The Manchester Literary and Philosophical Tour – 2

Guided tour linking the great literary stories of Manchester with places and events that saw new ways of thinking influencing society.

This is a past event
Date and time
29 September 2025
6:00pm - 8:00pm
Price
£12.00

Overview

Due to demand, we have arranged a second Manchester Literary and Philosophical Tour on 29th of September 2025

In 1781, just as Manchester was starting to become an industrial giant, with thunderous machines, canals packed with activity, brass works, iron foundries and coal mines, a group of local merchants and freethinkers founded the Manchester Literary and Philosophical Society to debate ideas and attitudes. The growing metropolis would be a haven of thought as well as commerce. The Lit & Phil has since nurtured the city’s writing and debating.

Ed Glinert, Manchester’s most prolific tour guide, has devised an ingenious guided tour linking the great literary stories of Manchester with places and events that saw new ways of thinking influencing society. The tour begins outside the Lit & Phil’s traditional home, 36 George Street, Chinatown, the building where John Dalton devised atomic theory in 1803, no longer standing, and takes in a host of key sites:

  • The Portico Library, to hear about the glorious flights of fancy of Thomas de Quincey.
  • Central Library, built to resemble the Pantheon – of London.
  • The Free Trade Hall, the only building in England “dedicated to a proposition” (A. J. P. Taylor).
  • The Hidden Gem Church. Why was Catholicism banned in England for more than two hundred years?
  • The former Swedenborgian church, dedicated to one of the most influential thinkers of the 18th century.
  • The Chartist Plaque.
  • Cross Street Chapel (the Lit & Phil’s first home.)
  • Other relevant sites, and ends at the Wellington Inn, 18th century birthplace of John Byrom, the first Mancunian to be invited to join the Royal Society, who founded the Kabbalah Club to discuss the numerical pattern of the universe.

Location

6pm – Tour Begins:
36 George St, Manchester, M1 4HA

8pm – Tour Ends:
4 Cathedral Gates, Greater, Manchester M3 1SW

ed glinert

Ed Glinert

Ed Glinert is one of the country’s most prolific tour guides, who has completed some 5,000 tours in the Manchester area. He is an expert in Manchester history whose research has uncovered a number of inconsistencies regarding accepted stories about the city, including the origins of the name “Manchester”, the reasons behind the choice of a slave ship and the purpose of the three stripes on the city’s coat of arms, whether or not Rolls and Royce did indeed meet at the Midland Hotel, why the pillar box on Corporation Street is NOT the one that survived the 1996 bomb, and where Marx and Engels really did write The Communist Manifesto.

He has been a journalist since 1981, most notably on Private Eye in the 1990s. He is a much-published author with books for Penguin, HarperCollins, Bloomsbury and other major names. His Manchester Compendium (Penguin, 2008), a street-by-street, building-by-building guide to the city, is due to be joined in November by Manchester: The Biography, the first ever epic, detailed history of the city – from pre-Roman times till today. Glinert is also an Arts Society lecturer and a cruise ships speaker.

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