Monday, 6 April 2026

An Exploration of Halifax - Part 5

 
A detail of the former Halifax Public Baths

Leaving Carlton Street to continue my exploration of Halifax, the next building on my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge was Nos. 2 and 4 West Parade – a pair of late C18/early C19 houses, for which the Historic England (HE) description is not particularly informative. 
 
Nos 2 and 4 West Parade
 
Taking note the area of land to the north of Kent Street that is now used as a car park, but which the 1894 Ordnance Survey (OS) map shows was once occupied by terraced houses - including back to backs – I continued along Arches Street (previously named Archer Street) past the former worsted mills until I reached King Cross Street.
 
Now demolished terraced housing shown on the 1894 OS map
 
The Halifax Playhouse was built in 1836 as the Methodist New Connexion Chapel, but was converted to a theatre by the Halifax Thespians in 1947. Thin courses of Elland Flags sandstone has been used for the walling, but the portico is made from massive blocks of uniformly buff coloured sandstone. 
 
The Halifax Playhouse
 
HE describe it as "Early/mid C19. Formerly a chapel. Stone building with 2 tiers of windows, upper ones round-arched. Pedimented main (south) elevation framed by pair of strip pilasters and with Greek Doric entrance portico (disused)". 
 
The gate piers at the Halifax Playhouse
 
I just took a few photos from a distance, including the gate piers that are included in the listing, and can't tell if the massive sandstone is from the Elland Flags or is a coarser grained gritstone from the Rough Rock, which I had only seen at Halifax Minster and the Piece Hall despite being quarried in several places around Halifax. 
 
Views of the former Halifax Public Baths

Continuing along the dual carriageway section of King Cross Street, my next building to photograph was the former Halifax Public Baths (1859), the conversion of which into use by the King's Church in 2001 earned a Halifax Civic Trust Award.
 
The Halifax Civic Society Award plaque

The baths were donated to the people of Halifax by the Crossley family – the owners of the largest manufacturer or carpets in the world at Dean Clough - and were built by the Borough Engineer George Wilson Stevenson, who also submitted a design for Halifax Town Hall, with HE stating that it was possibly designed by Sir Joseph Paxton and/or George Henry Stokes. 
 
The south-east entrance to the People's Park

Although I didn't look at the sandstone closely, its distinctly yellow colour suggests that this is another use of the massive variety of the Elland Flags, which also appears to have been used for the gate piers and walls at the south-east entrance to the People's Park – although the upper section of the left pier has been replaced with sandstone that has developed a greyish patina. 
 
The south elevation of the former Halifax Public Baths
 
Retuning to King Cross Road, after taking a photo of the former public baths from another angle, I crossed over the road and carried on until I reached the junction with Arden Road, where there is another example of the influence of the Crossley family. 
 
The west range of the Joseph Crossley Almshouses

The Joseph Crossley Almshouses (1863), according to HE,  were designed by Roger Ives as a large group of Gothic style buildings that are set around a garden court, which includes a central castellated tower with a stair turret and a large chapel. 
 
The north range
 
Being private property, I just took a couple of quick snaps from the entrance and didn't spent closely inspect the sandstone used for its rock-faced walling, which has developed a uniformly grey patina and is quite unlike the yellowish Elland Flags sandstone that I had seen in several  contemporary buildings in the town centre. 
 
The north gateway

After taking a couple of photos of the north gateway and the attached boundary wall for my Photo Challenge, I took a couple of photos of the late C18/early C19 West House, before crossing back over King Cross Road and entering the People's Park.
 
West House

Sunday, 5 April 2026

An Exploration of Halifax - Part 4

 
A detail of the former Halifax Police Station

Having left the town centre, where I had seen some very fine buildings that were built in the second half of the century - particularly Halifax Town Hall and others on Crossley Street - I continued my exploration of Halifax at Harrison Road, where several Grade II listed buildings formed part of my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge. 
 
Buildings on my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge
 
The first of these was Nos. 1 and 3 Harrison Road, a pair of very plain early/mid C19 houses that are listed for their group value only and which Historic England (HE) describe as being part of an interesting group of buildings on Harrison Road. 
 
Nos. 1 and 3 Harrison Road
 
Yellowish brown thinly coursed sandstone with well defined plane bedding, presumably from the Elland Flags, is used for the walling and window and door surrounds. The same sandstone is used as ashlar in Nos. 5 and 7, No. 2, Nos. 6 and 8 and Nos. 11 and 11A, which are similar in size and designed in the Classical style – with features that include porticos with Ionic or Corinthian columns, carved corbel brackets, pedimented windows and prominent cornices. 
 
Nos. 5 and 7, No. 2, Nos. 6 and 8 and Nos. 11 and 11a Harrison Road

Unfortunately, HE provides no historical information about any of these houses, which are now all used as offices. They were presumably built for the professionals and businessmen who were able to pay for houses of a better quality, which were located in a relatively green area set away from the textile mills and their surrounding terraced houses. 
 
The 1854 Ordnance Survey map showing the area around Harrison Road

On the north-west corner of Harrison Road and Carlton Street is the early C19 Harrison House Branch Library, which is built with thinly bedded sandstone Elland Flags sandstone for the walling, with four large slabs used for each of the giant simplified Doric pilasters. 
 
The former Harrison House Branch Library
 
The south-west corner of this junction is occupied by the early Renaissance Revival style former Halifax Police Station and Court House (1889), which was not on my list of buildings to photograph but I think is another example of the Elland Flags - although I didn't examine the stone closely. 
 
The former Halifax Police Station and Crown Court
 
The Carlton United Reformed Church (1837), with its very simple classical design and an ornate pediment inscribed with Harrison Road Chapel and the date, is described by HE as being built in stone "brick" with ashlar dressings. 
 
The Carlton United Reformed Church
 
The gate piers and railings are separately Grade II listed and I thought that massive blocks of coarse grained Rough Rock would probably have been used for these, but when enlarging my photograph I think this is a further use of massive finer grained Elland Flags sandstone. 
 
The gateposts to the Carlton United Reformed Church

Next to the chapel, on Carlton Terrace, is the former Harrison Road Schools (1872), which has its name and date in raised lettering on a plaque that is attached to the gable end. It is listed for group value and the HE description states that "its classical style compliments that of the adjacent church and it compares favourably with other, listed Sunday schools". 
 
The former Harrison Road Schools
 
Returning to Harrison Road, the pair of houses comprising Nos. 13 and 15 were the next on my list to photograph. Although one of these was scaffolded at the time, the Classical door surrounds with pilasters and the sandstone ashlar, which varies in course height between the ground and upper floors, were clearly visble. 
Nos. 13 and 15 Harrison Road
 
Continuing west along Carlton Street, Nos 4 and 6 are another pair of 3-storey houses designed in a Classical style that provide further examples of porticos with Corinthian capitals to the columns and an entablature above. 
 
Nos. 4 and 6 Carlton Street
 
A little further along Carlton Street is Basement House (No. 10), another early to mid C19 building that HE describes as "Early/mid C19. Distinguished Greek revival facade. Stone now painted. 3 bays with order of Doric pilasters. Pedimented blocking each side and raised centre with wreath flanked by consoles. Subsidiary order of pilasters to glazing, now altered but retaining tripartite central entrance with light over".
 
No. 10 Carlton Street

Its architecture style and its finish, which is render and not painted stone, stands out against the surrounding stone buildings, which continue as modest terraced houses along Carlton Street – including the pair of houses comprising Nos. 12 and 14 and the adjoining No. 16, which are part of the same listing and were built 1830-1840. 
 
Nos. 12 to 16 Carlton Street
 

Friday, 3 April 2026

An Exploration of Halifax - Part 3

 
A detail of the National Westminster Bank on Crown Street

After having a good look at Halifax Town Hall and photographing several listed buildings on Crossley Street, I returned to Crown Street to continue my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge, but first stopped to photograph a couple of buildings that caught my eye – the first being No. 2 Silver Street, a mid/later C19 building that Historic England (HE) describe as being in the C13 Gothic style. 
 
No. 2 Silver Street
 
On the opposite rounded corner of Crown Street and Waterhouse Street, is the earlier C20 National Westminster Bank building, which is built in a Classical style with a rusticated ground floor, a door surround with floriated decoration and a dome rising above. 
 
The National Westminster Bank building
 
Like the Art Deco Virgin Money bank and the former Burton Buildings, the use of Portland stone makes it very conspicuous in a town where coarse grained gritstone from the Rough Rock and finer grained sandstone from the Elland Flags were quarried in many places around Halifax and were readily available. 
 
Nos. 45 and 47 Crown Street
 
Further along Crown Street, Nos. 45 and 47 form another pair of mid/later C19 Gothic buildings with modern shop fronts, which are Grade II listed for their group value. As with No. 2 Silver Street, it looks like it has been built with sandstone from the Elland Flags, but I just took a few record photos for my Photo Challenge and continued to Cow Green. 

The upper storeys of Nos. 45 and 47 Crown Street

To the west of this section of the main A629 road, which here is a dual carriageway, many of the buildings marked on the 1907 Ordnance Survey (OS) map have been demolished and replaced by mixed use C20 buildings and, compared to the centre of Halifax with its fine later Victorian buildings, the area appears to be quite run down. 
 
A side by side view of the 1907 OS map and Google Map view
 
Continuing south along Cow Green, I stopped briefly to photograph the corbel brackets in the form of bull's heads and hoofs that support the 3-bay oriel window on the splay of No. 5 Cow Green - an Art Deco building built at some time between the publication of the 1930 OS map and its revision in 1938, which was eventually published in 1947 after WWII. 
 
The corbel brackets supporting the oriel window at No.5 Bull Green
 
Zooming into a photograph of one of the scrolled brackets, there is a coat of arms with three castles, the word probity and a date of 1738. A Google search would suggest that this relates to the Halifax Freemasons' Lodge of Probity, which was founded in 1738 and perhaps that No. 5 was occupied at one time by the lodge.
 
A corbel bracket on No. 5 Cow Green
 
On the north side of Cow Green is Bull Green, which was once the site of the cattle market and I assume that the carved corbel brackets described above relate to this. Construction works were being undertaken at the time of my visit and I just took a photo from a distance of another Art Deco building, Bull Green House (1932), before continuing to Harrison Road.
 
Bull Green House
 

Tuesday, 31 March 2026

Crossley Street in Halifax


The former Halifax Permanent Benefit Building Society

In the Yorkshire West Riding volume of The Buildings of England, Pevsner refers in his 'perambulation' around inner Halifax to the streets around Halifax Town Hall (1859-62), which Historic England (HE) also describe as possessing an important group of buildings. 
 
An extract from Pevsner's 'perambulation' around Inner Halifax
 
Before the design of the town hall had been finalised, John Crossley had already been developing this part of Halifax town centre and laying out new streets, with the Bradford based architects Lockwood and Mawson designing several large buildings in a Neoclassical style. 
 
The 1854 OS map of Halifax before the creation of Crossley Street
 
Looking at the 1854 and 1894 Ordnance Survey (OS) maps, the extent of this redevelopment is quite obvious, but HE only describe the listed buildings built during this phase of development as being mid to later C19, except for the White Swan Hotel (1858) on Princess Street, with Pevsner mentioning that Marlborough House on Crossley Street was opened in 1857. 
 
The 1854 OS map of Halifax after the creation of Crossley Street
 
Although not part of my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge, the first building that I looked at was No. 4 Crossley Street, which HE describes as being in a Classical style and highlights its Corinthian capitals to the pilasters and the bracketted main cornice. 
 
No. 4 Crossley Street

The first of the buildings on my list to photograph was the Offices of the Borough Engineer on Town Hall Street East, where again the bracketted cornice is highlighted by HE, but I actually misidentified this building and had to crop another photograph to submit for the Photo Challenge. 
 
The Offices of the Borough Engineer
 
I didn’t examine the sandstone used for any of the buildings on Crossley Street, but they all have a uniform slightly yellowish colour and look like the sandstone used for Halifax Town Hall, which is built with sandstone from the Elland Flags at the Ringby quarries. 
 
No. 17 Northgate
 
On the corner of Crossley Street and Market Street, the building listed as No. 17 Northgate is another building described by HE as designed in the Classical style, again with its description highlighting the cornice and its semi-circular window arches with enriched tympana. 
 
Nos. 8 to 12 Crossley Street and Nos. 1 to 3 Wesley Court
 
Making my way back along Crossley Street, Nos. 8 to 12 and Nos. 1 and 3 Wesley Court have frontages that are very different, with the latter being quite plain. HE say very little about the building and I was very interested to see the coat of arms above the doorway, which seems to combine the Royal coat of arms with the motto Deus Nobis Haec Otia Fecit and liver birds, which are both associated with Liverpool. 
 
A detail of No. 8 Crossley Street
 
On the opposite of the road is the Grade II* listed Marlborough Hall, which was built in a Classical style as the Mechanic’s Institute. This building was not on my list, but I took a single photograph of its first floor, which has ornate tympana, keystones and floriated capitals above the windows and engaged Corinthian columns. 
 
A view of the first floor of the Marlborough Hall 
 
At the end of Crossley Street, I stopped to take a photo of the Art Deco style former Yorkshire Penny Bank (1934), which replaced the original bank that occupied the adjacent site but was demolished in the same year. I then walked back to the corner of Princess Street, where the Halifax Permanent Benefit Building Society was relocated to in 1861.

The former Yorkshire Penny Bank on Waterhouse Street