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Hunslet

Coordinates: 53°46′40″N 1°31′50″W / 53.7779°N 1.5305°W / 53.7779; -1.5305
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Hunslet
Former Printworks, now part of Leeds City College
Hunslet is located in Leeds
Hunslet
Hunslet
Hunslet is located in West Yorkshire
Hunslet
Hunslet
Location within West Yorkshire
Population33,705 (City and Hunslet Ward. 2011)
OS grid referenceSE311314
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLEEDS
Postcode districtLS10
Dialling code0113
PoliceWest Yorkshire
FireWest Yorkshire
AmbulanceYorkshire
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Yorkshire
53°46′40″N 1°31′50″W / 53.7779°N 1.5305°W / 53.7779; -1.5305

Hunslet (English: /ˈhʌnzlət/) is an inner-city suburb in south Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It is 1 mile (1.6 km) southeast of the city centre and has an industrial past.

It is situated in the Hunslet and Riverside ward of Leeds City Council and Leeds South parliamentary constituency. The population of the previous City and Hunslet council ward at the 2011 census was 33,705.[1]

Many engineering companies were based in Hunslet, including John Fowler & Co. manufacturers of traction engines and steam rollers, the Hunslet Engine Company builders of locomotives (including those used during the construction of the Channel Tunnel), Kitson & Co., Manning Wardle and Hudswell Clarke. Many railway locomotives were built in the Jack Lane area of Hunslet.

The area has a mixture of modern and 19th century industrial buildings, terraced housing and 20th century housing. It is an area that has grown up significantly around the River Aire in the early years of the 21st century, especially with the construction of modern riverside flats. It was at one point the main production site for Leeds Creamware, a type of pottery (still produced) so called because of its cream glazing. Hunslet is now prospering as it follows the trend of Leeds generally and the expansion of office and industrial sites south of Leeds city centre.

Etymology

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Hunslet is first mentioned as Hunslet (sic, for *Hunsflet) in the Domesday Book of 1086, though twelfth-century spellings of the name such as Hunesflete seem to be more conservative: the name appears originally to have meant 'Hūn's creek', from an Anglo-Saxon personal name Hūn[2] (or Hūna[3]) and the Old English word flēot 'creek, inlet', probably referring to an inlet from the River Aire[2] (> -fleet : Adlingfleet, Adelingesfluet 1086 ; Marfleet, Merefluet 1086 ; Ousefleet, Useflete 1100–1108). There are also the Old Norse personal names Húnn (Old Danish Hun)[4] and Húni,[5] cognates of Hūn(a). The district of Hunslet Carr, whose name is first attested in the period 1175–89 as Kerra, includes the northern English dialect word carr, meaning 'bog' (borrowed into English from Old Norse kjarr, which had the same meaning, but more commonly "copsewood", "brushwood", "thicket"). Meanwhile, Hunslet moor is first mentioned in 1588.[6]

Notice : Hunslet is possibly related etymologically to the place-name Honfleur in Normandy, which is probably of Anglo-Scandinavian origin and mentioned as Huneflet in 1025, Hunefleth in 1082 - 87.[7]

History

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The Hunslet Feast in 1850
The former Tetley's Brewery in the Crown Point area of Hunslet, Leeds

At the time of the Domesday survey in 1086, the manor of Hunslet belonged to the Lacys, from whom it passed to various families including the Gascoignes and the Neviles.[8] Hunslet was the birthplace of Thomas Gascoigne, born in 1404 and later chancellor of Oxford University.

The brewers Joshua Tetley and Son set up business in Hunslet in 1822 producing beer and bitter today as part of Carlsberg Tetley group. However, in 2011 the brewery closed.[9]

In 1823 forty working men from Hunslet raised the sum of £1 5s 1d which they sent to the radical publisher Richard Carlile who was serving a prison sentence in Dorchester gaol for the publications in which he exposed the reactionary policies of the government of Lord Liverpool. The subscription was accompanied by a noble letter written by one of the contributors, William Tillotson.[10]

The population of Hunslet grew rapidly in the first half of the 19th century becoming an important manufacturing centre. Several large mills were built for spinning of flax including Hunslet Mill, and there were chemical works, works for the manufacture of crown and flint glass, extensive potteries for coarse earthenware and the Leeds Pottery. Hunslet Mill, created between 1832 and 1842, is a Grade II listed building.[11]

The gasholders at the Meadow Lane Gas Works

From 1898 to 1935 it was the home of the 25 acres (10 ha) Leeds Steel Works, with four blast furnaces, which was the site of a major industrial accident in 1913, when a boiler explosion killed nine men.[12] Thirteen years earlier, four men had died in a very similar explosion.[13] By 1906 Hunslet was home to Leeds’ second-largest gas works, the city's main rail goods yards, known at the time as Midland Goods Station (now the site of Crown Point Retail Park), as well as a large number of factories.

Hunslet was home to the first free public library in Leeds when a branch library opened on evenings from October 1870 in a room at the Hunslet Mechanics Institute. It became a day branch in 1912. On 23 February 1931, the new building was opened by Arthur Greenwood MP and Minister for Health.[14] The fixtures and fittings in the interior of the library, with an adult and junior reading room, were designed by Thomas Horsman and Co Ltd, costing £1,049 17s 6d.[15] The building is now Hunslet Library and Community Hub.[16]

Crown Point once had a large railway depot which contained Leeds' main goods station. After many decades lying derelict the area was redeveloped into the Crown Point Retail Park, though the main railway cutting into the terminus station can still be seen at the southern end. The former track beds are currently let for storage and contain timber and brickwork. Tetley's Brewery was to the north of this area, as was the Yorkshire Chemical Works: both have now been demolished. Next to the river is Clarence Dock.

Pottery Fields is the industrial area around Kidacre Street, Leathley Road, Ivory Street, Meadow Lane and Cross Myrtle Street where Leeds City Council's Pottery Fields Depot and the former Meadow Lane Gas Works are situated. Pottery Fields House, has the administrative and engineering functions for Northern Gas Networks. Other businesses include Merlin Gerin medium voltage electrical supplies, a scrap yard and Volkswagen auto breakers, and a motorcycle training centre. There are several disused railways crossing the roads, which brought coal from Middleton Colliery to the Meadow Lane Gas Works for the production of town gas, before conversion to North Sea natural gas.

Penny Hill surrounds Church Street. This is the old centre of Hunslet referred to as Hunslet Grange when the Leek Street Flats (1968 to 1983) were built. The Leek Street Flats developed problems with crime and condensation and were demolished fifteen years after their construction.

The area was redeveloped in the 1960s, the main feature of this being the Hunslet Grange (Leek Street flats). In the 1980s it was again redeveloped, and in the 2000s, the area around the River Aire and Clarence Dock was redeveloped.

Photograph of Hunslet Community Hub and Library – a single storey building from the 1930s with distinctive red brick and white window surrounds.
Hunslet Community Hub and Library
Photograph of construction equipment at the site of Hunslet Mills, Leeds
Hunslet Mills in the process of being renovated 2021

Aire Park, a 4.9 acres (2 ha) new public open space and redevelopment, is now being planned for the site surrounding The Tetley art gallery as part of the regeneration of the South Bank of Leeds.[17]

Governance

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Hunslet was formerly a township in the parish of Leeds,[18] in 1866 Hunslet became a separate civil parish, on 1 April 1925 the parish was abolished and merged with Leeds.[19] In 1921 the parish had a population of 71,626.[20]

Geography

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Hunslet, in the lower Aire Valley, is bounded on the east by the River Aire and covers nearly 1,200 acres of flat land. The underlying rocks were coal measures.[8] Hunslet has different areas including Hunslet Moor, Hunslet Carr, Crown Point, Pottery Fields and Penny Hill.

Economy

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Hunslet today is still primarily based around manufacturing and heavy engineering. Newer industries have moved to the western fringes of the area in recent years with the building of new office complexes including the Leeds City Business Park which originally opened with offices for companies including O2 and British Gas. O2 have since moved to Morley. The Morrisons supermarket in the Penny Hill Centre as well as the Costco wholesale warehouse on Leathley Road are also large employers. In 2011, Aston Barclay, a car auction group, purchased the former Motor Auctions Leeds car centre on Hillidge Road to further add to the regeneration of the area.

According to an article by the Yorkshire Evening Post, 43% of the area's population lives in poverty and it has the ninth highest child poverty rate in the country, with a reported 4,579 children having been fed by food banks between April 2019 and February 2020.[21]

Religion

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St Mary the Virgin Church

A chapel dedicated to St. Mary the Virgin was built in 1636, and enlarged in 1774. It was a brick structure with a tower. It was enlarged by subscription in 1826.[8] There were two churches built on the site. The Victorian church, of which the spire remains, is the tallest in Leeds, was built in 1864 and the new church building surrounding it was built in the 1970s but was demolished in 2019.

Other smaller less notable churches exist in the district. The area is also home to St Joseph's Catholic Club (near a St Joseph's Catholic Church that was demolished in 2005 and is now part of the parish of St Margaret Clitherow).[22][23]

Hunslet Grange (Leek Street Flats)

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Hunslet Grange (Leek Street) flats in 1973

Hunslet's redevelopment in the 1960s was notable for the construction of the Hunslet Grange (usually known as 'Leek Street Flats'). Construction of the 350 flats and maisonettes started in 1968 following a widespread slum clearance project in the area.[24] The complex was commissioned by Leeds City Council and built by Shepherd Construction,[25] in a maisonette style with so-called 'streets in the sky' and overhead walkways connecting blocks. The exterior of the buildings were pale grey pebbledashed concrete. Each floor had a rubbish disposal chute leading to huge bins at street level.[26] Hidden in the complex on the second floor were shops and a public house, 'The Pioneer'. Twelve of the blocks were six storeys in height and six were of seven, with the entrance on the second floor. The estate covered a large area of Hunslet and was arranged in three clusters around a small park.[27]

The individual flats had large windows and were spacious and light, and were very popular with their new tenants. But the popularity was short-lived; the heating systems were inadequate for the poorly insulated concrete prefabricated buildings, the interiors suffered from condensation and the exterior walls became streaked with black. In addition, the "rabbit-warren" layout made the estate hard to navigate and, within a few years, even harder to police.

Demolition of the complex started in 1983, less than fifteen years after the first tenants moved in, to be replaced with low-rise council housing, which was largely built around the late 1980s. Low Rise private housing was added in the 1990s and 2000s and a public space known as Hunslet Green occupies much of this space.[24]

Charities and voluntary organisations

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Stringer House, 34 Lupton Street, offices of Voluntary Action Leeds

The area is home to a number of voluntary organisations servicing the community, this includes the Hunslet Club, a youth organisation established in 1940 which provides sport, dance and drama activities for hundreds of young people in the area as well as offering vocational education courses for 14- to 16-year-olds.[28]

Hunslet is also the home of Voluntary Action Leeds, the Council for Voluntary Service in Leeds, which provides direct support services and specialist advice to Voluntary Sector organisations across the city.[29]

Transport

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M621 junction 3, with entrance to junction 4 for Hunslet visible

The M621 and A61, two major roads, pass through the area, providing convenient access to the whole of Yorkshire and access the M62 to Manchester and Hull. The motorway was completed in 1971, and isolated a large part of Hunslet Moor.

Leeds Hunslet Lane railway station was located on the Hallam Line. It opened in 1840, but in 1846 the Midland Railway replaced it with Leeds Wellington station, and Hunslet Lane became a goods depot, which closed in 1972: the area is now occupied by the Crown Point Retail Park. There was also a passenger station on Hillidge Road: this is gone, but the Station Hotel remains.[30] The railway yard is now used as the Leeds Vehicle Maintenance Facility for Freightliner.[31]

Education

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An educational hub has been formed in the north of Hunslet, with Leeds City College's Printworks Campus using the former Alf Cooke printworks building, Leeds College of Building's Cudbear Street site,[32] the Ruth Gorse Academy,[33] and University Technical College Leeds (UTC) using the former Braime's engineering works,[34] all in close proximity to each other.[35]

Bewerley Street Infant School, designed by famous Leeds architect, George Corson, opened on 8 August 1873. By the 1950s, the school was for Juniors (7 – 11 Years) and the Infants had moved to a school on Hunslet Hall Road.[36]

Sport

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The suburb has a rugby league club with historic roots in the form of Hunslet who play at the John Charles Centre for Sport formerly known as the South Leeds Stadium.[37]

The original Hunslet, who played at Parkside, Hunslet, were the first club in Rugby League to win "All Four Cups" in season 1907–08, the Challenge Cup, the RFL Championship, the Yorkshire County League Cup and the Yorkshire County Cup.[38] Only two other clubs have achieved this feat, Huddersfield (1914–15)[39] and Swinton (1927–28). Other local rugby league clubs include Hunslet Warriors, and Hunslet Parkside.

Notable people

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References

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  1. ^ "City of Leeds ward population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Archived from the original on 14 March 2016. Retrieved 26 February 2016.
  2. ^ a b A. H. Smith, The Place-Names of the West Riding of Yorkshire, English Place-Names Society, 30–37, 8 vols (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1961–63), III 220.
  3. ^ Nordic Names : origin and etymology of Huna [1]
  4. ^ Nordic Names : origin and etymology of Hun [2]
  5. ^ Nordic Names : origin and etymology of Húni [3]
  6. ^ Harry Parkin, Your City's Place-Names: Leeds, English Place-Name Society City-Names Series, 3 (Nottingham: English Place-Names Society, 2017), p. 58.
  7. ^ François de Beaurepaire, Les Noms de lieux du Calvados, (annoté par Dominique Fournier), Paris, L'Harmattan, 2022, p. 214, ISBN 978-2-14-028854-8
  8. ^ a b c Lewis, Samuel (1848), "Hunslet or Hunfleet", A Topographical Dictionary of England, British History Online, pp. 583–588, retrieved 24 September 2010
  9. ^ Sibun, Jonathan (5 November 2008). "Carlsberg to close Tetley brewery in Leeds after 186 years". The Daily Telegraph. London.
  10. ^ The Republican, volume 8, page 107
  11. ^ Historic England. "Hunslet Mill (1256253)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 10 February 2021.
  12. ^ "Leeds Steel Works, Lupton Street, Balm Road". www.leodis.net. Leeds City Council. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
  13. ^ "Fatal Explosion at Leeds". The Times. 12 January 1900.
  14. ^ Libraries, Leeds (7 October 2020). "National Libraries Week 2020: Headingley, Hunslet and Middleton Libraries". The Secret Library | Leeds Libraries Heritage Blog. Retrieved 28 December 2022.
  15. ^ "Hunslet Branch Library, Interior, Junior Room". Leodis – a photographic archive of Leeds. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  16. ^ "Hunslet community hub and library". Leeds.gov.uk. Retrieved 22 January 2021.
  17. ^ Dzinzi, Mellissa (4 August 2020). "Leeds to get a huge new bridge over River Aire and UK's biggest city centre park". Leeds Live. Retrieved 25 August 2020.
  18. ^ "History of Hunslet, in Leeds and West Riding". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 10 October 2024.
  19. ^ "Relationships and changes Hunslet CP/Ch through time". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 10 October 2024.
  20. ^ "Population statistics Hunslet CP/Ch through time". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved 10 October 2024.
  21. ^ Beever, Susie. "The side of Leeds that has more foodbanks than Co-ops". Yorkshire Evening Post. Retrieved 30 June 2020.
  22. ^ "St. Joseph's Roman Catholic Church, Hunslet, Leeds, Leeds, Roman Catholic". GENUKI UK & Ireland Genealogy. GENUKI. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  23. ^ "St Margaret Clitherow Catholic Church, Leeds". St Margaret Clitherow Catholic Church, Leeds. Diocese of Leeds. Retrieved 19 April 2022.
  24. ^ a b Morrell, Steve. "Pottery Vale, Leek Street flats (Hunslet Grange)". www.leodis.net.
  25. ^ Morrell, Steve. "Pottery Vale, Leek Street Flats (Hunslet Grange)". www.leodis.net.
  26. ^ Morrell, Steve. "Pottery Vale, Leek Street flats (Hunslet Grange)". www.leodis.net.
  27. ^ "Leek St, Hunslet, Leeds". Archived from the original on 27 September 2013. Retrieved 21 February 2012.
  28. ^ "The Hunslet Club". Hunslet Club.
  29. ^ "About Doing Good Leeds | Doing Good Leeds". doinggoodleeds.org.uk.
  30. ^ Leodis Hillidge Road, Station Hotel
  31. ^ www.freightliner.co.uk Leeds Vehicle Maintenance Facility
  32. ^ Leeds College of Building: Facts and Figures Archived 3 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 13 June 2017
  33. ^ "The Ruth Gorse Academy". The Ruth Gorse Academy.
  34. ^ "UTC Leeds". Archived from the original on 2 April 2017. Retrieved 13 June 2017.
  35. ^ South Bank Education Archived 3 January 2017 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 13 June 2017
  36. ^ Leodis, Bewerley Street Infant School, from Bewerley Street, accessed 23 June 2017
  37. ^ "South Leeds Stadium". Hunslet RLFC. Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  38. ^ Collins, Tony. "Rugby Reloaded". Retrieved 18 December 2022.
  39. ^ "All Four Cups - Huddersfield Rugby League Heritage". www.huddersfieldrlheritage.co.uk. Retrieved 28 December 2022.
  40. ^ "The ALF MATTISON Collection". The Secret Library | Leeds Libraries Heritage Blog. 3 August 2016. Retrieved 28 December 2022.
  41. ^ "Peter O'Toole: An Inventory of His Papers at the Harry Ransom Center". norman.hrc.utexas.edu. Retrieved 28 December 2022.
  42. ^ "Keith Waterhouse | British writer | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 28 December 2022.
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