Tuesday, 2 June 2026

Station Road in Batley - Part 1

 
The arch above the doorway to No. 40 Station Road

My introduction to Batley, with the wonderful architectural sculpture at No. 51 Station Road, was completely unexpected and, as with the very many textile warehouses that I had seen on Bond Street and Wellington Road in Dewsbury, the blue plaque attached to this states that it was designed to impress visitors arriving on the train.
 
The blue plaque on No. 51 Station Road

Attached to No. 51 are the remains of another warehouse and office (c.1870), which Historic England (HE) describe as being in the Italian Gothic style and was recently used as the Xclusive nightclub, but which seemed to be unoccupied at the time of my visit.
 
The former Xclusive nightclub (L)
 
I only took a photo of the rock faced walling at basement level, which looks to be another example of the fine grained Thornhill Rock that has differentially weathered to reveal both plane and cross-bedding. The same sandstone has been used for the ashlar masonry above, but I was more interested in the red sandstone that is used for the alternate voussoirs in the blind arches.
 
Rock faced walling at the former Xclusive nightclub
 
I could not get near enough to have a close look at this red stone, but I normally associate this with Red Mansfield stone, a dolomitic sandstone that is a variety of the Upper Permian Cadeby Formation and is thought to have been formed as a sandbank at the mouth of a river.
 
No. 40 Station Road

On the opposite side of the road, this red sandstone is also seen in the voussoirs of Nos. 32 to 40 Station Road (c.1870) - another set of warehouses that are designed in the same Italian Gothic architectural style as the Xclusive nightclub – but following a fire only Nos. 32 and 40 remain.
 
No. 32 Station Road
 
HE make no mention of the architects that designed any of these buildings, and Kirklees Council have no records, but it is very possible that they were the work of Michael Sheard and Walter Hanstock, whose practice was responsible for several mills and commercial premises in Batley. Vivien Tomlinson's Family History does make a reference to a warehouse for Abraham Brooke (c.1873), although the specific building is not mentioned.
 
A carving of a squirrel on No. 32 Station Road

Unlike the Xclusive nightclub, the ground floor window arches are decorated by finely carved floral details and animals, with the pilasters on No. 32 being decorated with a squirrel and flowers, which still retain their very sharp details.
 
Intricately carved flowers on No. 32 Station Road
 
Continuing down Station Road, Nos. 24 and 26 (c.1870) are again described by HE as warehouses in the Italian Gothic style, with the design of the first floor windows being identical to the buildings mentioned above.
 
Nos. 24 and 26 Station Road

The architectural details of the ground floor and second floor, however, are more typical of the Neoclassical style, with square headed windows and string courses, central engaged columns to the second floor windows and richly foliate capitals to the ground floor pilasters.
 
A capital on Nos. 24 and 26 Station Road
 

Sunday, 31 May 2026

No. 51 Station Road in Batley

 
A keystone

Arriving at Batley railway station on the train from Leeds at 10:37 am, having left Treeton just over two hours earlier, I set off across a large forecourt that is paved with large rectangular sandstone road setts and immediately sensed that I was surrounded by a former industrial area, which is now part of the Station Road Conservation Area. 
 
The station forecourt

When later looking at old Ordnance Survey (OS) maps, several mills and a gas works had been built in the vicinity of the station by the end of the C19, with extensive railway sidings, which coincided with the rapid growth of Batley and other nearby towns in the Heavy Woollen District during the second half of the C19 – based on the production of shoddy and mungo. 
 
The OS map showing the area around Batley railway station
 
Although not part of my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge, the first building that I noticed was the elaborately decorated No. 51 Station Road (c.1880), which the Historic England (HE) description records as "formerly office and warehouse premises". 
 
A view of No. 51 Station Road from the forecourt of the railway station
 
Getting closer to the 7-bay rounded faรงade, I was very interested to see that the keystones to the ground floor windows are exquisitely carved with a monkey and birds, which HE state as including an owl, eagle and a macaw. 

Carved keystones

HE describes the corner with Warehouse Street as having a turret on the 1st and 2nd floors, but could which also be considered to be an oriel window. The soffit of this is carved in relief with various animals and floral details, beneath which is a round headed window with an enlarged keystone carved in the form of a bat. 
 
The keystone with a bat and the soffit to the oriel window
 
Moving round to the entrance and porch, HE further highlights the elaborately carved capitals that are composed with foliage and sheep heads, which are a motif that I have frequently seen in the textile producing towns - especially in Dewsbury, where I also came across very many fine examples of figurative sculpture on the keystones. 
 
The porch
 
The capitals are set on columns of pink Peterhead granite, which was quarried on the Aberdeenshire coast and, together with Rubislaw granite, is very often seen in later Victorian banks and other public buildings all over the UK. 
 
A detail of a column and capital
 
Looking up at the gable, there are more examples of fine architectural sculpture, with the cornice decorated with stylised floral motifs and above this is a shield flanked by sitting figures and it is surmounted by a squatting dog. 
 
The gable
 
I didn’t look closely at the sandstone, but from my photos it is quite uniformly light brown in colour and appears to be fine grained, with both plane bedding and cross-bedding. Looking at the geological map, much of the area is underlain by the Thornhill Rock and the Building Stones Database for England map explorer shows that this was quarried at several places less than 3 km to the north-east.
 
Quarries on the Thornhill Rock
 

Friday, 22 May 2026

Planning a Day Out to Batley & Birstall

 
A sign at Batley railway station
 
Following on from my brief visit to the village of Wortley, principally to see Wortley Hall and St. Leonard’s church, my next day out on the buses and trains was to explore Batley and Birstall in West Yorkshire - on the second Saturday of the Heritage Open Days (HOD) festival.
 
The locations of Treeton and Birstall
 
In previous years, I had made a considerable effort to travel far to visit one of the mediaeval churches that opened its doors - Barwick-in-Elmet, Scarcliffe, Methley, Ault Hucknall, Whitkirk and Kirkthorpe - but it was becoming increasingly difficult to justify my travel time to remote villages, where the buses often only run every 2 hours.
 
A British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge for Batley and Birstall
 
On this occasion, I was aware that Batley Library and the Grade II* listed St. Peter’s church was open for HOD and that a British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge would give me a good reason to further explore the textile producing towns of West Yorkshire – as I had done earlier in the year at Morley, Halifax and Huddersfield.
 
An extract from the No. 201 bus timetable
 
As I was becoming increasingly aware of, a day out on the buses and trains from Treeton – which has been described as a “downtrodden backwater” and “the forgotten village” and the bus services have been cut to the bone – had started to take a lot of organising. Although I had caught a train to Leeds and then a bus to my final destination several times before, the No. 201 bus takes an hour to get to Batley and I therefore decided to catch another train at Leeds railway station.
 
Having established the quickest way to get to Batley, albeit not covered by my travel pass, the next step was to plan a route from Batley and Birstall, where several properties had appeared in the postcode search for my Photo Challenge, but were located some distance from St. Peter’s church.
 
The topography around Batley and Birstall
 
Although only a short distance between Birtley and Birstall as the crow flies, looking at the topographic map, these listed buildings are spread across a valley formed by a tributary of the River Calder and a walk up to the Bagshaw Museum required a walk up an escarpment formed by the Emley Rock – at an elevation 65 m higher than the entrance to Wilton Park on Bradford Road.
 
An extract from the No. 283 bus timetable
 
Whilst in the area, I also planned to visit Batley Cemetery to continue a personal project to photograph some of the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) headstones, which had regimental crests that I had not seen before, so I thought it best to catch the No. 283 bus from Batley to Birstall - to reduce the stress on my ageing knees on what would be a long day out.
 
 
As with many trips to cemeteries to find these CWGC headstones, I started by downloading an Excel spreadsheet from their website before editing into a format that I could include in my worksheet for the day. Very often, those headstones on the CWGC website are actually non standard memorials and, to eliminate these, I used the War Graves Photographic Project website and finally found a plot plan to help me find those on my list.
 
The plot plan for Batley Cemetery
 

Thursday, 21 May 2026

St. Leonard’s Church in Wortley

 
St. Leonard's church

When investigating the mediaeval churches in South Yorkshire and the surrounding counties, one of the things that particularly interests me about them is that the various phases of building show variations in the style of masonry. 
 
Yellowish sandstone inside the porch
 
With most of the Victorian and occasional Georgian churches that I have visited, there is usually very little variation in the masonry and I found this to be the case with St. Leonard’s church. When entering from the churchyard, it was only when seeing the yellowish sandstone inside the porch – probably a further use of Grenoside Sandstone in Wortley – that I took notice of the stonework. 
 
A view east along the nave to the chancel
 
Entering the south door, the first thing that I noticed was that the interior was completely plastered and no stonework was visible; however, there are numerous wall monuments dedicated to the Stuart-Montagu-Wortley-Mckenzie family of Wortley Hall. 
 
A monument to members of the Stuart-Wortley family

On the north wall, the first of these is a large pale coloured alabaster monument, with serpentinite columns, which commemorates James Archibald Stuart-Wortley-Mackenzie (d.1845), his son John Stuart-Wortley-Mackenzie (d.1855) and his grandson James Frederick Stuart-Wortley (d.1870), with the monument being erected by the latter’s brothers and sisters. 
 
A simple Carrara marble plaque

Beneath this monument, there are two very plain veined Carrara marble plaques, the first of which is dedicated to Archibald Ralph Montagu Stuart Wortley Mackenzie (d.1953), 3rd Earl of Wharncliffe, and his wife Maud (d.1979). The second is dedicated to Alan James Montagu Stuart Wortley Mackenzie (d.1987), 4th Earl of Wharncliffe, and his wife Aline (d.2001). 
 
A simple Carrara marble plaque
 
Above the arch that leads to the north aisle of the chancel, there are two simple plaques that commemorate Edward Law (d.1860), who worked for 23 years as the head gardener at Wortley Hall, and Clement Laughton (d.1911), who was the agent for the Earls of Wharncliffe for 37 years – which are made of white and grey marble respectively, but I could not see them clearly. 
 
Memorials to Edward Law and Clement Laughton
 
Entering the chancel, I had a quick look at the wall monuments on either side of the priest’s door on the south wall of its south aisle, before photographing the ornate monument to Mary Wortley (d.1794) by Charles Regnart – a sculptor whose work I hadn’t encountered before. 
 
The monument to Mary Wortley
 
Veined Carrara marble has been used for the inscribed panel, with back panels of what looks like black Carboniferous Limestone that has lost its polish. These polished limestones were widely produced in Co. Kilkenny and Co. Galway, in the Republic of Ireland, and also Belgium. 

The monument to Edward Wortley

The monument to Edward Wortley (d.1761) looks like it might be made with Portoro marble from La Spezia in the Liguria region of Italy and another marble for the inscribed panel – which is probably Carrara marble - but my photo of this is quite dark and not very sharp and I would therefore need to have another much closer look. 
 
The monument to Joanna Margaret Montagu-Stuart-Wortley
 
Set against the east wall of the chapel is another white marble sculpture of Margaret Stuart Wortley Mackenzie (d.1808), who is depicted in a sitting position and reading a book. This monument was made by the renowned sculptor John Flaxman and Histtoric England refer to it being set in an older trefoil-headed niche with colonnettes. 
 
George Francis Dudley-Montagu-Stuart-Wortley
 
Next to this is a brown veined alabaster monument to George Francis Dudley-Montagu-Stuart-Wortley (d.1894), the eldest child of Francis John (later the 2nd Earl of Wharncliffe) and Ellen Montagu-Stuart-Wortley, who are commemorated by a simple plaque below – which is made with a Carrara marble inscribed panel and is framed in what could be another Italian marble from the Apuan AlpsBardiglio Capella. 
 
The monument to Francis John 2nd Earl of Wharncliife and his wife Ellen

Another simple plaque in the south chapel is the monument to Joanna Margaret Montagu-Stuart-Wortley (d.1981), which has an inscribed Carrara marble panel set on a grey slab that may be another variety of Bardiglio marble. 
 
The monument to Joanna Margaret Montagu-Stuart-Wortley
 
The history and relationships of the various members of interconnected families needs a very experienced genealogist to unravel, but I was interested to see the connection to the Montagu family from Beaulieu, where I had my wedding reception many years ago. 
 
Francis Dudley Montagu-Stuart-Wortley
 
I finished my quick look at the wall monuments by photographing that of Francis Dudley-Montagu-Stuart-Wortley (d.1893), the second son of John the 2nd Lord of Wharncliffe, and his wife Maria Elizabeth (d.1891), which is made of dark brown veined alabaster from Tutbury in Staffordshire and was erected by their children in 1894. 
 
The clock mechanism
 
After talking to various people at this Heritage Open Days event, I was asked if I would like to go up the tower to see the clock mechanism and its eight bells (1893), which the National Churches Trust describes as being said by some to be the sweetest peals in South Yorkshire. 
 
The bell frame

I have been up into the belfry of several mediaeval churches during my travels, which are normally accessed up a spiral staircase, but at St. Leonard’s church this is obtained by climbing up a very long and sturdy ladder that has its side rails cut from a trunk as single pieces.

The ladder to the bell tower

Tuesday, 19 May 2026

St. Leonard's Churchyard in Wortley

The west lychgate

After my very brief exploration of Wortley Hall and some of its estate buildings, as part of my British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge, I made my way back to Halifax Road and entered St. Leonard’s churchyard by the lychgate opposite Park Avenue – one of two providing an entrance to the churchyard - which was built as a war memorial in 1921. 
 
The war memorial lychgate
 
Soon after arriving in Wortley and having a look at the buildings on Halifax Road, I took a couple of photos of the east end and the south elevation of St. Leonard’s church from the pavement, but I didn’t notice any features of particular interest. 
 
The north elevation of St. Leonard's church
 
Once inside the churchyard, I just took another photo of the north elevation and then went to find the Grade II listed cross base, with a sundial pedestal (1679). The sundial disc no longer remains and, after taking a couple of quick snaps for my Photo Challenge, continued down to the churchyard extension. 
 
The cross base and sundial pedestal

Here, I went to find the three Commonwealth War Graves Commission headstones for Private C.K. Francis of the Queen’s Royal Regiment, Leading Aircraftwoman Beatrice Turner of the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force and Driver Ethelbert Clarke of the Royal Field Artillery – all of which are replacement headstones made of Botticino marble. 
 
Commonwealth War Graves Commission headstones

The only regimental crest that I had not seen before was that of the Queen’s Royal Regiment (West Surrey), with the details of the lamb and flag and the Latin motto – Pristinae Virtutis Memor (In memory of the ancient virtue) – having very sharp profiles. 
 
The Queen’s Royal Regiment (West Surrey) regimental crest

I didn’t spend much time looking at the rest of the headstones and memorials in the churchyard extension, which are mainly a mixture of Victorian headstones, made of fine grained sandstone that is probably the Greenmoor Rock, and C20 granite memorials, but the decoration of one memorial did catch my eye. 
 
A granite headstone

It is made from what I think is Peterhead granite from Aberdeenshire, into which have been cut a cross with Celtic knotwork, geometrical motifs, scrolls and what look to me like acanthus leaves. The designs are quite unusual, but I didn’t see the inscription or the date on the headstone, which may otherwise have provided information about the style of the design.
 
A detail of the granite headstone

Walking back up the hill towards the old churchyard, I stopped in one place to take a few more panoramic photos of the landscape to the north-west of Wortley, before taking advantage of the opening of the church for the Heritage Open Days festival. 
 
A panoramic view from St. Leonard's churchyard