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| A keystone on the Britannia Buildings |
Leaving Halifax on the No. 501 bus, I arrived at Huddersfield bus station at 4:25 pm and had just over 45 minutes before my hourly train to Sheffield departed, so I spent the time having a very quick walk around the Town Centre Conservation Area to photograph some of the listed buildings.
Having briefly visited Huddersfield a few times, I was aware that the vast majority of these have been built with the medium grained sandstone from the Rough Rock that is still quarried at Crosland Hill and a lasting memory is that the wealth generated by its textile industry is expressed in its very many fine examples of architectural sculpture.
The mid C19 Grade II listed Nos. 4 and 6 High Street first caught my eye, mainly for the elaborate stone carving, which Historic England (HE) describes as "Wealth of high quality ornamental carving, rarely repeating itself: eg 6 keystones with masks, sculpted spandrels to archway and 1st floor windows, Romanesque capitals to colonnettes, and bands of foliage around voussoirs of doors and archway, and under 1st floor sills".
The voussoirs of the arches are made of red sandstone which, in buildings of this age, I usually associate with Red Mansfield stone, a sandy variety of the Permian Cadeby Formation that is classified as a dolomitic sandstone.
I was interested to see that dark Shap granite from Shap Fell in Cumbria, with its distinctive rectangular phenocrysts, has been used for the colonnettes on the ground floor and for most of the windows on the upper storeys. The Guide to the Building Stones of Huddersfield booklet notes that a grey granite, probably the Rubislaw variety from Aberdeen, has also been used for colonnettes on the upper storeys but, quite strangely, HE describe all of the colonnettes as polished marble.
Continuing along High Street, the former Prudential Assurance Buildings (No. 71 New Street) was designed by Alfred Waterhouse and completed in 1898 and is built with red brick with red/brown terracotta dressings, which is a characteristic of other branches that I have seen in Leeds (1891), Nottingham (1890) and Sheffield (1896).
The plinth and the colonnettes to the doorway on New Street are made of pink Peterhead granite, which HE again describe as marble. The differences between sedimentary, igneous and metamorphic rocks are taught to schoolchildren aged 7 to 8 as part of Key Stage 3 Science in the National Curriculum and it is therefore quite shocking that the HE fieldworker did not know that granite and not marble has been used here and at Nos. 6 and 8 High Street.
Continuing down Ramsey Street, I next encountered the Grade II listed Huddersfield Town Hall, which is built in two phases: the municipal offices fronting Ramsey Street (1878) and the 3-storey concert hall (1881) forming the southern Princess Street end.
Its designer was the Huddersfield Borough Engineer, John Henry Abbey, who was assisted by Frederick Wild of Huddersfield and Mr. B. Stocks of Huddersfield was brought in as a consultant after the death of Abbey in 1880 – as reported on pp. 543-540 in the 22nd October 1881 issue of Building News – and it is designed with the Corinthian order of the Classical style.
Medium grained gritstone from Crosland Moor was selected for the building and the architectural sculptor was Thomas Stocks, from nearby Berry Brow. The Hudersfield Public Arts Trail states that Matthew Hale, Friedrich Handel, William Hogarth, Isaac Newton, William Shakespeare and James Watt are depicted on the keystones, but I just took a few quick snaps of a few that caught my eye on the Princess Street elevation.
I wanted to have another look at the sculptures by James Woodford in front of Huddersfield Library and Art Gallery (1937), but the area was closed off due to the creation of the new library hub. I continued along Cross Church Street to the Grade II* listed St. Peter's church (1836) by J.P. Pritchett of York, where I just took general photos of each elevation.
Opposite the church, the keystone a nd the surrround to the southern entrance of Kirkgate Buildings are more fine examples of architectural sculpture, with similar quality work also seen on the Kirkgate elevation, but HE have removed this building from the Heritage list.
Making my back towards the railway station along John William Street, I took very quick snaps of the Grade II* listed Britannia Buildings (c.1858) by the local architect William Cocking, which were originally built as a warehouse, showroom and offices.
It is designed in the Neoclassical architecture in the grand palazzo style, with the John William Street elevation especially being adorned with yet more examples of high quality sculptural work to the keystones and decorative detailing.
HE describe that this was built on the site originally reserved for the town hall and is one of Huddersfield’s mid-C19 purpose-built commercial premises built as part of the Ramsden Estate’s planned New Town development. It further adds that remodelling in the 1920s included shopfronts on the St. George’s Square elevation, with an eclectic mix of classical and Egyptian motifs.
At parapet level on the St. George’s Square elevation, the balustrade has large gadrooned urns and the central segmental section has the Royal Arms sculpted in high relief and is topped with a large sculpture of Britannia and a lion.
With just a few minutes before I had to catch my train back to Sheffield, after another great day out, the last building that I photographed was the Grade II* listed Lion Buildings (1853), another building by J.P. Pritchett, on the east side of St. George’s Square. I was particularly interested in the large lion, which I thought is made of Portland limestone but which is in fact a fibreglass replica that was installed in 1978 after the disintegration of the original lion by John Seeley.






















































