Thank you so much for the great photos of the Mill on Standish Street. I am a 40+ year genealogist and have been researching my husband's paternal line. His 2nd Great Grandparents removed to Standish St. (Bldg.#47 Thistleton's on the 1851 Census) from Sligo, Ireland sometime between 1848 and when they were recorded in the 1851 census. Andrew Donahue was a "Hawker of Prints & Checks", a Veteran from his 20+ years of service to the British Army (serving at Gibraltar and Mauritius). His wife, Catherine had 6 known children: Mary, Francis, Hugh, Ellen, Catherine (died on Standish St.-1851) and Philip (my husband's Great Grandfather). The children all worked in the cotton yarn mills from an early age. Their mother died on Standish Street in 1857 and their father followed in 1860. I just discovered the other day that both Andrew and Catherine are buried in Chorley Cemetery, thanks to the info sent by Chorley Council. The eldest sibling, Mary, married Thomas Mitchell and they raised her younger siblings on Standish Street until sometime after the 1861 Census. If you look at the 1846 map of Chorley, you'll see tenement housing on both sides of the street and behind. It's been an adventure tracing this family line and seeing your photos was just so cool! Sorry this is so long....Kindest Regards from America, Kat Donahue