Walking Around Ilkley

Holiday in Ilkley like the Victorians used to do using Shanks’s Pony. You do not have to walk all of the Dales Way to have a good holiday with fresh air and exercise. The River Wharfe runs through the town and you can follow it down stream to Denton and Ben Rhydding or up stream on the reasonably flat walks to Addingham.  Before tackling the Moors themselves there are several more challenging walks on the rivers northern shore to Beamsley Beacon or Mount Calvary and Middleton Woods.

The moors have two main routes running north to south. From the town centre you can go straoight up and across to Dick Hudsons and on over Baildon moor to Shipley. The other route heads south west up the track towards Keighley old road. The heather moors are precious resourses and walkers are encouraged to stick to the main pathways.

On the moor there are many features to visit such as White Wells, Cow and Calf Rocks and the Tarn or Hebers Ghyll and the Swastika Stone. Simple directions for the famous walk across the moor to Dick Hudsons   (with acknowledgement to Ilkley.org) Leave the centre of Ilkley up Wells Road to the cattle grid, then aim up the hillside to White Wells. Take the path to the rear of the buildings towards Ilkley Crags and up the steps to a cairn at the top. Go forward along a broad track, partly a board walk and often a bit boggy, past the boundary stone of Lanshaw Lad and the Twelve Apostles stone circle. Ahead is Baildon Moor with Otley Chevin to the left and Almscliff Crag in the distance. Cross a wall by a stile and continue to a rough walled track down leading to the road and Dick Hudsons, the renown watering hole and foody pub.

When you are worn out from walking you may find a show at The Kings Hall or Ilkley Playhouse.  Alternatively read  ‘On Ilkley Moor’ by Tom Binding (a journey into the heart of Yorkshire gone by) whilst you are on Ilkley Moor or sat in the bar at the Cow and Calf hotel.

Read about views on top of Ilkley
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Where’er You Wander

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Holidays or work trips looming? Do not forget the words to Home Sweet Home an old folk song once banned as it was thought it encouraged desertion in the American forces. …..

‘There’s no place like home
Well I say now home, home sweet home
There’s no place like home
Wherever you wander
There’s no place like home’

For home you will doubtless be reading Yorkshire

‘There’s no place like Yorkshire
Well I say now Yorkshire, home sweet Yorkshire
There’s no place like Yorkshire
Wherever you wander
There’s no place like Yorkshire’

 

So forget your far off Continents, European Unionites or even other UK counties and stick to home spun Yorkshire. There is no place like it.

 

‘Where’er You Wander’ with words  by Alexander Pope  which Handel set to music is also evocative of our Yorkshire Dales and glades.

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Facts about Keighley BD21

Keighley has two claims to fame, the first being the pronunciation of it’s name Keeth-lee.
The second item amused me when Bill Bryson asked why the Army used beautiful countryside for munition target practice, rather than a place like Keighley.
“I’ll tell you now and I’ll tell you briefly, I don’t never want to go to Keighley.” John Cooper Clarke


You Are Welcome to  Keighley

  1. Visit Cliff Castle museum to see a good collection of fossils, geological samples, Victorian stuffed animals and the grotto pictured above. Set in a parkland with hillside walks.
  2. Keighley is the home base of the Keighley and Worth Valley Steam Railway. ‘The steep gradient up the Worth Valley from the Keighley terminus has been a challenge for locomotives ever since the line opened on 15th April 1867. The sound of a steam engine tackling this climb echoes from the steep sides of the valley, while great clouds of steam and smoke add drama to the scene.’ from KWVR site
  3. Keighley has been a location for several films and TV dramas the best known being  The Railway Children. Others include Blow Dry and the film of the Pink Floyd musical The Wall plus several Asian documentaries.
  4. The TV series episode Sharpe’s Justice, which focuses on the roots of the title character, is actually set in and around Keighley. The local Utley cemetery contains the grave of war hero Christopher Ingham, a veteran of the 95th Rifle Regiment and conflicts against Napoleon. Some local historians believe Mr Ingham’s heroism may have inspired the author Bernard Cornwell’s saga about Major Richard Sharpe, played by Sheffield-born Sean Bean.
  5. Timothy Taylors has been brewing in Keighley for 150+ years and has supplied Madonna with Landlord a much loved and good strong ale.
  6. The 17th century East Riddlesden Hall’s tumultuous past, which includes tales of ghosts and dastardly deeds is now managed by the National Trust.
  7. Keighley has far less textile engineering than in better days but the shopping and indoor market is good value to cheap, reflecting the hard time some of the community are suffering.
  8. Read the Keighley News for local colour and latest information.
  9. I am struggling to find 10 items of note even though the rivers Aire  and Worth meet in Keighley I can’t say it creates a local beauty spot.

Keighley
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Sheffield Murders and More?

The Chinese Laundry Murder of 1922.

Sing Lee had carried on a laundry business living above the shop at 231 Crookes, Sheffield in 1922. Lee Doon entered his employment only a few days earlier (don’t you just love these Chinese names). Lily Siddall a young employee left the two men together at the laundry but the following day she found Lee Doon alone and he told her that Sing Lee had gone back to China. Later Sing Lee’s body was found in a trunk in the cellar under a heap of coke and stones.
Lee Doon’s story was that Sing Lee had suggested smoking opium or taking morphine but he was found guilty of murder at Leeds assizes and despite an appeal he was hanged at Armley in 1923.

Book Cover

Murder and Mayhem in Sheffield
by Geoffrey Howse covers the Sheffield outrages and many other murders.

The Sheffield Outrages

The Sheffield Outrages of the 1860’s included a failed plot to murder some of Sheffield’s officials, take control of the Town Hall and set fire to the homes of prominent citizens. Watch out Nick Clegg.
In 1886 trade unionists in Sheffield were accused of using arson and murder to intimidate non-unionists.
The image of trade unions was also damaged by the revelation that William Broadhead, secretary of the Grinders Union, had paid £20 to a man to murder an employer. The leaders of the Trade Union Congress claimed that these incidents were just the work of a few individuals and that the best way to improve industrial relations was to remove the legal constraints upon the status and funds of unions. The resulting Royal Commission on Trade Unions did not include any trade unionists as appointees and only a minority report saved the day when Gladstonee eventually passed the 1871 Trade Union act.

The William Smedleys

Two different Sheffield murderers bore the same name, William Smedley. They were both hanged for their murderous crimes committed in 1875 and 1947 respectively.
The 1947 Smedley was found guilty of the murder of 27-year-old prostitute Edith Simmonite whom he claimed had given him VD (venereal disease).
In 1875 Elizabeth Firth was the common-law wife of widower William Smedley. Poverty, booze and requited love led to Smedley loosing it pulling a razor blade and slitting Elizabeth’s throat.

Other Murders Reported and Amplified by Geoffrey Howse
The notorious Sheffield Gang Wars of the 1920’s.
The fascinating case of one of Britain’s most notorious cat burglar and murderers, Charlie Peace. Executed 1879 but still remembered in novels and literature.
The gruesome Shelf Street Hatchet Murder of 1881.
The Woodhouse Murder of 1893

Other Murders Reported and Amplified in Style by Chris Hobbs
MURDER AT WHITE CROFT SHEFFIELD – 10th JULY 1884
THREE DIE IN PUBLIC HOUSE SHOOTING New Years Day 1960.
Christmas 1923 Inspector Hughes was told “I want you to go to 20 Lister Road. I believe I have done Jack Clark in with a hatchet which I have thrown away.” Hughes found a dying man on his own doorstep dressed only in his trousers and shirt. The wife of the murdered man was standing on the stairs. She said ” Jack Eastwood has done that. I don’t know what he has done it for” Read more

Real Life Murder Goes On

A man has appeared in court charged with the murder of a 41-year-old man in Sheffield on New Year’s Eve 2015/6.
Zabair Hussain was discovered badly injured on Staniforth Road  Darnall, where he later died. A man accused of murdering the Muslim pensioner in a racist attack has refused to give evidence in his defence. 17th Feb 2016 Sheffield Telegraph

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Twirlies on Doncaster & Bradford Trolley Buses

Black Country Museum

Twirlies you know are the OAP’s and people who stand at bus stops with their free passes and ask ‘are we too early’ because it is not yet 9.30am. So that is how we get our name ‘Twirlies’, it is not a trolley bus maneuver to turn around at the terminus.

Well Twirlies would have needed to get up early in the morning to catch the Bradford Corporation Trolley Bus No 7 to Thornbury.
Ten Bradford trolleybuses are now preserved at the Trolleybus Museum at Sandtoft , Lincolnshire. In the tram shed at Bradford Industrial Museum there is the pictured Trolley bus plus the only tramcar left in Bradford. Continue reading

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Lister Park and Cartwright Hall

Lake in Lister Park

Lister Park Bradford is on the English Heritage Register of Parks and Gardens of special historic interest in England, and contains six listed buildings, including the opulent Cartwright Memorial Hall. The ‘Green Flag’ park has recently been renovated around the boating lake and botanic gardens with £3.2m help from the National Lottery. The priorities were set by a Lister Park user group who were keen to see the park return to its former glory. This picture was taken mid week when there was lots of people and activity and it looks like a great success has been made of the renovations.

The Mughal Garden are a key element of phase two of the development works developed on the site of a former car park. Looking like a series of geometric ponds there are fountains,topiary and seating places in a very none traditional Bradford style.

Mughal Gardens 2

Footnotes.

Lister Park is named after Samuel Cunliffe Lister 1st Baron of Masham, 1815-1906 was an industrialist and inventor. He designed a nip comb and silk loom for producing velvet which was produced in his Manningham Mills in Bradford (notable for its tall chimney). Lister endowed the current museum in Cartwright Hall with many artifacts and had it named after Edmund Cartwright the prolific inventor of the power loom and a wool combing machine in 1789 .

Cartwright Hall Facts & Figures

  • 117 competition entries were used to select the design in 1899
  • The hall weighs about 50,000 tons and the walls vary up to 7feet 9 inchesthick
  • It took 4 year to build but no serious accidents occurred (health ans safety take note)
  • Modern ideas on fire proofing were incorporated with all steel covered in a composition material
  • The site is 50 yards long and 30 yards wide
  • The drawings for the building were created in full size needing 600 sheets of paper.
  • Most of the stone came from Idle moor
  • The original cost was £40,000 but the eventual cost exceeded £70,000

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Lassie the Literary Wonder Dog

Book Cover

Eric Knight the author and creator of Lassie was born on 10 April 1897, in Menston Yorkshire the son of a Quakers family.

Lassie first appeared in a magazine story published by Evening Post and was subsequently expanded into as novel. Lassie Come-Home appeared in 1940 and was filmed by MGM in 1943 with Roddy McDowall in the role of Joe Carraclough and canine actor Pal in the role of Lassie.
The Plot
‘Set in Depression-era Yorkshire, England, Mr. and Mrs. Carraclough are hit by hard times and forced to sell their collie, Lassie, to the rich Duke of Rudling, who has always admired her. Young Joe Carraclough grows despondent at the loss of his companion. Lassie will have nothing to do with the Duke, however, and finds ways to escape her kennels and return to Joe. The Duke finally carries Lassie to his home hundreds of miles distant in Scotland. There, his granddaughter Priscilla senses the dog’s unhappiness and arranges her escape. Lassie then sets off for a long trek to her Yorkshire home and the boy who loves her. She faces many perils along the way—dog catchers and a violent storm—but also meets kind people who offer her aid and comfort. At the end, when Joe has given up hope of ever seeing his dog again, the weary Lassie returns to her favorite resting place in the schoolyard at home. There, Lassie is joyfully reunited with the boy she loves.’ with acknowledgment to wikipedia

The success of the novel and film generated more films and eventually several television series, cementing Lassie’s icon status. The Son of Lassie, who was inevitably named Laddie, was set as Joe starts RAF training at the start of World War II.

Other Works
His first novel was Song on Your Bugles (1936) about the working class in Northern England.
As “Richard Hallas,” he wrote the hardboiled genre novel “You Play The Black and The Red Comes Up”
“This Above All” is considered one of the significant novels of The Second World War.
Knight’s last published work was “The Flying Yorkshireman” about an otherwise undistinguished man from Yorkshire named Sam Small, whose sojourns are reflected in a series of short stories with ethnocentric and eccentric observations of life around him.

Eric Knight Died at the age of 49 in 1943 in an air crash.

Post Script
Greg Christie the biographer of Eric Knight will give the De Grey lecture at York St Johns University on 20 March 2010 at 3.00 pm. He is also trying to get a blue plaque in Menston in memory of Eric Knight.

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Yorkshire v Lancashire

Yorkshire v Lancashire – two great counties, but which is greater?

Who won the War of the Roses?

Lancashire. After several years of fighting, the final victory went to a relatively remote Lancastrian claimant, Henry Tudor. He defeated the Yorkist king Richard III. Though after the war, Henry Tudor married Elizabeth of York to unite the two houses.

Lancashire 1 – Yorkshire – 0

Football

Liverpool Kop

Liverpool Kop

Football is pretty one sided in favour of Lancashire. Football teams from Lancashire fill the Premier League including the most prolific top flight winners. Manchester United (19 League titles), Liverpool (18 League Titles), and Manchester City. Other recent Premier League teams from Lancashire include Bolton Wanderers,  Blackburn Rovers, Burnley, Wigan Athletic, Blackpool. Preston North End won the first national English title

By contrast, Yorkshire singularly fails to have any team in the Premiership. Leeds United had their glory days, before an ignominious decline into the third tier of English football. The two Sheffield teams are perennial underachievers. Bradford City, had a short spell in top tier before their free-fall to the bottom. Doncaster Rovers were runners up in the Yorkshire League (1898-99(

Lancashire 2 – Yorkshire – 0

Cricket

Yorkshire are the undisputed greats of cricket. Yorkshire have 33 County Championship victories, dwarfing Lancashire’s total of 9 county Championships. Well into the modern age, Yorkshire was an anomaly amongst counties in insisting that Yorkshire players were born in Yorkshire.

Lancashire 2 – Yorkshire – 1

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Art Deco Book Collecting

Art Deco is back in vogue with new twists or as collectables and memorabilia. Art deco was a design and art style from 1910’s until the 1930s taking over from Art Nouveau. As well as all the visual arts, it encompassed buildings and architecture plus interior design. Some iconic buildings still stand out like Odeon Cinemas the Chrysler Building in New York and the Midland Hotel Morecambe.

Art Deco is eminently collectible in may forms, including books and magazines from the period and a bit of know-how from the following books may help you to make sound investments whilst owning a piece of Art Deco. Normally I would recommend you shop at Redbrick Mill in Batley or the Antique galleries in Harrogate but I am sure you will find your own favourite supplier.

Book CoverArt Deco Architecture: Design, Decoration and Detail from the Twenties and Thirties by Patricia Bayer

Book CoverArt Deco Interiors: Decoration and Design Classics of the 1920s and 1930s by Patricia Bayer
By the time of the Paris exhibition of 1925 from which Art Deco took its name, the idea that an interior and its furnishings should form a complete design – a “total look” – dominated the thinking of both designers and their clients

Book CoverArt Deco Ceramics: in Britain by Andrew Casey Distinctive designers Charlotte Rhead, Clarise Cliff and Susie Cooper three great British potters.
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Addingham Moorside’s Wild Dogs on Ilkley D’Amour

april 062

It is about 5 years ago that I caught sight of the Addingham hounds – I guess they are in some old dogs home by now. This is what I wrote at the time and I must go check to see if there is still a display on these rocks.

‘High on the ridge of Addingham Moorside bays a lonely hound. The ‘wickering’ sound can be heard far and wide interspersed by the occasional bone crunching chomping as another walker is fed to the ravenous beast.

I haven’t got close enough to discover the beasts name but then I still have all my limbs.
I don’t fancy becoming dog food just yet chum. With the roman connection Cesar was considered but it didn’t winalot of support. A pal of mine thought it would wolf him down but Iams still nervous of it’s Pedigree. (enough this takes the dogs biscuit ed.)

The second dog I spotted on the moor is photographed (below) in all its splendor. It is a Cairn of course a Yorkshire Cairn. This cairn is at Addingham Moorside just where you can see both dales the wharfe and the other terrier like Aire Dale.

I will leave you with a Paws for thought; is a dog high on the moor be part of the Upper Cruft or is it just a Red Setter in the Sunset? Continue reading

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