Around Mirfield 1974 - 1993
This collection of photographs was taken between
1974 and 1993. Click any image for a larger picture.
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The picture on the right is the library forecourt looking out onto the main Huddersfield Road through the centre of Mirfield and the shops as they were in 1993.
Also pictured left and taken in the same year is Station Road looking from the station bridge, up over
Bull Bridge and the canal to the Black Bull Hotel. On the left of the picture
is the gatehouse for Bass Maltings and the wall cut down from the old Crowther's
malt kiln showing the walled up windows through which the smell of malting barley
was spread on the wind to all parts of Mirfield. All this has now gone and is
replaced by the Lidl supermarket and car park. On the right is the view down Station Road towards the station.
The Baptist Chapel, pictured on the left in early 1993, is no longer standing
having become unsafe necessitating demolition later in that same year.
The foundation stone for the first chapel on this site was laid in 1828 and the
chapel opened on 21st May 1830. The Sunday School, which has now become the
chapel, was added in 1855. By 1870 it had become apparent that the chapel was
too small for their needs so a new one was built and opened on 11th April 1873
which was Good Friday.
Wellhouse Moravian Church, pictured left, was built in 1891 to replace an earlier
Sunday School. It was purchased by the Evangelical church in 1986. Pictured right
is the present church viewed from Wellhouse Lane in 2001.
Central Garage is depicted with the fleet of new staff vehicles in 1978.
The photo on the left shows the garage and forecourt as it was then with the fleet of cars
ranged across the front of it. The picture on the right is taken from the garage forecourt
looking out onto the shopping centre.
C. J. Bloomers around 1993. This building started life
as the Town Hall. When I was very young it was the Town Hall Cinema and then The
Glen Cinema before it became the Glen Ballroom in the fifties in time to see the
birth of rock and roll. After this it became the Pentagon Nightclub and then a
whole series of nightclubs including the Top Hat and Panache. It has now returned
to respectability as the home of the Mirfield branch of the Salvation Army.
The Bridge Hotel at Lower Hopton was a favourite haunt for us in our teenage years.
In the front room at the right of the building was a Wurlitzer Juke Box with all
the rock and roll records and a marvellous system for selecting them that was
a joy to behold. It was all gleaming chrome and bright lights with an arm that
would pluck a record from a rotating stack of 45s and lay it on the turntable
for playing. The hotel was long ago converted into flats but the memories are
still there.
Britannia Mill, on the corner of Lowlands Road and Station Road,
was operated by the Coloured Cotton Spinning Company. In the 1950s they had several
immigrant girls on the workforce who had come here because there was no work for
them at home. The girls lived in a hostel at Hopton Grange, Upper Hopton until such time as they
found something more permanent for themselves. Most of the girls found husbands
here in due course and became part of the community. After the closure of the
spinning company the building was taken by Fletcher's Filtration who carried out
their business here for many years. The main part of the building has now been
demolished and is pictured right as demolition was under way.
On the left is the lock at Newgate, looking towards the Mirfield Boat Yard which is pictured on
the right. Both scenes are from 1993 but have changed very
little since then. The canopy leading to the dry dock has become just a skeleton
frame.
On the left is a view of the canal from Bull Bridge showing the covered passageway linking the two parts of the Bass Maltings site which has now passed into history. On the right is what looks like a family photo and indeed that's what it is; Debra and Janette
sitting on a bench on the Library forecourt around 1965. But just a minute; what's
that building in the background? That my friends was Mirfield Ex-Servicemen's Club
known colloquially as the Soldiers and Sailors. It was replaced by Dyson's Greengrocers
and has since been home to various other shops.
The main thing I remember about the club is the smell of stale beer that wafted
out and assailed your nostrils when you walked past. The sign proclaims Whitaker's
Ales and Stout and sports the slogan "Cock of the North" along with the brewery's
cockerel logo.
The picture on the right shows the last remains of our railway station
just before it was demolished and replaced by the hooped perspex contraption that
we have today. The canopy roof (shown left in 1961) that had spanned the building
and island platform on its supporting stone walls had long since been removed.
A navigable part of the river Calder looking upstream from Newgate. There has been talk about constructing
a new foot bridge over the river but at the moment it doesn't seem likely that it will come to anything.
The pillars of the old toll bridge are visible in the middle of the river. Pictured on the right is the section of the towpath that climbed up and led onto the bridge.
Pictured on the left is the house on Bull Bridge, Station Road while on the right is the Lock Cottage at Newgate Bridge.
This is the current hooped contraption that passes for a station.