Browse Items (39 total)

  • Date contains "1880s"

http://www.penninehorizons.org/Omeka_photos/HLS00293.jpg
This can be accurately dated as to the right of Stubbings School, left centre, can be seen work on the construction of Zion Baptist Chapel which opened in 1882. Below it are the buildings on both sides of Commercial Street which were demolished in…

http://www.penninehorizons.org/Omeka_photos/HLS05031.jpg
Nothing to do with a 'palace' but a derivation from Pallis House i.e. the house of the 'palliser,' the person responsible in the middle ages for maintaining the fence around Erringden Deer Park. The house is now demolished.

http://www.penninehorizons.org/Omeka_photos/ALC00399.jpg
c.1888. In the centre is Nutclough Mill before the extension to the left, and above 'old' Birchcliffe Chapel. Housing starting to be developed on the hillside; top right Cliffe Royd on Wadsworth Lane and right behind the north side of Blenheim…

http://www.penninehorizons.org/Omeka_photos/HLS00147.jpg
They moved into the newly built Fallingroyd House, Hebden Bridge, with their two sons in 1873.

Daniel and Hannah were both born in 1824. A descendant of these two people, Mrs Duly, sent the photograph to Diana Monahan. The family believed the…

http://www.penninehorizons.org/Omeka_photos/LYR00232.jpg
LYRS 2680 - 1880s. Station staff and maintenance ganger's at the station. The station half way between Hebden Bridge and Todmorden was opened by the Manchester & Leeds Railway in December 1840. The valley is so narrow that the track had to be built…

http://www.penninehorizons.org/Omeka_photos/MOT00129.jpg
A family group photographed outside the toll house on Cross Stone Road in 1887.

http://www.penninehorizons.org/Omeka_photos/MOT00142.jpg
The Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway Company had to build a double retaining wall alongside the canal side at Salford due to land subsidence but also to extend the goods yard.

http://www.penninehorizons.org/Omeka_photos/ALC00715.jpg
Foster Mill far left, Hangingroyd Mill in the centre and above that Nutclough Mill. Birchcliffe Road climbing up the undeveloped hillside with the first Birchcliffe Chapel and grave yard to its left.
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