Wadsworth, West Yorkshire
Wadsworth maps
Historic maps of Wadsworth and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis. View all Wadsworth maps
Wadsworth photos
We have no photos of Wadsworth, although we do have photos of these nearby places: Hebden Bridge, Heptonstall, Mytholmroyd, Wainstalls, Cragg Vale, Sowerby, Mixenden, MankinholesWadsworth books
Displaying 3 of 23 books about Wadsworth and the local area. View all Wadsworth books
You can read extracts and browse photos from these books.
Memories of Wadsworth
Displaying a selection of personal
memories of Wadsworth
.
Add your memory of Wadsworth
or of a photo of Wadsworth.
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
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
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
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
My memory is a life time! I first came to Croft Farm, just above Lumbutts when I was 18 months old. My dear, dear Aunty Kath and Uncle Geoff lived there then. She was my mother's, sister's, sister-in law - so absolutely no blood relation to me! But both Aunty Kath and Uncle Geoff turned out to be better than my... [more]
Shared on 27 June 2008
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
Extracts From Wadsworth & West Yorkshire books
Displaying a selection of extracts from Frith books about Wadsworth, inspired by Frith photos.
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]
Read more and see photos from this book.
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.
Read more and see photos from this book.
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]
Read more and see photos from this book.
