Misplaced Pages

Keighley & Worth Valley Railway

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Keighley and Worth Valley railway) Heritage line in West Yorkshire, England

Keighley & Worth Valley Railway
A photograph of Haworth Station, the headquarters of the railwayMidland 4F 43924 at Oxenhope in 2021
LocaleCity of Bradford
TerminusOxenhope
ConnectionsNetwork Rail at Keighley
Commercial operations
NameWorth Valley Branch
Original gauge4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Preserved operations
Owned byKeighley & Worth Valley Preservation Society
Stations6
Length5 miles (8 km)
Preserved gauge4 ft 8+1⁄2 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
Commercial history
Opened13 April 1867
1881Midland Railway takes over ownership of line
1883Keighley Station opened in current location
1884Great Northern Railway extended into Keighley via part of the Worth Valley Branch
1892Mytholmes Tunnel built
1923LMS takes over ownership / operation of line
1948BR takes over ownership / operation of line
1960Diesel Railcars introduced
Closed to passengers30 December 1961
ClosedJune 1962
Preservation history
1962Keighley and Worth Valley Railway Preservation Society formed
1968Worth Valley Branch reopened
1971Damems loop built
Website
http://www.kwvr.co.uk/
Route map
Keighley & Worth Valley Railway
Legend
to Skipton, Carlisle and the North
Original Keighley Station
Keighley
to Leeds, Bradford Forster Square
and the South
to Keighley Goods Yard
to Queensbury, Bradford Exchange
and Halifax
Ingrow (West)
Ingrow Tunnel (150 yards)
River Worth
Damems
Damens Loop
Oakworth
Mytholmes Tunnel (75 yards)
Haworth
to Haworth Yard
Haworth Loop
Oxenhope
Detailed version
To Skipton, Carlisle
& The North
Site of original
Keighley station
Keighley
To Keighley Goods Yard
Ingrow (West)
Ingrow Tunnel (150 yards)
River Worth
Damems
Damems Loop
Oakworth
Deviation
Viaduct
Mytholmes Tunnel (75 yards)
Haworth
To Haworth Yard
Haworth Loop
Oxenhope

The Keighley & Worth Valley Railway (KWVR) is a 5-mile-long (8 km) heritage railway in the Worth Valley, West Yorkshire, England, which runs from Keighley to Oxenhope. It connects to the National Rail network at Keighley railway station.

History

Inception and building of the branch

In 1861, John McLandsborough, a civil engineer, visited Haworth to pay tribute to Charlotte Brontë but was surprised to find that it was not served by a railway. He proposed a branch running from the Midland Railway's station at Keighley to Oxenhope. The line would serve three small towns and 15 mills along its length.

A meeting of local gentlemen was told that the line would cost £36,000 to build (equivalent to £4,240,000 in 2023). A total of 3,134 shares worth £10 each were issued at this meeting, along with the election of directors, bankers, solicitors and engineers. J McLandsborough, the original proposer of the line (who dealt predominantly with water and sewerage engineering, but had experience of building the Otley and Ilkley Railway) was appointed acting engineer; whilst J. S. Crossley of the Midland Railway was appointed consultant engineer.

The railway was incorporated by an Act of Parliament in 1862 and the first sod was cut on Shrove Tuesday, 9 February 1864 by Isaac Holden, the chairman of the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway.

The railway was built as single track but with a trackbed wide enough to allow upgrading to double track for expansion. Although the work was estimated to take approximately one year, delays including buying land for the line, a cow eating the plans near Oakworth and engineering problems meant the work took nearly two years to complete. In particular the southern tunnel to Ingrow West had quicksand oozing through bore holes that required additional piles to be driven down to the bedrock to support and stabilise the tunnel. Unfortunately the work damaged the foundation to the Wesley Place Methodist Church resulting in the church receiving £1,980 from the railway company.

Tracklaying was completed in 1866, having started at each end and joined in the middle. The line was tested with a locomotive from Ilkley, which took nearly two hours to get from Keighley to Oxenhope, but just 13 minutes to get back. Before opening, violent storms struck the line in November of that year.

The opening ceremony was held on Saturday 13 April 1867. Unfortunately, the train got stuck on Keighley bank and again between Oakworth and Haworth, necessitating splitting it before carrying on with the journey. Finally, on 15 April 1867, public passenger services on the Worth Valley commenced.

Operation

The line was operated by the Midland Railway, who owned most of the rail network in the area, and was eventually bought by the Midland in part due to interest from the rival railway company, the Great Northern. Upon sale of the railway, the mill owners made a profit, which was unusual for many lines of that type, as (for strategic reasons) the Midland wanted to prevent the GN from taking over its territory. After becoming part of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway in 1923 during Grouping, ownership passed to British Railways (BR) following nationalisation in 1948.

Rebuilding

On 6 November 1892 the deviation line between Haworth and Oakworth through Mytholmes Tunnel was opened and the original route abandoned. The Midland had intended to double the entire route as the traffic was so heavy. However, due to national political developments, in particular a dispute on rates between the Railway Companies' Association and the Government, the railway companies were urged by the Association to cease all but essential capital expenditure. Consequently, although the Parliamentary Bill to double the track had been turned into an Act, the Midland decided not to double the whole route, but did undertake the necessary work on the section to avoid the trestle viaduct at Vale Mill. This is why that part of the line today looks so different from the rest of the route. The need for the deviation was to avoid a large wooden trestle viaduct that crossed a mill pond, as the locals believed the viaduct was unsafe, and supposedly many alighted at Oakworth and continued on foot to Haworth to avoid crossing the viaduct. The original trestle viaduct can be seen in a picture hanging in the booking hall of Oakworth station.

The need to increase capacity for the heavy traffic remained, so at the turn of the century, the Midland installed a passing loop at Oakworth and signalling at Haworth which gave virtually as much flexibility for dealing with the traffic as would have been the case had the line been doubled.

Closure

British Railways operated the last scheduled passenger train on Saturday 30 December 1961 and with no Sunday service the passenger service was deemed withdrawn from Monday 1 January 1962. Freight trains continued to run to Oxenhope until 18 June 1962. On 23 June 1962 the new formed Keighley and Worth Valley Railway Preservation Society chartered a special passenger train which ran from Bradford to Oxenhope and return. After this train the section between Oxenhope and Ingrow Junction was completely closed.

Reopening

S160 'Big Jim' 5820 arrives at Haworth with a service to Oxenhope

A preservation society was formed in 1962 of rail enthusiasts and local people which bought the line from BR and reopened it on 29 June 1968 as a heritage railway. The first train to leave Keighley for Oxenhope on that date was the only train to operate anywhere on the network due to a national train strike. The line is now a major tourist attraction operated by 500+ volunteers and roughly 10 paid staff. It carries more than 100,000 passengers a year.

The KWVR is the only complete heritage railway in the UK to be preserved and operating. It has its link to the main line which is in regular use for all types of traffic, including public passenger trains and it operates the whole railway as last used by British Railways.

Operation as a preserved line

On 10 July 2008, the Duke of Kent visited the railway following the 40th anniversary of its reopening. While at the railway, the Duke travelled in the carriage and on the locomotive footplate of a specially prepared "Royal Train", consisting of tank locomotive 41241, an LMS Class 2MT, pulling a single carriage, The Old Gentleman's Saloon, as featured in The Railway Children, which is a former North Eastern Railway directors Saloon.

Commuter use

The morning diesel railbus service at Damems station

On weekends, in particular Saturday mornings, local residents who live in Oxenhope, Haworth, Oakworth and Ingrow catch the early morning diesel service to Keighley, returning later on steam hauled services. During the weekday outside of the summer months, locals instead use the local bus services.

As a privately owned heritage railway, the line does not specifically serve commuters; however, a study by Ove Arup & Partners funded by Metro looked at the feasibility of a daily commuter service between Oxenhope and Keighley in 2009. After the first stage of the study was released, Metro stated concerns about a lack of funding and available rolling stock, meaning that services are unlikely to run in the short to medium term.

Another study undertaken in 2011 on behalf of the Worth Valley Joint Transport Committee found that running up to four commuter trains each way in the morning and evening is feasible.

Stations and facilities

Map this section's coordinates using OpenStreetMap

Download coordinates as:

Point Coordinates
(Links to map resources)
OS Grid Ref Notes
Keighley 53°52′04″N 1°54′04″W / 53.8679°N 1.9011°W / 53.8679; -1.9011 (Keighley Station) SE06604130
Ingrow (West) 53°51′14″N 1°54′54″W / 53.8539°N 1.9150°W / 53.8539; -1.9150 (Ingrow (West) Station) SE05683974
Damems 53°50′45″N 1°55′28″W / 53.8459°N 1.9245°W / 53.8459; -1.9245 (Damems Station) SE05063885
Oakworth 53°50′29″N 1°56′30″W / 53.8414°N 1.9416°W / 53.8414; -1.9416 (Oakworth Station) SE03943835
Haworth 53°49′52″N 1°56′56″W / 53.8312°N 1.9488°W / 53.8312; -1.9488 (Haworth Station) SE03463721
Oxenhope 53°48′55″N 1°57′06″W / 53.8154°N 1.9517°W / 53.8154; -1.9517 (Oxenhope Station) SE03273545

Keighley

Railbus at Keighley station, 2012
  • Mainline connections to Leeds, Bradford, Skipton, Carlisle, Lancaster, Morecambe and London King's Cross
  • Railway shop and buffet
  • Turntable
  • Picnic area
  • Station restored to BR 1950s condition complete with cast-iron platform canopy on Platform 4, as once existed on all of the platforms

Ingrow (West)

  • Access to the Vintage Carriages Trust's Museum of Rail Travel
  • Railway shop
  • Access to the Bahamas Locomotive Society Museum 'Ingrow Loco'
  • Car parking

Damems

Damems station, March 2017
  • The smallest standard-gauge railway station in Britain, complete with waiting room, booking office, signal box and level crossing
  • Lit by gas and heated by coal stoves
  • It is mostly used by passengers changing trains, usually during busy periods, such as gala events
  • Featured as Ormston in the BBC's Born and Bred

Oakworth

Oakworth station, April 2000
  • Famous as the location for the filming of the 1970 film The Railway Children, starring Jenny Agutter, Dinah Sheridan, Bernard Cribbins, Sally Thomsett and Gary Warren
  • Restored to Edwardian condition, the station is lit by gas lamps
  • Heated by up to four coal fires in winter
  • Civil Engineering yard, containing all engineering wagons (not open to public)
  • Car parking (for 'Horseless Carriages')

Haworth

Haworth station, December 2011
  • Railway shop
  • Motive Power & Civil Engineering Departments situated here (Not open to the public, although guided tours are run on peak days)
  • Picnic area and engine shed viewing area
  • Access to Haworth village and the Brontë Parsonage
  • Gas lit platform
  • An example of a 1950s country station

Oxenhope

  • Terminus of the branch (Located at around 660 feet (201 m) above sea level)
  • New Heritage Lottery Fund-supported exhibition shed; contains locomotives and carriages not currently in use and explains their history and that of the line as a whole
  • Carriage & Wagon Maintenance department (Not open to the public)
  • Buffet (converted from BR Mk1 RMB No. 1824) and railway shop.
  • Car parking
  • Bus connections to Hebden Bridge
  • Gas-lit platform, car park and waiting room

Rolling stock

Main article: Rolling stock of the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway

The KWVR has a large collection of both steam and diesel locomotives, as well as supporting carriages and other rolling stock. The railway has amassed a large collection of Vintage Carriages over the years. Some are used to carry passengers on specially selected open days.

The early morning fire-up of steam locomotives on the KWVR, September 2021
Restored Class 26, 26007, on the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway, September 2021

The railway owns three rail mounted cranes: a 10T Grafton steam P-Way crane, a 15T Taylor Hubbard diesel P-Way Crane and an ex LMS 45T steam breakdown crane. In addition, the affiliated Bahamas Locomotive Society owns a steam breakdown crane, based at Ingrow. Currently the 15T Taylor Hubbard crane and the 10T Grafton steam P-Way crane are in traffic, the latter now in apple green. Furthermore, there are a variety of wagons used by the civil engineering department, largely at either Oakworth or Ingrow West.

Use in film, media and television

Oxenhope station, December 2011

The line and its stations has been used in numerous period film and television productions including the film The Railway Children.

In the 1960s (shortly before the preserved line re-opened), an ITV advertisement on chocolate cookie biscuits, featuring Ronnie Corbett, was filmed along the line and at Mytholmes Tunnel (between Oakworth and Haworth). A steam train carries (at the front end) out of the tunnel a shocked Corbett holding onto the handrail of the engine. The locomotive used was Pug 51218.

In 1970 the line was featured in the British drama film The Railway Children. The line was then one of only a few heritage railways in the UK and was the only one at the time which had a tunnel (this was one of the most important locations needed for the film). The tunnel used is a lot shorter in reality than it appears in the film, for which a temporary extension to the tunnel was made using canvas covers. Locomotives that were chosen for the film included a Hudswell Clarke 0-6-0T No. 31 Hamburg, GWR 5700 0-6-0PT No. 5775, Lancashire & Yorkshire Railway 0-6-0 No. 957 & GNR N2 0-6-2T No. 1744. Railway locations used in the film included Mytholmes Tunnel near Haworth, the location for the paper chase scene was also shot at Mytholmes, as well as the one in which the children wave the girls' petticoats in the air to warn the train about a landslide. The landslide sequence itself was filmed in a cutting on the Oakworth side of Mytholmes Tunnel and the fields of long grass where the children waved to the trains are situated on the Haworth side of the tunnel.

In 1976, The KWVR and Haworth railway station appeared in the premiere episode of a Granada TV sitcom called Yanks Go Home (set in 1942), in which a group of US Army Air Force pilots arrive by train and alight at the station (Haworth) and are stationed in a small Northern town in Lancashire, North-West of England, during the Second World War.

In 1979, an episode of the long-running BBC sitcom Last of the Summer Wine was filmed partly along the Worth Valley route, in which the three main characters Compo, Clegg & Foggy visit and then to attempt to stop a runaway steam train having pulled the brake on purpose (and then only to drive upwards and downwards). The locomotive used was Pannier 5775 in its London Transport guise as L89.

In 1981 a scene from Alan Parker's film, Pink Floyd - The Wall was filmed at the entrance to the Mytholmes Tunnel, and others at the line's stations.

The railway was used in the filming of Peaky Blinders, a 2013 BBC television drama about Birmingham criminals just after the First World War. The same year, scenes were filmed for the dramatisation of The Great Train Robbery: A Coppers Tale, with locations in West Yorkshire acting as Cheddington's Aylesbury bound platform.

In 2014, Keighley station was featured extensively in the feature-film 'Testament of Youth', as were the interiors of some of the railway's vintage coaches.

In 2015, the railway was used for numerous scenes in the 2016 film Swallows and Amazons.

The steam-hauled train seen in All Creatures Great and Small (2020 TV series) was filmed on the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway line; Keighley station stands in for a Glasgow station in the first episode, and Oakworth station appears in both the first and second episodes.

According to Screen Yorkshire, other productions that filmed scenes on the railway include "the new Netflix mini-series The English Game, as well as ... Testament of Youth, Brideshead Revisited ... and Agatha Christie's 2018 The ABC Murders. In the 2019 Keira Knightley movie Official Secrets, the railway depicted Cheltenham Spa station".

In January 2022, trainspotter Francis Bourgeois was featured in the second chapter of a partnership between Gucci and The North Face. In the photographs and a promotional short film by Highsnobiety, he plays the part of a train conductor. The film, Full Steam Ahead with Francis Bourgeois, features Oakworth station on the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway, and 2MT locomotive No. 78022. The film won the award for "best fashion film" at Berlin Fashion Film Festival 2022.

References

  1. "Railway for Keighley and Haworth". Leeds Times. British Newspaper Archive. 9 November 1861. Retrieved 28 July 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  2. ^ Povey, Ralph Oliver Thomas (1970). The History of the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway. Keighley and Worth Valley Railway Preservation Society. ISBN 0902438093.
  3. UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 7 May 2024.
  4. "Keighley and Worth Valley Railway. Cutting the First Sod". Bradford Observer. British Newspaper Archive. 11 February 1864. Retrieved 28 July 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  5. "Opening of the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway". Leeds Mercury. British Newspaper Archive. 15 April 1867. Retrieved 28 July 2016 – via British Newspaper Archive.
  6. The History of the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway by R.O.T. Povey (pages not timbered) published in 1968
  7. The History of the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway by R.O.T. Povey
  8. "Worth valley History". Archived from the original on 15 September 2015. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  9. "Bradford and West Yorkshire; 40 Year Lookback". BBC. Archived from the original on 9 May 2016. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  10. Jones, Robin (20 December 2011). "Volunteers Remember 50th Anniversary of Worth Valley Closure". Heritage Railway. Mortons Media Group. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  11. "HRH The Duke of Kent visits Haworth". Haworth Village Website. 10 July 2008. Archived from the original on 13 June 2011. Retrieved 10 November 2008.
  12. "Court Circular, past events, Thursday, 10 July 2008". 10 July 2008. Archived from the original on 20 December 2015. Retrieved 20 December 2015.
  13. "Full-steam ahead on the royal railway!". The Telegraph and Argus. 10 July 2008. Archived from the original on 17 February 2009. Retrieved 10 November 2008.
  14. "Commuter trains earmarked for the Worth Valley?". Rail Magazine. No. 618. 20 May 2009.
  15. "Commuter service plan hits buffers". Bradford Telegraph & Argus. Newsquest Ltd. 6 June 2009. Archived from the original on 26 September 2012. Retrieved 8 June 2009.
  16. "Keighley and Worth Valley Railway could carry commuters". BBC. 21 January 2011. Archived from the original on 3 February 2011. Retrieved 2 February 2011.
  17. "screenonline: Railway Children, The (1970)". screenonline. British Film Institute. Archived from the original on 26 November 2009. Retrieved 27 November 2009.
  18. The Golden Age of Steam Engines, No. 2 – Branching Out (at 27mins 30secs). BBC Four, broadcast 27 October 2013; first broadcast 17 December 2012
  19. "Railway Children Train Back on Track". Telegraph and Argus. 25 November 1998. Archived from the original on 6 April 2016. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  20. "Keighley and Worth Valley Railway bosses hail work". Telegraph and Argus. 27 April 2011. Archived from the original on 6 April 2016. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  21. "Landslide hits 'Railway Children' line". Telegraph and Argus. 18 February 2002. Archived from the original on 7 April 2016. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  22. ^ "KWVR – TV & Film". Worth Valley. Keighley and Worth Valley Railway. Archived from the original on 15 September 2015. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  23. "Pink Floyd – The Wall". Archived from the original on 4 April 2016.
  24. Mabbett, Andy (2010). Pink Floyd - The Music and the Mystery. London: Omnibus. ISBN 9781849383707.
  25. Rahman, Miran. "Filming starts at Keighley & Worth Valley Railway". Keighley News. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 13 May 2015.
  26. "Temporary Halt to Services on the KWVR Due to Filming for new BBC production". Telegraph and Argus. 16 July 2015. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  27. "The Great Train Robbery – Filming Locations". IMDB. Archived from the original on 5 April 2016. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  28. "Screen Yorkshire Showcase – Testament of Youth". Screen Yorkshire. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 6 November 2015.
  29. "Swallows and Amazons". kwvr.co.uk. Archived from the original on 18 October 2017.
  30. ^ "Keighley & Worth Valley Railway". Retrieved 3 March 2021.
  31. Panesar, Gursharan; Fasano, Lavinia. "Why TikTok sleuths are luxury's most valuable asset". The Future Laboratory. LS:N Global. Retrieved 8 February 2022.
  32. Abraham, Tamara (21 January 2022). "The supernerd who conquered high fashion". The Telegraph. Retrieved 21 January 2022.
  33. Connolly, Hannah. "CALLING AT COUTURE: BETWEEN THE LINES OF FASHION'S LOCOMOTIVE LOVE AFFAIR". ES Standard. ES Magazine. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
  34. "Full Steam Ahead With Francis Bourgeois, The North Face And Gucci". Highsnobiety. 17 January 2022.
  35. Deas, Brad. "Tik Tok train star Francis Bourgeois films Gucci advert". Craven Herald & Pioneer. Retrieved 18 January 2022.
  36. Houston, Amy (17 January 2022). "TikTok trainspotter Francis Bourgeois stars in The North Face and Gucci ad". The Drum. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  37. Liederman, Emmy (24 January 2022). "TikTok's Francis Bourgeois Stars in Gucci, The North Face Ad". Adweek. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  38. Royce, Aaron. "TikTok Trainspotter Francis Bourgeois Stars in Gucci x The North Face's New Campaign". Footwear News. Retrieved 18 January 2022.
  39. Cohen, Jamie. "Gucci x The North Face and a Trainspotting TikTok Star". Marker by Medium. Retrieved 20 January 2022.
  40. "berlin fashion film festival 2022 (best fashion film) – Full Steam Ahead with Francis Bourgeois – Gucci x North Face – Black Dog Films". Berlin Fashion Film Festival.

External links

Heritage railways, museums and preservation societies in England
Operational railways
Narrow-gauge
Standard-gauge
Centres and museums
Planned railways
Closed sites
West Yorkshire museums
City of Bradford museums
Baildon
Bracken Hall Countryside Centre and Museum
Bradford
Bolling Hall Museum
Bradford Industrial Museum
Cartwright Hall
National Science and Media Museum
Peace Museum
Haworth
Brontë Parsonage Museum
Ilkley: Ilkley Toy Museum
Manor House Museum
Keighley
Cliffe Castle Museum
East Riddlesden Hall
Keighley & Worth Valley Railway
Museum of Rail Travel
Saltaire
Salts Mill
Calderdale museums
Brighouse
Smith Art Gallery
Halifax
Bankfield Museum
Calderdale Industrial Museum
Dean Clough
Eureka! The National Children's Museum
Hebden Bridge
Gibson Mill
Heptonstall
Heptonstall Museum
Shibden
Shibden Hall
Kirklees museums
Batley & Birstall
Bagshaw Museum, Oakwell Hall
Dewsbury
Dewsbury Bus Museum
Dewsbury Museum
Gomersal
Red House Museum
Huddersfield
Castle Hill
Colne Valley Museum
Rugby League Heritage Centre
Tolson Museum
Marsden: Standedge Tunnel Visitor Centre
City of Leeds museums
Aberford
Lotherton Hall
Leeds
Abbey House Museum
Armley Mills Industrial Museum
Bramham Park
Harewood House
Henry Moore Institute in Leeds
Kirkstall Abbey
Leeds Art Gallery
Leeds City Museum
Leeds College of Art
Middleton Railway Museum
Royal Armouries Museum
Temple Newsam
Thackray Museum
Thwaite Watermill
Otley
Otley Museum
City of Wakefield museums
Netherton
National Coal Mining Museum for England
Nostell
Nostell Priory
Pontefract
Pontefract Museum
Wakefield
The Hepworth Wakefield
Wakefield Museum
Category
City of Bradford
Towns,
villages,
areas

and wards
Addingham
Allerton
Apperley Bridge
Baildon
Barkerend
Belle Vue
Ben Rhydding
Bingley
Bingley Rural
Bingley ward
Bolton and Undercliffe
Bowling and Barkerend
Bradford
Bradford Moor
Broomfields
Burley in Wharfedale
Burley Woodhead
Buttershaw
City of Bradford
City ward
Clayton
Cottingley
Craven ward
Crossflatts
Cross Roads
Cullingworth
Cutler Heights
Denholme
Dudley Hill
East Morton
East Bowling
Eastburn
Eccleshill
Egypt
Eldwick
Esholt
Frizinghall
Forster Square
Gilstead
Girlington
Great Horton
Greengates
Hainworth
Harden
Haworth
Haworth, Cross Roads and Stanbury
Heaton
Holme Wood
Idle
Idle and Thackley
Ilkley
Ingrow
Keighley
Keighley Central
Keighley East
Keighley West
Laisterdyke
Laycock
Little Germany
Little Horton
Long Lee
Longlands
Low Moor
Lumbfoot
Manningham
Menston
Oakenshaw
Oakworth
Odsal
Oldfield
Oxenhope
Queensbury
Ravenscliffe
Riddlesden
Royds
Ryecroft
Saltaire
Sandy Lane
Shipley
Silsden
Staithgate
Stanbury
Steeton
Steeton with Eastburn
Thackley
Thornbury
Thornton
Thornton and Allerton
Thorpe Edge
Toller
Tong ward
Tong village
Trident
Tyersal
Wharfedale ward
Wibsey
Wilsden
Windhill and Wrose
Worth Valley
Wrose
Wyke
Governance
Bradford-Keighley Youth Parliament
City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council
Constituencies
Council
Councillors
Parishes
Politics
Wards
Culture
Leisure and
Tourism
Countryside
Airedale
Bradford Dale
Brontë Country
Harden Moor
Heaton Woods
Ilkley Moor
Judy Woods
Penistone Hill Country Park
Pennine Way
Wharfedale
Worth Valley
Yorkshire Dales
Buildings and
Listed buildings
The Gatehaus
Mechanics' Institute Library
Midland Hotel
Milligan and Forbes Warehouse
Old White Horse Inn
Salts Mill
Top Withens
White Wells
Wool Exchange
Halls
Bingley Town Hall
Bolling Hall
Bradford City Hall
Cartwright Hall
Cottingley Town Hall
East Riddlesden Hall
Heathcote
Ilkley Town Hall
Keighley Town Hall
Oakwood Hall
Oakworth Hall
Paper Hall
Ponden Hall
Royds Hall
Shipley Town Hall
Silsden Town Hall
Victoria Hall
Mills
: Drummond Mill
Lister Mills
Places of Worship
All Saints' Parish Church
Al Mahdi Mosque
Bradford Cathedral
Bradford Grand Mosque
Bradford Tree of Life Synagogue
Holy Trinity Church, Bingley
St Patrick's Church
Saltaire United Reformed Church
St Peter's Church, Addingham
Shree Lakshmi Narayan Hindu Temple
Entertainment
Bradford Alhambra
Bradford Odeon
Bradford Playhouse
Cubby Broccoli Cinema
Ilkley Playhouse
IMAX
Keighley Picture House
Odeon Leeds-Bradford
Pictureville Cinema
St George's Hall
Museums
and galleries
BD1 Gallery
Bolling Hall
Bracken Hall Countryside Centre and Museum
Bradford Industrial Museum
Brontë Parsonage Museum
Cartwright Hall
Cliffe Castle Museum
Colour Experience
Ilkley Toy Museum
Impressions Gallery
Keighley & Worth Valley Railway
Manor House Museum
Museum of Rail Travel
National Science and Media Museum
Peace Museum
Transperience
Clubs and
societies
Airedale Boat Club
Bradford Festival Choral Society
Bradford Girls' Choir
Bradford Mechanics' Institute Library
Fanderson
Idle Working Men's Club
Keighley and District Local History Society
The 1 in 12 Club
Shopping
Sunbridge Wells
The Broadway
Wool Exchange
Parks
Bingley St Ives
Bowling Park
Bradford City Park
Harold Park
Holden Park
Horton Park
Lister Park
Northcliffe Park
Peel Park
Roberts Park
Events
Bingley Music Live
Bradford Literature Festival
Bradford Mela
Moor Music Festival
Ilkley Literature Festival
Infest
Ilkley Trophy
Keighley Festival
Saltaire Festival
Heritage
Keighley & Worth Valley Railway
Saltaire International Heritage Centre
Shipley Glen Tramway
Undercliffe Cemetery
Services
Education
Bradford College
Bradford Libraries
Bradford Mechanics' Institute Library
Bradford Schools
Shipley College
University of Bradford
Health
Airedale General Hospital
Bradford Royal Infirmary
St Luke's Hospital
Mass media
Publishing
Emerald Group Publishing
Keighley News
Telegraph & Argus
Radio
Hits Radio West Yorkshire
Greatest Hits Radio West Yorkshire
RamAir
Sunrise Radio
TVAAP TV
Organisations
Companies
Bradford Trades Council
British Wool Marketing Board
Club 18-30
Damart
Dean, Smith & Grace
Findel plc
Four Door Lemon
Grattan
Greenwoods
Hallmark Cards
Hield
JCT600
Kelda
Wm Morrison Supermarkets
Mumtaz Group
Pace Micro Technology
Safestyle UK
Seabrook Potato Crisps
Sports Turf Research Institute
Standard Wool
Telegraph & Argus
Timothy Taylor Brewery
Vanquis Banking Group
Wharfedale Brewery
Yorkshire Building Society
Yorkshire Water
Other
Anchor Hanover Group
Association of Nail Technicians
Bradford Mechanics' Institute Library
Ilkley Upstagers' Theatre Group
Charity
Christians Against Poverty
Human Relief Foundation
Sacar
Religious
Al-Mustafa Centre
LIFE Church UK
Sport
Clubs
Basketball
Bradford Dragons
Cricket
Bradford Premier League
Cycling
Ilkley Cycling Club
Football
Albion Sports A.F.C.
Bradford City
Bradford City W.F.C.
Bradford Park Avenue A.F.C.
Eccleshill United F.C.
Ilkley Town A.F.C.
Silsden F.C.
Thackley A.F.C.
Golf
Ilkley Golf Club
Rowing
Bradford Amateur Rowing Club
Rugby
Bradford & Bingley RFC
Bradford Bulls
Bradford Bulls Women
Bradford Dudley Hill
Clayton A.R.L.F.C.
Ilkley Rugby Club
Keighley Cougars
Keighley RUFC
Venues
Cougar Park
Great Horton Road
Horsfall Stadium
Odsal Stadium
Park Avenue
Valley Parade
Waterways
Rivers
Bradford Beck
Harden Beck
Holme Beck
River Aire
River Wharfe
River Worth
Tyersal Beck
Canals
Bingley Five Rise Locks
Bingley Three Rise Locks
Leeds and Liverpool Canal
Crossings
Beckfoot Bridge
Ireland Bridge
Thornton Viaduct
Transport
Air
Leeds Bradford Airport
Rail
Lines
Airedale
Calder Valley
Keighley & Worth Valley Railway
Shipley Glen Tramway
Wharfedale
Stations
Tunnels
Bowling
Thackley
Bus
Stations
Bradford Interchange
Ilkley bus station
Keighley bus station
Services
Arriva Yorkshire
First West Yorkshire
Keighley Bus Company
Road
Road
M62
M606
A647
A650
A658
A6036
A6177
Miscellaneous
Crime
History
Military
Postcodes
Timeline
People
Geology
Aire Valley Fault
Denholme Clough Fault
Category
Categories: