If you are interested in family history, please do read. This post is not what it may at first seem to be.
Few people in UK and the United States will have avoided the media frenzy surrounding the publication of Prince Harry’s memoir Spare. It has provided headline news for days. In the run up to the 10 January release date its contents have been poured over and analysed ad nauseam, spawning daily discussions on radio, TV and in the newspapers. Even passing people in shops, cafes or in the street you can here snippets of conversation about it. Becoming the fastest selling non-fiction book ever in the UK, it has been difficult to escape from all the hype and noise.
Tescos in Batley, the day after publication – photo by Jane Roberts
But what relevance does this publication have for family historians? I would argue it has huge implications, and should perhaps provoke some thought and debate amongst this cohort.
As someone wanting to get to know my ancestors beyond mere names and dates, to really dig into their individual life stories setting them against the context of their communities and times, I’ve always believed autobiographical notes, diaries, letters etc., have been akin to a family historian’s holy grail. Particularly ones they wrote. But the contents of Spare have caused me more than a twinge of discomfort … and on several levels. Here’s why.
From a personal perspective I was an avid diarist from around the age of 13 right through to becoming a mother. After that I was too exhausted to keep up the discipline. However, I still have them all – many volumes tucked away in an inaccessible cupboard, along with old Christmas decorations.
Diaries by non-public figures who are not thinking of a future potential audience, are more likely to contain intimate and authentic thoughts and words. Mine are probably filled with teenage angst. Truth is I haven’t looked at them in donkey’s years. I couldn’t face it. And if I find the thought of reading them horrifying, would I really want close family seeing them?
But I can’t bear to throw them away either … yet. They were a record of my life and feelings set in the context of the time they were written. They would be immensely useful for family historians of the future – not just my descendants (if any ever are interested in family history) – but descendants of all others who may find themselves unwillingly featuring! Though looking at it from yet another perspective, would passing them on place an immense moral burden for whoever inherited them?
For me Prince Harry’s autobiography has also brought into sharper focus another family history source – letters. I have the letters my dad wrote to my mum when they were courting. I’ve had them for a few months. But I have no intention of reading them. Dad died only a few years ago. Mum is still alive but ill. It is all too close, both in time and relationship, and feels like a massive intrusion of privacy.
Conversely I was given the letters an uncle wrote home whilst on National Service in the 1950s. He was killed in the course of this service. I never knew him. And although I did find it difficult, I have read them, and they do provide a unique insight into his life and personality. I feel immensely privileged to have them. So perhaps there is something there about proximity in relationship and time.
As for autobiographies, how does Prince Harry’s searingly personal account of his life (perhaps in parts it could be described as providing ‘too much information’) leave me feeling? If I’m honest, confused.
First impression it’s family history gold dust if you inherited something like that. But then pause for thought. If you are writing your story to set it out for descendants how honest should you actually be? Should it be warts and all? Or should you employ some element of self-censorship both for personal details and in relation to others named in the narrative – because perhaps some things should remain private.
These autobiographies, whether the rich or famous like Prince Harry, or those written by ordinary individuals to hand down to their families once more lead me back to diaries which may have been used as the basis for writing them. What happens to them?
And, as hinted at earlier, all this leads to a whole new set of dilemmas. If you do discover, or inherit, letters, diaries, life stories etc, how (if at all) should these be shared? What responsibilities do you have? Is it to tell the full story? Or do you have some duty to handle information with sensitivity. And is there a difference between information relating to your direct family, or information relating to distant relatives, or those to whom you have no familial connection?
This post provides no answers. But I hope it does highlight some of the ethical dilemmas of creating, coming across or owning this type of document.
Postscript: Finally a big thank you for the donations already received to keep this website going.
The website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I am considering if I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource, especially as I have to balance the research time against work commitments.
If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated.
Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all.
At the start of January 2022 many of us were eagerly awaiting the 1921 Census release, so we could find out about our families in post-Great War England and Wales. I wrote about the background to this census and what type of information to look out for here.
One year on, I thought it time for me to note some findings relating to Batley generally. This includes the debate the 1921 census results caused locally in the months and years which followed their release. This was the type of debate happening up and down the country, so you may find this post interesting even if your ancestors did not live in Batley in this period. It may also be helpful if you want to compare the findings for your area of interest with Batley, an industrial Yorkshire town with a population of 36,137, whose growth over the previous hundred years was built on its textile industry. And it will definitely be of interest if your family lived in 1921 Batley, to compare them against the overall populace of the town.
Census night was 19 June 1921. It was delayed from its planned April date because of the state of emergency declared as a result of the coal miners’ strike. In the week after the census, Batley’s local newspapers reported that the enumerators were on the whole well-received across the district. Some difficulties did arise though. In many cases forms were not filled in ready for collection on Monday as specified (although the census instructions contained the originally intended 25 April collection date.) Instead some unfortunate enumerators were delayed in their duties, having to wait for them to be completed when they called round. In some cases enumerators were still collecting forms on Tuesday. One frustrated enumerator had to call ten times to get the return from one resident. Apparently the enumerators also encountered many amusing incidents – unfortunately for us they did not wish to repeat them to the local journalists for publication.1
Although there were few refusals to fill in the papers, errors and omissions were reported to have abounded, with many householders feeling the form was needlessly complex and one enumerator claiming “only about 4 per cent of the papers would be quite accurate.”2 It was also noted that with an absence of ink in many households, pencil was resorted to for completing the forms.3
So, what were the findings for Batley Municipal Borough in 1921?
When the preliminary figures came out in August 1921, there was one main headline for Batley – after decades of an increasing population, the number of inhabitants recorded on census night now stood at 36,151. This was a decrease of 238 since 1911. When the census figures were reviewed and finalised in 1923, the amended 1921 population figure was even lower – 36,137, marking a 252 decrease over 1911.4 For the remainder of this post, unless stated, I will stick with the final confirmed numbers rather than the preliminary ones released in August 1921.
This decrease was not predicted. In fact in May 1921, the month before the 1921 Census, Batley’s Medical Officer, G. H. Pearce, was finalising his 1920 annual health report for the town. In this the population for Batley as at the end of 1920 was put at 36,527 based on the Registrar General’s estimates.5 This was a small increase over the 1911 Census figure. So the 1921 figure was not really anticipated.
However, in hindsight this decrease should not have been any surprise to anyone, and that was the received wisdom once the figures did come out. You have only to take a look at the in excess of 800 names on Batley War Memorial to see the impact of the Great War locally. This was recognised in the reporting analysis.
Batley War Memorial
And it was not only this loss of a generation of men. There was also a fall in the birth rate during the war years, as a consequence of so many being away serving in the military. In 1914 Batley’s birth rate was 22.1 per thousand. By 1919 it had dropped to 16.4 per thousand, with a low point in 1917 of 15.7 per thousand.6
There had also been the flu pandemic which pushed the 1918 death rate in Batley up to 19.7 per thousand – with 104 extra deaths directly attributed to the pandemic that year, and a further 83 in 1919.7
In the opinion of Dr Pearce, the town’s medical officer, the combination of war losses, a declining birth rate and the hit of the flu pandemic largely accounted for Batley’s population decrease. The conclusion reached was, but for the war, there would have been no population decrease.8
And there was cause for optimism going forward, in that by 1920 Batley’s birth rate had bounced back, jumping to 24.3 per thousand.9
But broader factors had to be considered too. Local occupations also impacted on population growth. Batley was dominated by its textile industry. The 1921 Census once again confirmed this. A total of 7,885 people (3,842 males and 4,043 females) aged 12 and over were classed as textile workers. This equated to 296 male workers per 1,000 and 622 female workers per 1,000 occupied in this industry. To this should be added a further 599 individuals (14 males and 585 females) involved in rag, bone and bottle sorting, which fell under a different occupational classification – and a significant proportion of these would be rag sorters for the local mills. The textile industry was way ahead of Batley’s second employer, the mining and quarrying sector, which accounted for 1,688 males. I will cover Batley occupations in detail in a separate post at a later date.
In general terms in Yorkshire it was found mining-dominated districts had increased in population between 1911 and 1921, whereas those where the textile industries were paramount had remained practically stationary in population compared to 1911.10
To demonstrate the difference in population growth between 1911 and 1921 in mining and textile districts, the Yorkshire Post of 24 August 1921 compared the West Riding districts of Bingley, Elland, Golcar, Saddleworth, Shipley, Skipton and Sowerby Bridge, where textile industries were dominant, with eight West Riding mining districts of similar size – Bentley-with-Arksey, Bolton-on-Dearne, Castleford, Mexborough, Stanley, Wath-on-Dearne, Wombwell and Worsborough. These textile areas had a total population of a little over 100,000 in 1911, and by 1921 this had fallen by 19. In contrast the mining areas had a population increase of 16,566, or over 15 per cent, three times as great an increase than for the whole county.
One reason given for this difference was something said to be well-known in official circles – textile operatives had very much smaller families than many classes of working people.11
And the war even played a part in population growth in certain areas between 1911 and 1921. Wartime industries drew people into areas such as Barrow-in-Furness and other locations associated with heavy industry. Sheffield, for example, had an inrush of munitions workers. These workers boosted the population, and post-war there was no corresponding mass exodus due, it is said, to problems for these workers in moving and securing houses elsewhere. This in part was the explanation for why Sheffield had a population increase of around 30,000 between 1911 and 1921. In contrast, any new wartime industries brought to Batley though were relatively small, and the area was not a population importer during the war, focussing on what it always did – textile manufacture.12
Industrial environment also had an impact on sex distribution, with men generally outnumbering women in the mining areas. The same Yorkshire Post survey of mining/textile districts referred to earlier, showed that in the seven textile towns there were 1,202 females to 1,000 males; in mining towns only 938. This is born out when looking specifically at Batley, where this figure was 1,171 females per 1,000 males, an increase over the 1911 female/male ratio of 1,149:1,000. Essentially textile areas drew in women who could undertake the type of work offered in mills, and this also helped retain the existing female population. In mining dominated areas there was less work to draw in women, and there was a push away for local women seeking work.
Housing – or rather lack of it – brought into sharp focus another issue for Batley, where it was argued overcrowding limited population growth and was a factor in the 1921 census figures. The housing dilemma had been perceived as a problem for many years in Batley, with the levels of overcrowding described as considerable. Dr Pearce pointed out that the Registrar General’s analysis from the 1911 census was 19.3 per cent of Batley residents were living in overcrowded conditions, based on the standard of more than two people per room.13 Though this had improved – in part due to the war and men being away on military service – it was still a problem. Yet despite it, only 24 houses had been built in Batley between 1916 and 1920.14 In fact, because of the lack of progress, in November 1919 the Housing and Town Planning Committee passed a resolution that 500 houses be erected in Batley.15
There were also problems around the type of housing, as highlighted in the Medical Officer’s annual report in 1920. The town had few middle class type dwellings. Essentially the housing stock was split between working class dwellings and mansions, with the former predominating. Many of these working class houses were back-to-back, consisting of only two rooms, one above the other, and built in long rows. As for their condition, many had damp problems as a result of defective roofs, walls or absence of damp proof courses, lack of light and defective ventilation. Sanitary standards also lagged behind modern ideals, with hundreds of water closets being shared by the occupants of two dwelling houses. There were also still large numbers of brick fixed receptacles for ashes and refuse, rather than the preferred covered metal ash bins.
The housing shortage was even said to have prevented many from getting married.16 The housing problem was seen as a long-term brake on population growth, especially if road transport developed as was expected, which would mean some moving out from the crowded centres. Already a good many miners employed in Batley Borough lived outside the area.17 Dr Pearce was of the view that if more houses were built, more people would live in Batley.18
However, even in the years immediately after the census there was a clear lack of action. When Dr Pearce issued his Medical Report for 1924 he pointed out the 1919 Batley Town Council housing programme of 500 new houses still had not yet been fulfilled. And in the meantime the situation had worsened – Dr Pearce now estimated that Batley needed 2,000 more houses.19
There was one other major factor which many blamed for Batley’s population decline in the 1921 census – timing. As I pointed out at the beginning census night was 19 June 1921. Although attempts were made to avoid the holidays in the big industrial towns of the north, it was inevitable that some were away. One unnamed Batley official went as far as to say the whole of Batley’s decrease might be accounted for by this.20 A quick look through the Batley returns shows a raft annotated with phrases such as “not at home” or “away from house”. Official statistics show 212 Batley dwellings were vacant on census night. With 9,509 recorded as occupied, that is around a 2.2 per cent vacancy rate. In cases where the census form is annotated “not at home” etc., it is as well to also check the address page as this may give the occupier’s name. And it is true that the seaside resorts of Blackpool, Scarborough, Whitby, Filey, Hornsea, Saltburn and the like had noticeably swelled numbers when compared to 1911.
A few other interesting information snippets from the 1921 Census Batley details.
The impact of the war was reflected in some entries of men who had returned. For example 36-year-old Adam Gregory’s occupation is “an ex-soldier under treatment.”21 23-year-old John William Boot’s occupation entry reads “Disabled during the Great War.”22 Dennis Kennedy, from the Batley St Mary’s One-Place Study, has a similar occupation entry, “Disabled at war unable to work.”23 Whilst 31-year-old John Lynch, a coal miner by trade, was also unable to work. His former coal-mining occupation is scored through and replaced by “Disabled Soldier.”24
The census also included a new question around orphanhood, with entries for children under 15 having to state if both parents were alive, if the father was dead, the mother dead or both parents dead. The Great War had an impact here. In Batley of the 9,303 children in this under 15 category, 698 had dead fathers, the mother had died in 196 cases, and 34 children had lost both parents. A further 105 replied not known, or had left this section incomplete. It did mean though that 8,270 children had both parents alive. However, it was acknowledged that there were issues with how census forms were filled in for this new question.
This census also included a question for the first time around marriages dissolved by divorce, in recognition of its increased availability. 16,682 people in England and Wales declared themselves so. In Batley, according to the official figures, this amounted to three men and five women. Table 1, below, taken from the 1921 Census, shows Batley’s population by marital condition. It also shows the age splits between males and females.
Table 1 – Extracted from Table 14a of the 1921 Census, Yorkshire
Table 2 looks in graphical form at the percentage male/female age split, including the lost Great War Generation differences.
Table 2 – Extracted from Table 14a of the 1921 Census, Yorkshire
In terms of age, the average age of males in Batley was 30.5, and females 30.6.
To draw all this together here are some more Tables illustrating different Batley population aspects based on the 1921 Census, and in some cases with comparisons to 1911 to show the changes. Tip, if the font is too small to read, click on the Table to bring up a new screen with an enlarged version.
Table 3 shows the housing of private families in Batley in 1921, with a comparison to the 1911 census.
Table 3 – Extracted from Table IX of the 1921 Census, Yorkshire
In Batley there were 0.85 people per room in 1921, compared to the County average of 1.04. In Batley there was an average of 3.85 persons per family in 1921 compared to 3.97 in 1911. There was an average of 3.29 rooms per dwelling, so towards the lower number in comparison with other areas of Yorkshire – Leeds for example was 4.19, Dewsbury 3.42. Though Birstall, at 3.21, was lower. Note rooms covered the usual living rooms, including bedrooms and kitchens, but excluding sculleries, landings, lobbies, closets, bathrooms, or any warehouse, office or other shop rooms. On the plus side the percentage population living in more than 2 persons per room had dropped from 19.3 per cent in 1911 to 18.8 in 1921, and all this equated to a 27 per cent deficiency in rooms. Although not at as bad as, for example, Birstall at 22.6 per cent (room deficiency of 28.9 per cent) or Birkenshaw at 21.8 (room deficiency of 30.1 per cent), it was worse than Dewsbury’s 18 per cent (room deficiency of 24.2) or at the other extreme Ilkley with a room surplus of 27.8 per cent. And saying that Batley’s population was far higher then Birstall, Birkenshaw or Ilkley.
Table 4 shows Batley’s population in 1921, with comparisons to previous censuses. This table clearly illustrates the small decline in population between 1911 and 1921, after a growth in the 1901-1911 decade.
Table 4 – Extracted from Table 2 of the 1921 Census, Yorkshire
Table 5 shows the acreage, population, private families and dwellings statistics for Batley. Here you can clearly see the differences between the areas in Batley, with the North and Soothill Wards having a large acreage with a comparatively small population, whilst the West and East Wards have far less land, but contain a much larger population. For example the East Ward, being the most densely populated, has 33.7 people per acre, compared with the overall Batley average of 11.2.
Table 5 – Extracted from Table 3 of the 1921 Census, Yorkshire
Table 6 contains analyses of the buildings and structurally separate dwellings in Batley in 1921. The upper part of the table looks at the classes of buildings (split between five groups). The lower part of the table is split into two parts. The left looks in at Group V buildings. Whilst in the right-hand side the analysis according to dwellings is continued in respect of certain selected classes of private family occupation. Note 212 dwellings were vacant on census night.
Table 6 – Extracted from Table 10 of the 1921 Census, Yorkshire
Table 7 contains an analysis of the private families within Batley according to the number of persons in the family, and the number of rooms occupied by the family.
Table 7 – Extracted from Table 11 of the 1921 Census, Yorkshire.
Table 8 illustrates the number of people in Batley attending educational establishments. These are split by age, sex and whether attending school full or part time.
Table 8 – Extracted from Table 15 of the 1921 Census, Yorkshire
The final series of tables – Table 9, 10 and 11 – are different ways of displaying the previous datasets. These are as set out in the 1923 Borough of Batley Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health, G. H. Pearce.
Table 9 – Batley Municipal Borough Buildings, Dwellings, Rooms and Families, 1921 CensusTable 10 – Batley Municipal Borough – Ward Populations, 1921 CensusTable 11 – Housing of Private Families – Batley Municipal Borough – 1921 Census
These overall statistics for Batley, and other statistics gathered as the study progresses, including the additional detail around occupation, will enable comparisons to be made for the Catholic population against the overall population of the town. For example looking at the number of people per family, the number of people per room etc., or comparing the Catholic and non-Catholic population on an individual street or two similar sized streets. Also did those who worked in the textile industry really have smaller families than those from, for example, mining families?
One final point to note for family historians looking for ancestors in Batley. There are issues with the Batley census returns. If you cannot find your family in this census it may be because some household returns were damaged and have not been indexed by Findmypast. It is worth trying workarounds to look at the images. I have had success for example searching by address – and although the writing was faint and therefore not indexed, I have been able to work out sufficient portions to confirm it was the family I was seeking and add to my knowledge of them.
Postscript: Finally a big thank you for the donations already received to keep this website going.
The website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I am considering if I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource, especially as I have to balance the research time against work commitments.
If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated.
Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all.
Thank you.
Footnotes: 1. Batley Reporter, 24 June 1921 and Batley News, 25 June 1921. 2. Batley Reporter, 24 June 1921. 3. Batley News, 25 June 1921. 4. The official 1911 census figures for Batley’s population was 36,389. However, in several Medical Officer reports it is consistently put at 36,395. I have stuck with the official figures. 5. Borough of Batley Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health for the Year 1920 – G. H. Pearce. 6. Borough of Batley Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health for the Year 1919 – G. H. Pearce. 7. Ibid. 8. Batley Reporter, 26 August 1921 and Batley News, 27 August 1921. 9. Borough of Batley Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health for the Year 1920 – G. H. Pearce. 10. Yorkshire Post, 24 August 1921. 11. Batley Reporter, 26 August 1921. 12. Ibid. 13. Batley News, 27 August 1921. 14. Borough of Batley Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health for the Year 1920 – G. H. Pearce. 15. Borough of Batley Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health for the Year 1919 – G. H. Pearce and Batley Reporter, 26 August 1921 16. Batley Reporter, 26 August 1921 17. Batley News, 27 August 1921 18. Ibid. 19. Borough of Batley Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health for the Year 1924 – G. H. Pearce 20. Batley News, 27 August 1921 21. 1921 Census, The National Archives (TNA), Ref RG15/22341/30 22. 1921 Census, TNA, Ref RG15/22328/306 23. 1921 Census, TNA, Ref RG15/22346/7 24. 1921 Census, TNA, Ref RG15/22345/160
The Batley St Mary’s one-place study hit a major milestone in December 2022 – the two hundredth post was published, a little over two years after the study started. More of that later.
If you are new to to this one-place study and want to know what it is all about, click here. Otherwise read on to find out what the milestone post was, and discover all the other posts, new and old, containing a wealth of parish, parishioner and wider local Batley history.
St Mary’s Church – photo by Jane Roberts
December 2022 saw the addition of eight new posts, bringing the total number for the study to 203. Two other pages were updated.
The additions included five weekly newspaper pages for December 1916. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.
There were also three new school log books added, for the infants’ department. These covered 1913, 1916 and 1917. And it is the 1917 log book which has the distinction of being the study’s two hundredth post.
Unfortunately, due to other work priorities, this month there were no new Memorial biographies. I hope to begin adding to them once more in the New Year, if time and work permits. And, although more men who served and survived have been identified and that page includes these new names, no new biographies were added here either.
Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* and *UPDATED* ones, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.
Postscript: My website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I am considering whether I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource, especially given the time this research takes.
If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated.
Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all.
This is the latest Batley St Mary’s one-place study update. If you want to know more about the background to this one-place study click here. Otherwise read on to discover all the posts, new and old, containing a wealth of parish, parishioner and wider local Batley history.
St Mary’s Church – photo by Jane Roberts
November 2022 saw the addition of six new posts, bringing the total number for the study to 195. Two other pages were updated.
The additions included four weekly newspaper pages for November 1916. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.
I have written two new War Memorial biographies, those of Thomas William Chappell and Henry Groark.
More men who served and survived have been identified. I have updated that page accordingly. No new biographies were added here in November, but they will follow in due course.
Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* and *UPDATED* ones, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.
Postscript: My website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I’m having to consider whether I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource.
If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated.
Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all.
Family historians will ‘get’ the feeling of pure elation I felt one damp Tuesday afternoon in Northumberland in late November 2022.
The changeable weather that day prompted a post-lunch visit to Kirkharle Courtyard. These converted 18th century stone farm buildings house a lovely selection of independent craft and artisan shops, so it seemed a perfect pre-Christmas haven to escape any threatened showers. Here’s the website link for more details.
Kirkharle Coffee House – photo by Jane Roberts
As it happened, the weather improved which meant we could explore further the wider Courtyard surroundings.
The tiny hamlet of Kirkharle was the birthplace of the iconic landscape gardener Lancelot “Capability” Brown. Here the Shakespeare of English gardening took the first fledgling steps in his illustrious career, employed as a gardener on Sir William Loraine’s Kirkharle estate until 1739.
But he retained a connection to his birthplace, and first employer’s family, even after he had moved onwards and upwards. One of his landscape designs for Kirkharle was discovered in 1980, shoved at the back of some drawers. Thought to date from around 1770, when he was at nearby Alnwick, his vision finally came to fruition in 2010, interpreted and adapted to fit the current Kirkharle landscape. We enjoyed a pleasant stroll around the serpentine lake, the centrepiece of this plan.
As usual, driven by the obsession of a family historian, I now felt compelled to visit Kirkharle’s tiny church. It is only a short walk from the courtyard complex, and on the way you pass a Grade II listed monument to Robert Loraine who was “barbarously murdered” here by the Scots in 1483. He was on his way home from church when set upon by them.
In a gruesome warning to others who would – like him – defend the borderlands against the Scottish raiders, the attackers cut his corpse up into tiny pieces, stuffed them into his horse’s saddlebags and set it loose to wander home. That was some kind of warning message!
The Loraine Monument, Kirkharle – photo by Jane Roberts
The inscription reads:
This New stone was set up In the place of an old one by S[i]r William Loraine Bar[one]t in 1728 In Memory of Robert Loraine his Ancestor Who was Barbarously Murderd in this place by the Scots in 1483 for his good service to his Country against their thefts & Robbery As he was returning home from the Church Alone Where he had Been at his private Devotions
This replacement monument would have been erected during the period “Capability” Brown worked here.
On then to St Wilfrid’s Church, or St Wilfred in the Historic England Grade I listing. This small, simple, squat building, dating mainly from 1336 and restored in 1884, is best known as the baptism place of “Capability” Brown, on 30 August 1716.
St Wilfrid’s, Kirkharle, with the “Capability” Brown plaque – photos by Jane Roberts
Inside I was drawn to the font. Dating from the 15th/16th century, I was stunned to discover until 1786 it was the baptismal font at the old All Saints church, Newcastle upon Tyne. Therefore not the one in which a young “Capability” Brown was inducted into the church. For me this was no disappointment – it was now far more thrilling and personal.
Image if the old All Saints church, from Sopwith’s ‘A Historical and Descriptive Account of All Saints’ Church, in Newcastle upon Tyne’, published in 1826, out of copyright.
Completed in 1286 and initially known as All Hallows’ church, by 1786 the old All Saints church in Newcastle upon Tyne had fallen into such a state of disrepair and collapse that a meeting of parishioners in the vestry room on Easter Tuesday, 18 April voted unanimously to completely demolish it and build a new church.1
Ruined interior of the old All Saints’ Church, Newcastle upon Tyne, from The local historian’s table book, of remarkable occurences, historical facts, traditions, legendary and descriptive ballads, etc., etc., connected with the counties of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Northumberland and Durham, Vol II – published 1841 – out of copyright
The last service in the old church was held on 9 July 1786, and by August 1789 its total demolition was complete.2 This included disposal of all the old fixtures and fittings, even to the extent of placing an advert in the Newcastle Courant of 15 July 1786 requesting anyone entitled to any of the monuments or monumental inscriptions to immediately remove them.
The foundation stone for the new church was laid on 14 August 1786, and the building completed with the placing of the top stone of the spire on 21 October 1796. It went on to be used as a place of worship until 1959.
The new All Saints Church, Newcastle upon Tyne, from Sopwith’s ‘A Historical and Descriptive Account of All Saints’ Church, in Newcastle upon Tyne’, published in 1826, out of copyright.
But back to my particular interest – the old All Saints church font, now at Kirkharle. I discovered it had a varied – and colourful – history. This included being hidden by stone mason Cuthbert Maxwell from Scots raiders in around 1640. It was eventually reinstated in the Newcastle upon Tyne church in 1660 following the Restoration of King Charles II.3
The font from the old Newcastle All Saints Church demolished in 1786, it is now at St Wilfrid’s Kirkharle – photo by Jane Roberts
There is a description of the font in T. Sopwith’s A Historical and Descriptive Account of All Saints’ Church, in Newcastle upon Tyne. It reads:
The font, which was of stone, was placed immediately on entering the body of the Church by the middle aisle, a situation which it generally occupied in former times, and by which was intimated the baptismal entrance of the Christian Church. It was a plain octangular pillar, the sides of which extending outward at the top, formed large cavettos,4 supporting an octagon of a larger size, with concave sides, decorated with armorial bearings…Above this octagon which contained the bason,4 a cover was formerly suspended. In the churchwardens’ accounts for 1636, mention occurs of a charge for hanging the font cover – in 1685, a bason and cover for the font cost £2, and in 1700, it was new painted and gilded. On the demolition of the Church, the stone font was given to Alderman Hugh Hornby, by whom it was placed in the garden of his house, in Pilgrim-Street, and left there when the house was sold to Mr. Clapham.6
Its worn appearance may therefore owe something to its period as a garden ornament.
Plaque about the font, and its carved armorial bearings representing the Dent, Beverley, Roddam, Lumley, Lilburne, Anderson and Rutherford families, plus a merchant’s mark – photo by Jane Roberts
So how did it come to end up in a tiny church in rural Northumberland?
In 1836 Thomas Anderson of Little Harle purchased Kirkharle from the Loraine family. His father had acquired the font three years earlier. When St Wilfrid’s was restored in 1884, Thomas’ son George placed the font in the church.6
And why did all this send shivers down my spine?
Newcastle All Saints was a church associated with my paternal ancestors. It is where my 4x great grandmother, Ann Jackson, was baptised on 22 August 1773. More details of her here.
I’d quite by chance stumbled across a religious artefact associated with my family history. I had absolutely no idea the baptismal font from her era was at Kirkharle.
This was the highlight of my holiday – made all the better for its sheer unexpectedness.
Footnotes: 1. Mackenzie, E. A Descriptive and Historical Account of the Town and County of Newcastle upon Tyne Including the Borough of Gateshead. Vol 1, 1827. Page 292-322 2. Sopwith, Thomas. A Historical and Descriptive Account of All Saints’ Church in Newcastle upon Tyne: Illustrated with Plans, Views, & Architectural Details. Newcastle: Edward Walker, 1826. Page 21 3. Bourne, Henry. The History of Newcastle upon Tyne or, the Ancient and Present State of That Town. by the Late Henry Bourne, M.A. Curate of All-Hallows in Newcastle. Newcastle upon Tyne: J White, 1736. 4. A concave moulding with a regular curved profile that is part of a circle, widely used in architecture as well as furniture, picture frames, metalwork and other decorative arts. 5. A variant spelling of basin. 6. Sopwith, Thomas, ibid. Page 40 7. Information board at St Wilfrid’s church, Kirkharle.
This is the latest Batley St Mary’s one-place study update. If you want to know more about the background to this one-place study click here. Otherwise read on to discover all the posts, new and old, containing a wealth of parish, parishioner and wider local Batley history.
St Mary’s Church – photo by Jane Roberts
October 2022 saw the addition of seven new posts, bringing the total number for the study to 189. Two other pages were updated.
The additions included four weekly newspaper pages for October 1916. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.
I have written one new War Memorial biography, that of Patrick Hopkins.
More men who served and survived have been identified. I have updated that page accordingly. No new biographies were added here in October.
The Infant School log book for 1915 has been added to the School Log Books section.
Finally for this month there is one new piece in the Miscellany of Information section, about the Batley Peace Medal. Although written from a St Mary’s perspective, this is of far wider Batley local history interest.
Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* and *UPDATED* ones, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.
Postscript: My website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I’m having to consider whether I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource.
If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated.
Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all.
This is the latest update of the pages relating to my Batley St Mary’s one-place study. If you want to know more about the background to my one-place study click here. Otherwise read on to discover all the posts, new and old, containing a wealth of parish, parishioner and wider local Batley history.
St Mary’s Church – photo by Jane Roberts
September 2022 saw the addition of 10 new posts, bringing the total number for the study to 182. Two other pages were updated.
The additions included five weekly newspaper pages for September 1916. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.
I have written two new biographies for War Memorial men – Michael and Patrick Cafferty. There is also a new biography for a parishioner who died but is not on the Memorial – Thomas Gannon
More men who served and survived have been identified. I have updated that page accordingly. One new biography has been added to this section in September – that of another Thomas Gannon.
Finally for this month there is one new piece in the Miscellany of Information section, about the 1929 service of consecration of the church and the new altar.
Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* ones, plus the *UPDATED* pages, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.
Postscript: If you have enjoyed reading this post and would like to make a donation towards ensuring the continued running of this website, it would be very much appreciated.
Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link.
This is the latest update of the pages relating to my Batley St Mary’s one-place study. If you want to know the background and what this one-place study involves click here. Otherwise, read on and dive right into the latest monthly update.
St Mary’s Church, the old school and convent – photo by Jane Roberts
August 2022 saw the addition of eight new posts, bringing the total number to 172. Two others were updated.
The additions included four weekly newspaper pages for August 1916. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.
I have written two new biographies for a War Memorial man – those of James Garner and James Trainor.
More men who served and survived have been identified. I have updated that page accordingly. No new biographies for these men have been added this month. They will follow in due course.
Finally for this month there are two new school log books. These are for the Boys’ Department in 1920 and the Infant School in 1914.
Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* ones, plus the *UPDATED* pages, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.
Postscript: If you have enjoyed reading this post and would like to make a donation towards ensuring the continued running of this website, it would be very much appreciated.
Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link.
Since then I have pinpointed many of the affected buildings, houses and addresses, including a general summary of the damage inflicted on each property.
This is the seventh, and final, post with these details so you can identify if your home was part of this event in our local history; or if a home associated with your family history was affected. It covers street names starting with the letters U to Z.
Some of the affected streets – photos by Jane Roberts
One note of caution, although many house numbers remain unchanged from that period, some may have undergone re-numbering in the intervening years. The numbers here are as they were during the war, not as they are today. Other houses have long gone.
Also, though hundreds of addresses are listed, I am aware from my earlier research that this is not the complete inventory – there are areas of Batley hit that night which are missing from the list.
Some final points to be aware of. I have detailed the information exactly as it was written, so the damage inventory columns are not consistent. For example ceiling damage sometimes comes under ‘contents’, at others under the ‘generally’ heading.
It is also clear this is not the complete story of damage inflicted. I am aware some buildings did suffer substantially more than is listed for them in the space-limited columns – for example gable ends needing rebuilding as a result of the air raid.
And, to my mind, the list of contents ruined does appear suspiciously light. For example it is hard to believe that crockery and furniture in the majority of houses was undamaged given the structural damage listed. Again has space played a part? There are exceptions – in one detailed entry for an address in another post, although the contents were not listed in the space provided, they were an add-on insertion at the top of the page. It is hard to believe that contents in the majority of entries for other houses suffered no similar damage. I believe it is likely that individual household forms were completed initially and the information then collated and condensed on one form covering all addresses, meaning layers of detail being missed in this overall summary.
Anyway, good luck with locating your home. Don’t forget to scroll across the table to get the full details – there are columns detailing the property description, address, and an indication of the extent of damage (i.e. roof, walls, floors, contents and general damage). And do check my website as I continue to add more posts listing affected houses.
Description1
Address
Roof
Walls
Floors
Contents
Generally
3, Upper Croft Road
Ceiling
Window
5, Upper Croft Road
Window
7, Upper Croft Road
Window
9, Upper Croft Road
Many Slates
Windows
10 Upper Croft Road
Window
Cinema
Victoria Hall (Regent Pictures)
Windows
1, Wards Place, Healey Lane
Many Slates
Window
2, Wards Place, Healey Lane
Many Slates
Windows
3, Wards Place, Healey Lane
Many Slates
Windows
79, Warwick Terrace Road
Ceiling
Window
85, Warwick Terrace Road
Dislodged
Ceiling
Window
80, Warwick Road
Window
125, Warwick Road
Windows
127, Warwick Road
Windows
129, Warwick Road
Windows
46, Wellington Street
Windows
49, Wellington Street
Many Slates
Ceiling
Shop
54, Wellington Street
Window
Shop
56, Wellington Street
Windows
Shop
60, Wellington Street
Window
Shop
60A, Wellington Street
Window
Shop
62, Wellington Street
Window
Shop
64, Wellington Street
Window2
Shop
66, Wellington Street
Window
House & Shop
70, Wellington Street
Window
House & Shop
72, Wellington Street
Window
Shop
74, Wellington Street
Window
Chapel
Methodist Church
Windows
Garage & Stable
Wellington Street
Slates
Burnt
Hearse Damaged
Windows
House
3, Yard 6, Wellington Street
Many Slates
Warehouse
113, Well Lane
Slates & Purling
Lead Gutter
Burnt
Windows
Warehouse
7, Well Lane
Slates
Burnt
Windows
Canteen3
18, Well Lane
Not Known [Possibly completely destroyed]
18A, Well Lane
Window
19, Well Lane
Many Slates & Purling
Ceiling
20A, Well Lane
Window & Frame
Warehouse4
Well Lane
Completely Destroyed
First-Aid Post & Mobile Unit Depot5
Well Lane
?
1, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Window
2, West Park Grove
Slates: Flashing
Ceiling
Windows
3, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Windows
4, West Park Grove
10 Slates
Lock
Windows
5, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Windows
6, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Ceiling
Ridge Tiles: Windows
7, West Park Grove
Window
8, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Lock
Windows
9, West Park Grove
Window
10, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Windows
11, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Ceiling
Windows
12, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Lock
Windows
13, West Park Grove
Windows
14, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Window
15, West Park Grove
Many Slates
17, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Window
18, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Windows
19, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Ceiling
Windows
20, West Park Grove
Many Slates
Windows
1, West Park Road
Many Slates
Windows
2, West Park Road
Many Slates
Windows
3, West Park Road
Many Slates
Plaster
Windows
4, West Park Road
Many Slates
Windows
6, West Park Road
Many Slates
Windows
8, West Park Road
Many Slates
Ceiling
Windows
8A, West Park Road
Ridge Tiles
Locks
10, West Park Road
Slight
Plaster
Windows
12, West Park Road
Many Slates
Windows
14, West Park Road
Many Slates
16, West Park Road
Rug & Carpet
Step & Windows
18, West Park Road
Many Slates
Windows
20, West Park Road
Many Slates
Lock
Window Frame
1, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
Ridge Tiles: Windows
2, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
Ceiling
Window
3, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
Ceiling
Windows
4, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
Windows
5, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
6, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
Window
7, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
Window
8, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
Window
9, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
10, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
Ceiling
11, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
12, West Park Terrace
Many Slates
Window
Shop
Wheatcroft
Windows & Blind
Shop
Wheatcroft
Window
55, Woodsome Estate
Slight Hole
4 Wood Street
Window
Data extracted from West Yorkshire Archive Services Ref KMT1/Box42/TB227 – This is only a portion of the information contained. I have not included owners, occupiers, rateable value etc.
For Part 1 – A to B see here. For Part 2 – C to F see here. For Part 3 – G to J see here. For Part 4 – K to N see here. For Part 5 – O to P see here. For Part 6 – Q to T see here.
Postscript: Finally a big thank you for the donations already received to keep this website going.
The website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I am considering if I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource, especially as I have to balance the research time against work commitments.
If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated.
Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all.
Thank you.
Footnotes: 1. In this section of the list the ‘Description’ column is largely blank. The implication is these are houses, not business premises. 2. No damage is detailed, but Number 64 was an insertion between rows and the implication from my reading of the list is that the damage was a window. 3. This building was also on a separate form where the only column relating to damage was “Indiction of Extent of Damage to Contents”. It seems to be a form reserved for those buildings which suffered serious damage in the air raid. The entry on the line for 118 appears to be Not Known on the basis of the ditto marks, referring to the entry for the buildings above. But it is also bracketed with W. J. Ineson and Sons warehouse on Well Lane which is marked as completely destroyed. 4. This building’s details are annotated on the back of the original form, then scored out. It then appears on a separate form which only has one column entitled “Indiction of Extent of Damage to Contents”. It states that it was completely destroyed. For more information see my post about Batley’s First Air Raid which states it was burnt out. 5. This building’s details are annotated on the back of the original form, then scored out. Owned by W. J. Ineson, it then appears on a separate form which only has one column entitled “Indiction of Extent of Damage to Contents”. It seems to be a form reserved for those buildings which suffered serious damage in the air raid. The implication being this was amongst the heavily damaged/destroyed buildings. The entry for this building, in the indication of extent of damage to contents, is difficult to read – it potentially says None which would not fit with this form. If it was undamaged it should not be included. Neither does it seem to fit with the details in my post about Batley’s First Air Raid about the H.Q. for First Aid Parties being burnt out.
Since then I have pinpointed many of the affected buildings, houses and addresses, including a general summary of the damage inflicted on each property.
This is the sixth post with these details so you can identify if your home was part of this event in our local history; or if a home associated with your family history was affected. It covers street names starting with the letters Q to T. [Note for Prospect Terrace, Towngate Road see O to P, here.]
One note of caution, although many house numbers remain unchanged from that period, some may have undergone re-numbering in the intervening years. The numbers here are as they were during the war, not as they are today. Other houses have long gone.
Also, though hundreds of addresses are listed, I am aware from my earlier research that this is not the complete inventory – there are areas of Batley hit that night which are missing from the list.
Some final points to be aware of. I have detailed the information exactly as it was written, so the damage inventory columns are not consistent. For example ceiling damage sometimes comes under ‘contents’, at others under the ‘generally’ heading.
It is also clear this is not the complete story of damage inflicted. I am aware some buildings did suffer substantially more than is listed for them in the space-limited columns – for example gable ends needing rebuilding as a result of the air raid.
And, to my mind, the list of contents ruined does appear suspiciously light. For example it is hard to believe that crockery and furniture in the majority of houses was undamaged given the structural damage listed. Again has space played a part? There are exceptions – in one detailed entry for an address in another post, although the contents were not listed in the space provided, they were an add-on insertion at the top of the page. It is hard to believe that contents in the majority of entries for other houses suffered no similar damage. I believe it is likely that individual household forms were completed initially and the information then collated and condensed on one form covering all addresses, meaning layers of detail being missed in this overall summary.
Anyway, good luck with locating your home. Don’t forget to scroll across the table to get the full details – there are columns detailing the property description, address, and an indication of the extent of damage (i.e. roof, walls, floors, contents and general damage). And do check my website as I continue to add more posts listing affected houses.
Description1
Address
Roof
Walls
Floors
Contents
Generally
3A Queen Street
Window
57 Queen Street
Windows
60 Richmond Street
Windows
18 Snowden Street
Window
48 Snowden Street
Window
3 South Bank Road
Window
House
Staincliffe Hall
Windows
Staincliffe Hall Farm
Windows
Staincliffe Liberal Club
Windows
1 Suffolk Street
Ceilings
Windows
3 Suffolk Street
Ceilings
5 Suffolk Street
Ceilings
17 Suffolk Street
Window
19 Suffolk Street
Ceiling
21 Suffolk Street
Ceilings
Window
23 Suffolk Street
Ceiling
Window
27 Suffolk Street
Window
29 Suffolk Street
Window
31 Suffolk Street
Ceiling
33 Suffolk Street
Window
35 Suffolk Street
Window
21 Talbot Street
Window
34 Talbot Street
Window
38 Talbot Street
Window
43 Talbot Street
Lock
Window
47 Talbot Street
Window
49 Talbot Street
Lock
Window
53 Talbot Street
Windows
55 Talbot Street
Windows
59 Talbot Street
Windows & Frames
61 Talbot Street
Windows
63 Talbot Street
Windows
65 Talbot Street
Windows
67 Talbot Street
Windows
68 Talbot Street
Window
69 Talbot Street
Windows
70 Talbot Street
Window
71 Talbot Street
Windows
74 Talbot Street
Window
75 Talbot Street
Windows
78 Talbot Street
Window
1 Court 1 Talbot Street
Window
14, Yard 1, Taylor Street
Window
44 Taylor Street
Window
48 Taylor Street
Window
50 Taylor Street
Window
58 Taylor Street
Window
67 Taylor Street
Ceilings
72 Taylor Street
Window
74 Taylor Street
Window
78 Taylor Street
Windows
91 Taylor Street
Window
93 Taylor Street
Window
95 Taylor Street
Window & Frame
97 Taylor Street
Window
99 Taylor Street
Windows
109 Taylor Street
Windows
111 Taylor Street
Windows
113 Taylor Street
Windows
115 Taylor Street
Windows
117 Taylor Street
Windows
119 Taylor Street
Windows
121 Taylor Street
Windows
123 Taylor Street
Windows
125 Taylor Street
Ceiling
Windows
127 Taylor Street
Window
129 Taylor Street
Plaster
Window Frames
135 Taylor Street
Windows
137 Taylor Street
Windows
141 Taylor Street
Window
143 Taylor Street
Windows
145 Taylor Street
Ceiling
Window & Frame
147 Taylor Street
Window
149 Taylor Street
Plaster
Window & Frame
151 Taylor Street
Windows
153 Taylor Street
Ceiling
Windows
155 Taylor Street
Fireplace
Lock: Windows
157 Taylor Street
Locks: Windows
159 Taylor Street
Ceiling
Windows
161 Taylor Street
Lock: Windows
163 Taylor Street
Windows
165 Taylor Street
Windows
167 Taylor Street
Windows
169 Taylor Street
Many Slates
Windows: Lock
171 Taylor Street
Plaster
Windows
173 Taylor Street
Windows & Frame
175 Taylor Street
Windows & Frame
177 Taylor Street
Ridge Tiles
Windows
179 Taylor Street
Many Slates
Lock: Windows: Garden Wall
181 Taylor Street
Ceiling
Locks: Windows
183 Taylor Street
Many Slates
Window
185 Taylor Street
Window
187 Taylor Street
Window & Frame
189 Taylor Street
Tenant Away – Entry Impossible – Slight Damage Only
Window
191 Taylor Street
Many Slates
Lock: Windows
193 Taylor Street
Windows
195 Taylor Street
Window
197 Taylor Street
Many Slates
Ceilings
Lock: Windows
199 Taylor Street
Many Slates
Ceilings
Locks: Door: Windows
201 Taylor Street
Retaining Beam
Ceiling
Window
203 Taylor Street
Many Slates
Ceiling
Windows
205 Taylor Street
Many Slates
Locks: Windows & Frame, Greenhouse
207 Taylor Street
Ceiling
Windows
209 Taylor Street
Windows
211 Taylor Street
Many Slates
Ceiling
Windows & Frame
39 Royd Holme, Towngate Rd
Window
43 Towngate Rd
Ceiling: Lock
Windows
15 Town St, Batley Carr
Window
20 Trafalgar Street
3 Slates
Window
22 Trafalgar Street
Window
24 Trafalgar Street
12 Slates
Windows
26 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Ceilings
Windows
28 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Windows
30 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Ceilings
Lead Flashing & Windows
32 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Ceiling
Windows
34 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Ceiling
Windows
36 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Ceilings
Windows
38 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Ceiling
Window Frame
40 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Mullion
Lock
Window Frame & Windows
42 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Mullion
Door
Windows
44 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Windows
46 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Windows
48 Trafalgar Street
Windows
50 Trafalgar Street
Windows
52 Trafalgar Street
Locks
Windows
54 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Ceilings
Windows
56 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Ceilings
Windows
58 Trafalgar Street
20 Slates
Door Frame
Windows
60 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Ceiling
Windows
62 Trafalgar Street
Many Slates
Ceiling
Windows
Empty House Trafalgar St
Many Slates
Windows
New House Trafalgar St
Many Slates
Windows & Frames
Data extracted from West Yorkshire Archive Services Ref KMT1/Box42/TB227 – This is only a portion of the information contained. I have not included owners, occupiers, rateable value etc.
For Part 1 – A to B see here. For Part 2 – C to F see here. For Part 3 – G to J see here. For Part 4 – K to N see here. For Part 5 – O to P see here. For Part 7 – U to Z see here.
Postscript: Finally a big thank you for the donations already received to keep this website going.
The website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I am considering if I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource, especially as I have to balance the research time against work commitments.
If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated.
Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all.
Thank you.
Footnotes: 1. In this section of the list the ‘Description’ column is largely blank. The implication is these are houses, not business premises.