Farnley Tyas The Finger Points at You

Sign

Farnley Tyas is surrounded by green belt situated on the edge of the Pennines close to Hudderfield. Farnley Tyas was mentioned in the Domeday book and got its current name from a family le Tyeis in the 13th century. They were landowners and may have also had land near Richmond at Middleton Tyas.

Farnley Tyas is set amongst beautiful meadows with woods and lots of wild flowers in May. Castle Hill stands 1000 feet above sea level and provides great views over the old cloth making village of Farnley Tyas. In the 18th century it was famous for ‘Fulling’ which involves scouring and thickening the cloth. This is followed by stretching the cloth on great frames known as tenters and held onto those frames by tenterhooks. It is from this process that we derive the phrase being on tenterhooks as meaning to be held in suspense.

Formerly a township of 1000 people the majority of the village is within a conservation area. It has a number of listed buildings, one of which is the Church, whose spire can be seen for many miles around.There are 18th and 19th century workers cottages. Unfortunately more buildings are being converted to executive housing and the nature of the village is under pressure.  The surrounding countryside is designated as an area of High Landscape Value and there are belts of bluebell woodland close to the Village. These areas are very popular with walkers, cyclists and horse riders.

The Golden Cock village pub for 400 years was owned by Bentley and Shaw Ltd of Lockwood and then returned to serve Black Sheep after a spell as a pretentious wine bar.

Almondbury on the hill over looking Farnley Tyas lacks a bit of TLC despite having a good local cigar supplier, a sign of a former opulence? The church is in very good order
Almondbury Church

But what is this new HDR (High Dyanamic Range) for photographs? Apparently it exaggerates contrast and modifies colour for a painterly effect as can be seen on this other picture of Almondbury church.

The Church HDR

Photo Credits
The Church HDR by Urban Outlaw, CC BY-NC-SA 2.0
Almondbury Church by touring_fishman CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

Posted in Our Yorkshire, Villages, Towns and Cities | Comments Off on Farnley Tyas The Finger Points at You

Todmorden and Pirates

Todmorden is a bustling town on the edge or more correctly the border with that other county. Situated at the meeting point of three steep valleys, Todmorden is an ideal base for walking, mountain biking, bird watching and horse riding. I visited the local tourist information office after leaving the railway station and left with all the information and route maps I could cope with.

International Talk Like A Pirate Day is celebrated on 19th September everyyear in aid of Marie Currie Cancer Care. Look out around Todmorden for swashbuckling parrots, plank-walkers and pirates all after your pieces of eight in a good cause. According to Todmorden List of what’s on ‘If you just want a quick fix, a surface gloss, a “pirate patina,” if you will, here are the five basic words that you cannot live without. Master them, and you can face Talk Like a Pirate Day with a smile on your face and a parrot on your shoulder, if that’s your thing.
• Ahoy! – “Hello!”
• Avast! – Stop and give attention. It can be used in a sense of surprise, “Whoa! Get a load of that!” which today makes it more of a “Check it out” or “No way!” or “Get off!”
• Aye! – “Why yes, I agree most heartily with everything you just said or did.”
• Aye aye! – “I’ll get right on that sir, as soon as my break is over.”
• Arrr! – This one is often confused with arrrgh, which is of course the sound you make when you sit on a belaying pin. “Arrr!” can mean, variously, “yes,” “I agree,” “I’m happy,” “I’m enjoying this beer,” “My team is going to win it all,” “I saw that television show, it sucked!” and “That was a clever remark you or I just made.” And those are just a few of the myriad possibilities of Arrr!’

I will be shivering my timbers with a pint or two of local grog and will probably end up with patches over both eyes. Meanwhile the young ‘Pirates of The Calder’ will be canoeing along the canal towards Hebden Bridge.

 

Update

The British version of the successful Swedish political party’ The Pirate Party’  is fielded 9 candidates in the general election on May 6th 2010. As the BBC puts it the pro-internet file sharing Pirate Party  hopes to make waves in the UK on 6 May.  Pirates as MPs,  surely not!

 

Otley Folk Festival featured the Duncan McFarlane Band and they sang a couple of pirate songs with the Skull and Crossbones waving and the audience singing Yohoho or similar as a chorus.

Todmorden 1875 – Mill Explosion.
A well researched and presented story of a boiler explosion at Lord Brothers Mill Canal Street can be found on Ancestry community site for ‘Todmorden and Walsden’ presented by Dorothy Hargreaves and Linda Briggs. The Halifax Guardian newspaper headlined in January 1875 ‘Dreadful Boiler Explosion at Todmorden’. ‘Six Persons Killed and Many Seriously Injured – Great Destruction of Property’. What I learned from the various reports was the prevailing conditions of small pox and other health problems in a town only a little over 100 years ago. Despite our gripes about the Health and Safety industry and our current NHS I know what era I would prefer to be living in.

Posted in Our Yorkshire, Villages, Towns and Cities | Comments Off on Todmorden and Pirates

Robinson Library Timble – Otley

Don’t forget Sunday 27th September 2015 11.00 until 16.00 ‘Giant Book Sale’ in the Robinson Library in the heart of Timble right opposite the Timble Inn. Art, architecture, poetry, history and an eclectic collection of non-fiction books will be available for sale from Otley Lions.

timble 011

As you turn off the Otley road towards Timble you may see the ‘Menwith Hill Golf Balls’ on the horizon. That assumes the weather permits as 10 minutes after this photo it was raining cats & dogs.

Don’t let the weather put you off on Sunday 27th September 2015 as you can stay in the warm and dry at the ‘Giant Book Sale’ in the Robinson Library in the heart of Timble right opposite the Timble Inn.  Art, architecture, poetry, history and an eclectic collection of non-fiction books will be available for sale from Otley Lions.

The Timble Community will also be selling a large range of childrens and fiction books and others for your late holiday reading or to keep you company on  dark nights.

timble 029

 

TIMBLE Giant Book Sale Poster 3

As you flock to the sale between 11.00am and 4.00pm  these local residents are unlikely to beat you to your favourite authors  as they don’t read.

timble 020

Leaving Timble you may get another chance to see the views unless your head is stuck in a book.
timble 010

Posted in Books Club & Literary Work | Comments Off on Robinson Library Timble – Otley

Pontefract Building Tourism

pontefract 003

Pontefract has many fine buildings and a notable history to boot. Find out about them and lots more at the museum right in the center of town. It is housed in a fine looking red brick building built in 1904 as a Carnegie public library. There is still a reference reading library with interestingly titled sections.

Glass was a major industry in and around Pontefract and is still produced in nearby Knottingly. Glass moulding machines were first invented and used at the local works of William Bagley between 1871-86. Innovation in glass for use in the home included the art deco coloured glass on the 20th century. The museum has many examples of this type of moulded product and several books on the glass making industry. Continue reading

Posted in Uncategorized, Yorkshire History and Heritage, Yorkshire Trips and Places | Comments Off on Pontefract Building Tourism

Billy Liar RIP

Best known for his role in Billy Liar Sir Tom Courtenay received the 2015 award for best actor for his role in the film ’45 Years’. His co-star Charlotte Rampling was named best actress.

The 77-year-old actor was born in Hull near the city’s fish docks and is president of the Hull City official supporters club.
Book Cover

Charades will not be the same after the death of Billy Liar the author of ‘Keith Waterhouse. Is it a book, a film or a play? Yes! mimes the reply.

Still fresh after 50 years, Billy Liars’s novel about a compulsive dissembler who can’t handle reality is funny, sweet, and heartbreakingly sad. Set at the tail end of 1950s, the story is told by Keith Waterhouse, who lives with his parents in the fictional Yorkshire town of Stradhoughton. Keith can’t cope with his tedious clerking job at a local funeral parlor, living at home, or really anything about his life, and so, spends a great deal of time escaping into fantasy world in his head called Ambrosia. When he’s not imagining life as prime minister of his make-believe country, he’s spinning mostly purposeless lies to almost everyone he meets. Sometimes he’s lying to cover up real misdeeds, such as his small-time embezzling, other times, his lies are completely pointless, such as telling a friend’s mother about his fictional sister.

Billy grew up in Leeds, and like Waterhouse, worked as a clerk in an undertakers. 50 years since he wrote Keith Waterhouse, which began life as a book before becoming a hit West End play and film. Billy remembers there was a storm of complaints when it first appeared in the theatre because it had the word “bloody” in it. Fifteen times, apparently. Billy describes the word as “innocuous” and wonders what all the fuss was about. So how does the Mail spell it in the headline for the piece on Saturday? “B****y”. Bloody marvellous! says Media Monkey

Billy Liar Quotations.

“To my mind, 90 per cent of the unpleasant things that happen to us are in the name of rationalisation. Counties lose their names, trains lose their livery, ginger snaps lose their flavour and mint humbugs their sharp corners … under my derationalisation programme, Yorkshire would get back its Ridings, the red telephone box would be a preserved species, there would be Pullman cars called Edna, a teashop in every high street and a proper card index in the public library.”

“Should not the Society of Indexers be known as Indexers, Society of, The?”

“I wake up with views the way some people wake up with hangovers. Sometimes I wake up with both, when the confederation of clowns presiding over our destinies had better tread carefully.””I never drink when I’m writing, but I sometimes write when I drink.”

Billy’s record in Who’s Who lists   his hobby as ‘Lunch’, he created Clogthorpe Council and was also the founder of The Association for the Abolition of the Aberrant Apostrophe 9before Trusses’).

Book Cover

Posted in Books Club & Literary Work, Wit and Humour, Yorkshire Folk | Comments Off on Billy Liar RIP

A Yorkshire Woman of Substance

Book Cover

After selling over 80,000,000 books the Leeds born Barbara Taylor Bradford aged 84, must certainly be a woman of real substance, even though she now spends most of her money living in the USA. It is 30 years since the 1200 page block buster ‘Woman of Substance’ was released in British book shops and there has been a prolific output of another 24 books, films and TV spin-offs. Not a bad output for a former cub reporter with the Yorkshire Post.

Marrying a Yank (at least he had a Yorkshire surname) Barbara kept her maiden name Taylor but added the alliterative Bradford. After 46 years marriage they still work together “I refer to him as the General,” she says, “and he calls me Napoleon!” Robert Bradford produces all of her mini-series and films, structures her contracts and spearheads all of the activities of ‘the industry that is Barbara Taylor Bradford’. The Napoleon reference is said to be linked to the expat Yorkshire traits of Barbara’s strong will and blunt straight talking, although I never saw Napoleon as a Yorkshire man.

Barbara’s 25th book is ‘Breaking the Rules’ and ia available from the 3rd September 2009
Book Cover

Continue reading

Posted in Books Club & Literary Work, Yorkshire Folk | Tagged , | Comments Off on A Yorkshire Woman of Substance

My Favorite Yorkshire Fiction

Book Cover

The Harrowing by Robert Dinsdale – ‘January, 1916, and the rooftops of Leeds creak with the weight of the winter’s snows. William Redmond, soon to join the Chapeltown Rifles, wanders with his younger brother Samuel through the old haunts of their childhood – and, there, at the top of the Moor across which they are forbidden to walk, Samuel, for too long trapped in his brother’s shadow, stoves William’s head in with a stone’ so this book is described. The reviews I have read are very much in favour of this book and I think I will give it a try. Powerful and Atmospheric this is a highly promising first novel ‘Daily Telegraph’ and ‘Slow Start Turns Into An Unputdownable Read’ Amazon

Book Cover

D I Charlie Priest is the sort of Yorkshire detective I like to read. The books have that underlying Yorkshire humour that can be detected by the sledgehammer in the titles of other books in the series such as ‘Grief Encounters’ and ‘Judas Sheep’. There are 8 books so far and the Yorkshire author Stuart Pawson is worth following if you like a bit of escapism close to home in Yorkshire.

Book Cover

I bought Ballad of a One Legged Man at Waterstones remainders sale and I could have saved 99 pence. Set around Leeds at the retirement of a unexceptional ‘Copper’ the story is his reflections of times and friends past. Focusing on the hot summer of 1976 the pressures on a trainee bobby and the situations faced by all our police proves to be an interesting tale. Quick to read there is no plot to speak of and the characters could be drawn more sharply but the book has some simple charm. Also by Colin Campbell are Through the Ruins of Midnight and Darkwater Towers.

Posted in Books Club & Literary Work | Tagged | Comments Off on My Favorite Yorkshire Fiction

Titchy Presents from Alan

Book Cover

The Kitchen Gardener: Grow Your Own Fruit and Veg by Alan Titchmarsh

Do you want your Father in the allotment or garden? Then this could be a grand present for Fathers day as Alan ‘sits amongst the cabbages and pees (peas)’ (the best place for a leak (Leek).

Book Cover

England Our England is an anthology and miscellany of everything an Englishman should know:

      – ‘From Austen to Wordsworth
      – Jerusalem to the Scout’s Honour
      – Kings and Queens of England to Land of Hope and Glory
      – Savile Row tailors to Jermyn St Shirt Makers
      – Tying a Windsor knot to making a pot of tea
      – Victoria sponge to fish pie
    – The rules of cricket to Gilbert and Sullivan operas ‘

As a paperback it has a Titchy price of £5.99 as well as a Titchy author Alan ‘Titchy’ Titchmarsh.

Posted in Books Club & Literary Work, Our Yorkshire, Wit and Humour | Comments Off on Titchy Presents from Alan

Keighley Detective Series by Lesley Horton

Book Cover

Twisted Tracks is the 5th and latest offering about Inspector Handford or now Detective Chief Inspector Hanford and his Keighley based team. With an escaped convict recaptured in the lake at East Riddlesden Hall through the angst and envy of police versus miners this is an escapist detective with just enough local input to make it a good read. Twisted Tracks by Lesley Horton can be bought from Amazon by clicking here.

East Riddlesden Hall is a 17th-century West Riding manor house with formal and wild gardens, duckpond and grounds maintained by the National Trust. There are  fascinating associations with Yorkshire’s Civil War past and a charming country garden, grass maze and duck pond. It is the home  to the celebrated Airedale Heiffer and there is a local pub by the same name.

Lesley Horton was a teacher in an inner-city Bradford school, has run an educational unit for pregnant schoolgirls, and worked as a volunteer for Victim Support. She lives in Yorkshire. In this series of books the hero is Bradford based Detective Inspector John Handford

Some other books by lesley include:-

Book Cover

Devils in the Mirror set in Harden

Book Cover The Hollow Core

The Hollow Core was her fourth DI Handford novel based on the plight of children trapped in Bradford’s harsh criminal underworld,

Book Cover On Dangerous Ground

Snares of Guilt was the first in the series  set in the ‘cultural hot pot that is Bradford, the area is well brought to the page’.

Posted in Books Club & Literary Work | Tagged , | Comments Off on Keighley Detective Series by Lesley Horton

Visit Victoria Cave – Settle

Some folk may be thinking about royal coronations and Yorkshire has its own memorial to Queen Victoria’s. One of several caves (32) in Craven was discovered in 1838 and named Victoria cave after her coronation. It may not be the oldest bone-cave nor the first to be discovered in Britain but it’s discovery fired the imagination of Victorian archaeologist.

Victoria cave entrance

History of Victoria Cave

The modern history of the cave’s discovery is based on the dog of Michael Horner from Settle. The dog is said to have been chasing a fox down a hole and it squeezed through into the cave back in 1837.
Joseph Jackson with William Boyd and R Tiddeman organised excavations.
At three different layers in the cave, discoveries showed earlier occupation. Bones of animals that resembled elephants, hyenas and other tropical beasts were the earliest bone-cave remnants at 130,000 years old (dated to an Upper Pleistocene interglacial time.) The onset of the great Ice Age covered these remains under deep clay.
As the Ice retreated in the Mesolithic era 6000 B.C. man occupied the cave leaving harpoons and tools of the Azilian culture and then more bones and some iron age relics.
The Romans may have used the cave as a dwelling and enameled jewellery, bronze and more bones dating back to 250-360 A.D. were also recovered.
split sky

Location of Victoria Cave

The cave is situated 1450 feet above the current sea level amongst the Langcliffe scars.
It faces west with ‘bastions and ramparts of limestone leading down to green pasture.
The area is part of the Craven Fault and is within 2 miles of Settle.
Jubilee Cave and Attamire cave can be found very near by.
A favourite walk heads out of settle towards Langcliffe and Stainforth turning right at Catrigg Force.

Photo credits
‘Victoria cave entrance’ by Dissonancefalling ‘when excavated, somewhat destructively, bones dating back 130000 years were found as well as 11000 year old harpoon tip which is first evidence of people in the dales.
Large amounts of Roman artifacts were found as well.’
and ‘split sky’ by Dissonancefalling CC BY-NC-SA 2.0

‘The well known caves along the Attermire Scar are Jubilee Cave, Albert Cave, Victoria Cave and Attermire Cave (AT29). These have all produced archaeological artefacts but are also the caves that are under the most serious threat from both cavers and the casual visitor.’ Read more on pdf Audit of Archaeological Cave Resources in the Yorkshire Dales National Parks

Posted in Yorkshire History and Heritage | Comments Off on Visit Victoria Cave – Settle