Mytholmroyd, West Yorkshire
Mytholmroyd photos
Displaying 1 of 1 old photos of Mytholmroyd. View all Mytholmroyd photos
Mytholmroyd maps
Historic maps of Mytholmroyd and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Mytholmroyd maps
Mytholmroyd books
Displaying 3 of 23 books about Mytholmroyd and the local area. View all Mytholmroyd books
1 Mytholmroyd photos appear in 1 Frith book titles. You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Mytholmroyd
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West Yorkshire memories
The Railway Runs by their Doorstep
41 years of their 50 years of married life, Mr & Mrs Joshua Turner of 1 Station Cottages, Hebden Bridge had more than 200 trains a day passing by their doorstep, the trains never caused them any trouble. Their home was just below the platform of Hebden Bridge Station. Mr & Mrs Turner were natives of Halifax. They had 13 children.... [more]
Shared on 07 May 2007
I was born derrick wadswoth, but never knew my mother.Iwas adopted by Cyril&Dorothy wright,ifound out this from my mate.Ihave recently found my birth family,and found I have 1brother 1 sister 1 half brother and 3 half sisters.
Shared on 31 December 2007
I know this part of Sowerby so well as I was born in one of the cottages in the centre left of the photo. Grandma lived in the end house and my parents in the middle one. On recent visits the place has altered somewhat and is spoilt by too many cars parked around the greens, but such is... [more]
Shared on 24 December 2007
This picture evokes happy memories of the village where I was born and lived for the first twenty two years of my life. I have visited it often over the past forty years whenever I was in Yorkshire, and I still find it a lovely place to be. Maybe it has become just a little too pristine, and unfortunately not improved... [more]
Shared on 28 February 2007
This was the first home I ever knew and remains, to this day, the one I hold as the true definition of 'home'. Waterloo House was where I was brought as a newborn in June 1974, and where I lived so happily until 1980 when we were, sadly, forced to sell up and leave. I have countless memories, from toboganning down... [more]
Shared on 12 October 2006
Growing up in Triangle in the 70s, I was the middle child of three children. My dad was Ian Whippey and my grandparents were Arthur and Lillian Whippey. We lived at 18 Rochdale Road, opposite the Triangle Inn, then run by the Collett family.
I remember the harsh winters with snow drifts and also the hot summer afternoons. Sunday afternoons... [more]
Shared on 14 September 2008
My name is Monica Sekulka, I lived at Oaken Royd, Triangle, on the Norland side of the valley. Our house was one of 8, back to back - which the local council decided to demolish in their haste for modernity sometime in the 70s. We moved to Dodge Royd Farm, just a couple of hundred yards from Oaken Royd... [more]
Shared on 17 January 2008
I lived in Norland for just over 50 years and remember the war years quite well, and the night the doodlebug came over and came down on a farm in Sowerby. We had a few army places including the glasshouse on Walton Street in Sowerby Bridge, we used to watch the prisoners getting drilled up and down the parade ground and... [more]
Shared on 11 October 2009
Extracts From Mytholmroyd & West Yorkshire books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Mytholmroyd, inspired by Frith photos.
There could not be anywhere more northern-sounding than Mytholmroyd, the woollen village crammed into the bottom of the Calder Valley west of Halifax. The name means 'the clearing where the waters meet', the waters being the Calder and the Cragg Brook. Prominent in this view from Scout Road, which leads up through Hathershelf Scout Wood, south east of the village, is... [more]
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Huddersfield - A History & Celebration
While those firms weaving khaki thrived, the post-war depression and the gold standard crisis quelled any optimism. Employers tried to slash costs by wage cutting, leading to some 20,000 textile workers striking for several months in 1925 and in 1930. However, it was generally agreed that Huddersfield was not so badly affected as other areas, mainly due to the diversity of its industry. The textile trade itself was not reliant... [more]
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Huddersfield - A History & Celebration
There are also plans to demolish the council flats at Rashcliffe and Southgate and, although the latter in particular are notorious eyesores, there is concern that this will lead to a further reduction of housing stock.
Read more and see photos from this book.
