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| A field of sunflowers |
On my day out to Halifax and Huddersfield, I left Treeton at 8:30 am and arrived back home at 7:30 pm, with 6 ¾ hours of this time being spent in transit on 4 bus journeys and 2 train journeys. Although I would have liked to have spent more time in Halifax, I nonetheless had a very productive day and it took me nearly 6 weeks to write the 15 Language of Stone Blog posts that record my adventure.
A few days later, on the last day of August 2024, my next walk was undertaken much closer to home, around Thorpe Hesley, to undertake another British Listed Buildings Photo Challenge, before continuing to Chapeltown where I hoped to find exposures of the strata above the Thorncliffe Coal – as part of my continuing investigation of the Pennine Lower Coal Measures Formation (PLCMF) in South Yorkshire.
Alighting from the No. 135 bus at the Upper Wortley Road/Kirkstead Abbey Mews stop on the A629 road, the first building on my list was the Grade II listed Monks Smithy House, which Historic England (HE) dates as probably C16/C17 but with reused mediaeval masonry and round headed windows that may possibly be Norman, but which Heritage Gateway suggests are C16/C17.
The house and associated farm buildings were previously known as Kirkstead Abbey Grange, which supposedly is a link to the Cistercian monks from Kirkstead Abbey in Lincolnshire, who were provided with a charter of 1161-1166 that allowed them to mine the ironstone and build forges.
I just took a few general photographs that show the sandstone fabric and the stone slate roofs, but didn’t have the opportunity to examine the stonework and continued with my walk. Being unable to get through the brambles that were blocking the public footpath to Grange Lane Farmhouse, I returned to Scholes Lane, where Nos. 41 and 43 (previously named Nether Fold) were the next buildings on my list to photograph.
HE describe it has having have a late C15/early C16 timber framed core, with tree-ring analysis of timber from No. 43 dating it as c.1495, but later alterations were carried out and further additions are dated to the C19. The underlying bedrock is an unnamed PLCMF sandstone and the 1854 Ordnance Survey (OS) map shows quarries nearby, but I didn’t look closely at the walling stone.
Continuing along the footpath, I passed a grassed over pile of waste rock that first appears on the 1892 OS map and which the 1935 edition marks with an air shaft. Several air shafts are marked in the vicinity and the whole area was widely exploited for both coal and iron ore, with the sites of Scholes Colliery and Scholes Old Colliery being both less than 250 metres away.
My plan was to keep going along the footpath until I came across one of the two paths at right angles, which would take me to my next building to photograph in Scholes and then find another path that would take me to the bridge and cascade at Morley Pond in Wentworth Park.
The footpath that I was following was not clearly defined and, after looking back at the waste tip to get my bearings and carrying on past a field of sunflowers, I did not see any signpost for the footpath marked as Little Lane and inadvertently continued along a minor path that diverges from the public footpath that I should have taken.
After crossing over another public footpath that would have taken me to Scholes, but which again I didn’t identify, the views of Hoober Stand and the spire of the new Holy Trinity church in Wentworth suggested that I was heading in the right general direction, but I soon discovered that I had arrived at Wentworth Road in Thorpe Hesley and not Scholes Lane.



















































