in an adjacent alley.

Shortly afterwards the cinema’s cashier saw a woman lying in the alley, with O’Brien kneeling beside her. The cashier fetched the manager, who arrived to meet O’Brien coming out of the alley. “Will you call the police?” O’Brien asked him. “I have killed my wife.”

She had been strangled, and at his trial for her murder O’Brien, a 28-year-old former soldier, was said to have a good record both as a serviceman and as a civilian employee. The court heard that his meeting with his wife had been by chance, and there was little evidence of premeditation as their encounter had lasted only two minutes. Because of this, Terence O’Brien’s death sentence was commuted to life imprisonment. He was released eight years later.

Biffaskin
Biffaskin on March 25, 2023 at 9:41 pm

This was the Downs family’s first site where they tried bingo, opening under the Cosmo Bingo name. The club was later transferred to the New Princes Cinema, Stalybridge under the same club name.

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