The Francis Frith Collection.
You are here: Explore your past > Ackton

Ackton, West Yorkshire

Ackton maps

Historic maps of Ackton and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all Ackton maps

Ackton map

Historic map of Ackton

West Yorkshire map

Illustrated Victorian map of West Yorkshire

Ackton map

Historic Map of any Ackton postcode

Ackton maps
View all Ackton maps

Ackton photos

We have no photos of Ackton, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Featherstone, Normanton, Altofts, Castleford, Pontefract, Ackworth

Ackton books

Displaying 3 of 23 books about Ackton and the local area.   View all Ackton books

Yorkshire Coastal Memories Photographic Memories
Paperback
£14

Ilkley Town and City Memories
Paperback
£13

Yorkshire County Memories
Paperback
£15

Ackton books
View all 23 Ackton and West Yorkshire books

Memories of Ackton

No memories of Ackton have been shared yet - be the first!
Add your memory of Ackton or of a photo of Ackton.

West Yorkshire memories

Featherstone

I was born in Featherstone in 1956 and lived there until 1962 when we moved to Hampshire. My dad was also born there. We lived at 46 Market Street and my grandparents lived at 64 Featherstone Lane, on the corner of Gordon Street. I believe my great-grandparents lived in Featherstone Lane too. My grandfather (Arthur Haigh) was a miner all his... [more]

Shared on 03 February 2008 by Carole Steele.

Growing up in North Featherstone

I remember a happy childhood, playing in the streets with my best friends Joyce Dean, Linda Perry & Maureen Beaumont amongst many, we had quite a large gang,
playing rounders or sitting around telling ghost stories, we also used to take peoples babies for a walk and go to Pontefract Park.The school we attended was Gordon Street and my favourite teacher... [more]

Shared on 31 December 2007 by Hilary Hopton.

You are dead right

It is Green lane but I remember this spot as Cressys Corner,my dad Bill Atkinson used to sit on the seat during the day Until the Green Lane Club opened ,Then after dark it was a favorate spot for us to gather,As IRecall lBill Major Colin Jaques Keith Bullock Carl Farington Pat Sutton to name but a few ,I live in... [more]

Shared on 16 December 2007 by Brendan Atkinson.

A Good Time To Be Living In Featherstone

I was 10 when Featherstone Rovers beat Wigan and Leigh in getting to the Wembley final.  We lived in the school house immediately opposite the entrance on Post Office Road.  What a wonderful period in history of the town.
I was born on Vicarage Lane and schooled at Regent Street and then George Street Junior School.  Eventually Normanton Grammer school.
I... [more]

Shared on 15 May 2007 by Neil Wilford.

Extracts From Ackton & West Yorkshire books

Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Ackton, inspired by Frith photos.

Whitby Photographic Memories

Just south of the abbey's cliffs lie these rocks, which show the inroads made by the alum mining industry during the previous centuries. Before the chemists discovered a simpler method of fixing the dyes used in cloth manufacturing, alum was successfully used for this purpose. It had first to be extracted from rich mineral-bearing stone. This was mined locally both at Saltwick and Sandsend, and... [more]

This is an extract from Whitby Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Whitby Photographic Memories

The railway line continues past the houses and the stone bridge of East Row, whilst the flow from the beck makes a tempting paddling pool. Bathing machines were still in use at this time, as we see on the right.

This is an extract from Whitby Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

Whitby Photographic Memories

Nestling in the shelter of Lythe Bank, the ancient village holds the homes of many of the men who worked in the alum industry and on local estates. Alum was a chemical used in tanning leather and in the dyeworks to fix the dye used in the weaving industry. It was mined and extracted from local stone in the Whitby district,... [more]

This is an extract from Whitby Photographic Memories.
Read more and see photos from this book.

© Copyright 1998-2009 Frith Content Inc. All rights reserved.