Skipton, High Street 1893
Photo ref: 33157
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Photo ref: 33157
Photo of Skipton, High Street 1893

More about this scene

Skipton was a centre for sheep and cattle rearing, as we can see from this busy market day scene. Situated at the edge of a wild tract of limestone country, the town was generally called Skipton-in-Craven. Its two main features are the castle, which withstood a three-year siege from December 1642 to December 1645, and the extensively restored Holy Trinity Church, which can be seen in the background. It was damaged during the siege of the castle in the Civil War. It contains some elaborate monuments to the Clifford Family, and was restored by Lady Anne Clifford before she died in 1675.

An extract from Yorkshire Photographic Memories.

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Yorkshire Photographic Memories

Yorkshire Photographic Memories

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A Selection of Memories from Skipton

For many years now, we've been inviting visitors to our website to add their own memories to share their experiences of life as it was, prompted by the photographs in our archive. Here are some from Skipton

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View of Springs Canal. Gravel Chutes from Old Bailey railway can be seen at the end of the canal.
The boat was an old mine sweeper that the owner or manager of the corn mill had navigated from Liverpool on the canal. The owners name was a Mr. Bramall. My pals and I used to play on the boat and row its dingy. The owners son was named Timothy and my pals name was Peter Massey. mmounteerm@aol.com
This was the entry onto the moor, the Moor Gate in the centre leads towards Long Wood. At the right hand side there is a gate, a stone stile by its side, just over the stile and a little way up the moor is Rankin's Well. Over the wall on left is a rocky beck, perfect for building dams. Often it was sunny and clear up here, whilst Skipton was shrouded by smog from all the houses and mill chimneys. Our playground.
My Grandparents lived at 26 Otley Street in Skipton from the 1940 ( or earlier ) and I had first visited them in 1945 after VE day, They were Thomas Henry Jackson, my Grandmother Charlotte Jackson and their batchelor son, my Uncle Gordon. My Father Norman Jackson and Mother Sadie Jackson were living in Belfast Northern Ireland since 1934 where I was born in 1938, and because my Paternal ...see more