Stocksbridge
Stocksbridge photos (9 available)
Stocksbridge maps (2 available)
Map of South Yorkshire
Beautifully hand-drawn and coloured, dating from around 1840
See this old map of South Yorkshire
Personalised maps
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Stocksbridge books (23 available)
Harrogate Town Walk Guide
Paperback
- 2 photos on Stocksbridge appear in 2 Frith books - View photos of Stocksbridge
- Read extracts and see photos from these books on Stocksbridge and South Yorkshire
Stocksbridge memories
Early years
I think the road you see near the top right of the picture is Hunshelf Bank. If I'm right then I used to live in a house at the top of the hill with my family. It stood back from the road and looked down on Samuel Fox's. When I was around 6 years old my parents moved us to the Coach and Horses on Manchester Road which is the main road seen in the picture. I hope I'm right. My name then was Sanderson.
Contributed by Lesley Turner
South Yorkshire memories
Early years
I think the road you see near the top right of the picture is Hunshelf Bank. If I'm right then I used to live in a house at the top of the hill with my family. It stood back from the road and looked down on Samuel Fox's. When I was around 6 years old my parents moved us to the Coach and Horses on Manchester Road which is the main road seen in the picture. I hope I'm right. My name then was Sanderson.
A memory of Stocksbridge contributed by Lesley Turner
Midhopestones born and bred
The day I was born was 11th march 1974 and I'm a Midoper born and bred. We lived at the old cottages just at the entrance to the village at the side of the Dam. I have some lovely memories of the people which have passed on. I remember the pub being The Clubb Inn then and Robert (Bob) Genn owned and Jack and Pat Smith also ran the place. The village was really nice, no yuppies just proper village folk living a normal life. The main source of income around then was farming. The Roberts's and the Hollingworths, Clancys and my mother's side of the family originated from Midhope, I'm told they ran the local post office when they had ...read more here
A memory of contributed by kerry thornley
Cottages at Thurgoland Bank
First a little bit of history.
There is a double cottage on Thurgoland Bank overlooking Cheesebottom, it was built by my Great Grandfather John Tufft around 1880. He was a Shingler at Wortley Lower Forge, having moved his family down from Tipton some years earlier.
He brought up his family here, seven children in all. After he died in 1920 and my Great Grandmother died in 1921 the cottage was occupied by my Great Aunts Matilda, known as Mant, and Gertrude, known as Gertie. It passed from the family around 1975 upon Gertie`s demise.
It has always been a mystery to me how a Forgeman was able to built his own house, retire at around 50 (as the story goes ) ...read more here
A memory of Thurgoland contributed by Roger Tufft
Extracts From Stocksbridge & South Yorkshire books
A retired steelman looks across the industrial landscape of Stocksbridge, the steel-making town in the valley of the River Don between Sheffield and Penistone, on the edge of the Pennine moors. Now bypassed by the A616, Stocksbridge has been ‘cleaned up’; it no longer has the constant pall of smoke hanging over it, as it did when this photograph was taken.
An extract from from"Yorkshire Living Memories".
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 on
a narrow market because of the variety of
its products. Despite foreign competition,
the credit squeeze and the long disputes,
unemployment in the town was relatively
low at approximately 5,000 even in 1930.
By 1935 it had fallen to 3,653, the lowest for
eight years, and there was even a shortage
of textile workers. Some mills were working
overtime in response to improvements in
the export trade and firms looked to recruit
from ‘the distressed areas’. Engineering firms
like Brook Motors, the Prospect Ironworks
and David Brown & Sons were also making
extensions to their works. Nevertheless,
there was some shock when the old firm of
Vickerman’s, which traced its ancestry to the
18th century, closed down in 1938 and Taylor
Hill Mill was taken over by the Czech firm
Bruck & Englesmann. The loss of hundreds
of jobs with the closure of the massive
United Thread cotton works at Meltham
Mills and of the Slaithwaite Spinning Co
brought the depression uncomfortably close
to the town, but by now, with war looming,
military contracts were already helping to
revive the local economy.
(Brooke Collection)
The photograph shows fire engines attending a relatively
minor fire in part of Springdale Mill. Last occupied by
Harold Haigh, the building has now been demolished.
An extract from from"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.
An extract from from"Huddersfield - A History & Celebration".
THE FIRST PROPOSAL to buy the Ramsden
Estate had been put to the Council in 1894
when Cllr E A Beaumont met with Baron
Rothschild and secured an offer of financial
assistance if the purchase was agreed. The
idea was rejected as being ‘one hundred years
too soon’. Wilfrid Dawson, elected in 1917,
revived the plan. The Council did not yet have
the legal powers to purchase the estate, which
would require an Act of Parliament. However,
Sam Copley, a locally born millionaire and
former Berry Brow hairdresser, had made his
fortune in America and he offered to help.
He was happy to own his native town if the
Council proved unable to buy it from him.
Great secrecy surrounded the dealings. It
was vital that Sir John Frechville Ramsden,
the 6th Baronet, did not suspect that it was
the Council behind the purchase of the estate.
Considering the strained relations over the
years it was feared that he would totally reject
the sale, or try and squeeze as much money
out of them as possible - especially since
the Ramsdens were heavily burdened with
debt. It seems, however, that Colonel Beadon,
the Ramsden agent, was aware of what was
happening, which was more than could be
said for most of the councillors. Ramsden’s
asking price was £1,500,000. An offer was
made of £1,000,000 and bargaining continued
until Ramsden stuck at £1,333,000 and the
Council’s negotiators at £1,250,000. Then a
newspaper leaked the story of the Council’s
involvement and Cllr Dawson was rushed
(Trevor Kipling)
‘Huddersfield buys itself’ is re-enacted on a float during the Borough Centenary Pageant in 1968.
An extract from from"Huddersfield - A History & Celebration".
Denham, a stalwart of Highfields Chapel.
As early as 1869 he called a public meeting
to win support for the acquisition of the
Greenhead estate, including Gledholt Glen
(now known as T P Woods after former owner,
T P Crosland), to prevent the encroachment
of housing. Both the mayor, C H Jones, and
the town clerk opposed the purchase. The
Ramsden Estate was demanding too high a
price and would benefit from the new roads
by building houses on the parts they refused
to sell. Denham was so committed to this
project that he rented the land himself from
the Ramsden Estate and by 1872 had opened
it to the public in the summer for concerts,
fetes and other gatherings. It was eventually
purchased by the Borough for £30,000 and
officially opened on 27 September 1884.
An extract from from"Huddersfield - A History & Celebration".






