Listed buildings in Batley
Batley is a town and an unparished area in the metropolitan borough of Kirklees, West Yorkshire, England. It contains 63 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, one is listed at Grade I, the highest of the three grades, two are at Grade II*, the middle grade, and the others are at Grade II, the lowest grade. Included in the list are the districts of Brown Hill, Carlinghow, Staincliffe and Upper Batley.[a] During the 19th century, Batley became "Queen of the West Riding shoddy towns", shoddy being the process of breaking down rags and waste fabric to be re-used in the manufacture of uniforms.[1] The listed buildings remaining from this industry include a group of three-storey warehouses and showrooms in Station Road.[2] The other listed buildings include houses, cottages and associated structures, churches and items in churchyards, a milestone and boundary stones, a former watermill, a railway viaduct and subways, schools, civic buildings, banks, structures in the cemetery, a museum, a war memorial, and a pair of telephone kiosks.
Key
Grade | Criteria[3] |
---|---|
I | Buildings of exceptional interest, sometimes considered to be internationally important |
II* | Particularly important buildings of more than special interest |
II | Buildings of national importance and special interest |
Buildings
Name and location | Photograph | Date | Notes | Grade |
---|---|---|---|---|
Effigy, All Saints Church 53°42′57″N 1°38′09″W / 53.71589°N 1.63582°W |
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13th century (probable) | The effigy is to the east of the church porch, and is in stone on a stone base. The effigy is recumbent, and depicts a robed figure with hands together on the chest.[4][5] | II |
All Saints' Church 53°42′58″N 1°38′09″W / 53.71600°N 1.63588°W |
c. 1485 | The church incorporates material from a 13th-century church. It was | I | |
Banqueting House 53°43′29″N 1°37′58″W / 53.72484°N 1.63287°W |
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|
17th century | A building of uncertain purpose in brick with raised decorative diamond patterning in sunk panels, and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys and one | II* |
Manor Cottage 53°42′34″N 1°39′10″W / 53.70943°N 1.65283°W |
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|
1703 | Two cottages, later combined, the house is in stone with | II |
89 and 91 Brookroyd Lane, Brown Hill 53°43′47″N 1°39′27″W / 53.72962°N 1.65757°W |
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1708 | A stone house, partly quoins and a stone slate roof. There are two storeys, a symmetrical front of two bays, and a gabled rear wing and an outshut. The central doorway has a chamfered surround and an initialled and dated arched head. The window to the right of the doorway has been altered, and the other windows are mullioned, with some mullions removed.[10]
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II |
Staincliffe Hall 53°42′34″N 1°39′06″W / 53.70931°N 1.65157°W |
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|
1709 | A large house in stone, with moulded arched doorway.[11]
|
II |
2 and 4 South Bank Road, Carlinghow 53°43′09″N 1°38′56″W / 53.71910°N 1.64887°W |
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|
Early 18th century | A stone house with lintel, and the windows are mullioned, with some mullions removed. There is a continuous hood mould over the ground floor windows.[12]
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II |
Healds House 53°42′01″N 1°39′09″W / 53.70024°N 1.65240°W |
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18th century | The house, which incorporates 16th-century material, was altered in the 19th century, and has been at one time a meeting house and a school. It is in brick on a | II |
Milepost 53°42′30″N 1°39′32″W / 53.70843°N 1.65901°W |
Mid to late 18th century | The milepost stands on Halifax Road outside No. 125. It consists of a square stone set at an angle and inscribed on two faces with letters and numbers.[14] | II | |
110 Oaks Road, Batley 53°42′40″N 1°36′57″W / 53.71123°N 1.61585°W |
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|
Late 18th century | A stone house with | II |
83 and 85 Bunkers Lane, Staincliffe 53°42′34″N 1°39′08″W / 53.70936°N 1.65216°W |
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Late 18th century | A pair of stone cottages with | II |
6 and 8 Intake Road, Brown Hill 53°43′42″N 1°39′19″W / 53.72842°N 1.65529°W |
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Late 18th century | Three cottages, later combined, the building is in stone, with | II |
Carlinghow Mill 53°43′23″N 1°38′43″W / 53.72296°N 1.64524°W |
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Late 18th century | Originally a quoins and wagon entries with four-centred arches and voussoirs, and it contains square windows and ventilation slits. The attached range has a single storey and altered openings.[18]
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II |
1 and 2 Staincliffe Mill Yard 53°42′22″N 1°39′11″W / 53.70610°N 1.65299°W |
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Early to mid 19th century | A pair of stone houses with | II |
Holy Trinity Church 53°42′05″N 1°38′09″W / 53.70137°N 1.63591°W |
1840–41 | The church was designed by R. D. Chantrell in Gothic Revival style, and the porch and north aisle were added in 1894–94 by W. Swinden Barber. The church is built in stone with a slate roof, and consists of a nave, a north aisle, a south porch, a chancel, and a west tower. The tower has diagonal buttresses, a clock face, and a plain parapet with crocketed pinnacles.[4][20] | II | |
Railway subway, Lady Ann Road 53°42′51″N 1°37′26″W / 53.71407°N 1.62384°W |
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|
Mid-1840s | The subway was built by the Leeds, Dewsbury and Manchester Railway over a footpath, and was later altered. It is sloping, and built in sandstone. Both faces have semicircular arches, the east face has stepped, rusticated voussoirs, an impost band and a triangular parapet. The west face is higher and has stepped voussoirs.[21] | II |
Railway subway, West Street 53°42′47″N 1°37′25″W / 53.71297°N 1.62362°W |
Mid-1840s | The subway was built by the Leeds, Dewsbury and Manchester Railway over a footpath, and was later extended. It is built in sandstone and purple engineering brick. The east face has a segmental arch of stepped sandstone voussoirs, an impost band, and rectangular piers. The later west face is taller and has a semicircular arch of engineering brick with an impost band and a parapet.[22] | II | |
521 Bradford Road 53°43′10″N 1°38′31″W / 53.71953°N 1.64198°W |
1848 | Originally a National School, later used for other purposes, it is in stone, and has a stone slate roof with Tudor arch, carved spandrels, and a hood mould, and in the gable is an inscribed and dated plaque. The outer bays contain tall four-light chamfered mullioned windows with round arched lights and hood moulds. Flanking the porch, steps lead down to basement entrances.[23]
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II | |
Railway viaduct 53°42′27″N 1°37′24″W / 53.70739°N 1.62341°W |
1848 | The railway viaduct carries the | II | |
Town Hall 53°42′51″N 1°37′59″W / 53.71403°N 1.63318°W |
1853–54 | The town hall, which was rebuilt and extended in 1905 following a fire, is in | II | |
Wesleyan Methodist Church 53°42′44″N 1°37′43″W / 53.71225°N 1.62851°W |
1861 | The former chapel is in stone, with quoins, a sill band, and a slate roof. There are two storeys, a four-bay front with a pedimented gable, and six bays along the sides. In the centre is a double doorway with pilasters and a common entablature. The windows are sashes, those in the ground floor with segmental heads and keystones, and those in the upper floor with round-arched heads, pilasters, and rusticated voussoirs. In the tympanum of the pediment is an oculus with a scrolled surround, the word "WESLEYAN" below, and a vase acroterion on the apex of the gable.[27][28]
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II | |
25 Station Road and warehouses 53°42′40″N 1°37′32″W / 53.71110°N 1.62562°W |
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1864 | A group of warehouses in stone on a corner site, with moulded eaves cornice on console brackets, and a hipped slate roof. There are three storeys, a symmetrical front of three bays, a curved corner, seven bays along the left return, and beyond that a four-storey block with three bays on the front and ten bays deep. On the front, steps lead up to a central doorway that has a segmental-headed fanlight, and a keystone carved with a shield and a ram with the date. The flanking windows have segmental heads, architraves and keystones, in the middle floor are paired round-arched windows, and the top floor contains windows with plain surrounds.[2][29]
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II |
Cemetery Chapels 53°42′55″N 1°38′36″W / 53.71538°N 1.64341°W |
1865 | The chapels consist of a central steeple over an arch, flanked by identical chapels; they are all in stone with slate roofs. Over the pointed archway is a three stage tower with angle buttresses rising to pinnacles. The top stage of the tower is octagonal, and contains arched openings with colonnettes, and a pieced parapet with diamond-shaped pinnacles, and it is surmounted by an octagonal spire. Each chapel has four bays, a gabled porch, two-light windows on the sides, and a five-light east window.[25][30] | II | |
Cemetery Lodge 53°42′56″N 1°38′31″W / 53.71553°N 1.64191°W |
1866 | The cemetery lodge is in stone with quoins, and a slate roof with coped gables, gablets, and decorative iron finials. There are two storeys and an asymmetrical plan, consisting of a near-central tower, a gabled cross-wing on the left, and a single-storey rear wing. The tower has a porch with a pointed arch, above which are two thin lancet windows, a blind pointed window, and a sprocketed spire surmounted by decorative ironwork. To the left is a canted bay window, and on the right return facing the road is a square bay window.[25][31]
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II | |
Cemetery wall, railings, gates and gate piers 53°42′56″N 1°38′31″W / 53.71542°N 1.64183°W |
c. 1866 | At the entrance to the cemetery are two pairs of gate | II | |
Christ Church 53°42′31″N 1°39′08″W / 53.70849°N 1.65209°W |
1866–67 | The church, designed by | II | |
St Thomas' Church 53°43′02″N 1°37′36″W / 53.71724°N 1.62668°W |
1867–68 | The church is in Early English style, and is built in stone with a slate roof. It consists of a nave with a clerestory, north and south aisles, a chancel with a north vestry, and a southwest steeple. The steeple has a tower with three stages, angle buttresses, a south arched doorway, an oculus on each face, louvred bell openings with colonnettes and foliated capitals, a perforated parapet with octagonal pinnacles and gargoyles, and a recessed spire.[25][34]
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II | |
Boundary stone No. 4 53°43′11″N 1°37′56″W / 53.71968°N 1.63209°W |
1869 | The boundary stone is at the junction of Blenheim Drive And Batley Field Road, and consists of a rectangular stone block. It is inscribed with initials and the date.[35] | II | |
Boundary stone No. 5 53°43′29″N 1°37′52″W / 53.72473°N 1.63118°W |
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1869 | The boundary stone is in Old Hall Road opposite Batley Hall, and consists of a rectangular stone block. It is inscribed with initials and the date.[36] | II |
Zion Methodist Chapel 53°42′53″N 1°38′00″W / 53.71474°N 1.63340°W |
1869 | The chapel is in stone with giant balustrades. Along the sides, the windows in the lower floor have rusticated voussoirs, and in the upper floor they have an impost band.[25][37]
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II | |
St Mary's Church 53°43′02″N 1°38′31″W / 53.71715°N 1.64206°W |
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1869–70 | Transepts were added to the church in 1884, which is built in stone with a slate roof, and is in Gothic Revival style. The church consists of a nave with a porch and an apsidal baptistery, small transepts, and a chancel with an apse and chapels. There is a central doorway with a pointed arch and a cambered head.[25][38] | II |
2, 4, 6 and 8 Station Road 53°42′40″N 1°37′36″W / 53.71124°N 1.62665°W |
c. 1870 | A row of four warehouses in quoins, bands and cornices between the floors, an eaves cornice on consoles, and a slate roof. There are three storeys and a symmetrical front of eight bays, the middle two bays projecting forward. In these bays are round-arched doorways flanked by pilasters with foliated capitals and with fanlights, spandrels carved with serpents and dragons, and keystones carved with heads, and the windows above are similar. In the outer bays are two doorways with simpler surrounds, and the windows are sashes, in the lower two storeys with round heads and keystones, those in the ground floor also with aprons, and the windows in the top floor have segmental heads.[2][39]
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II | |
13, 15, 17, 19, 21 and 23 Station Road, wall, piers, steps and railings 53°42′41″N 1°37′34″W / 53.71125°N 1.62612°W |
c. 1870 | The warehouses, later used for other purposes, are in | II | |
16 and 18 Station Road 53°42′38″N 1°37′32″W / 53.71054°N 1.62556°W |
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c. 1870 | A stone warehouse with moulded cornice over the ground floor, a band, a moulded eaves cornice and blocking course, and a slate roof. There are three storeys, a front of six bays, and the windows are sashes. In the ground floor are round-headed arches with moulded surrounds, and pilaster-like piers with moulded capitals, containing two doors and four windows, the windows in the middle floor have segmental heads, and those in the top floor have square heads.[2][41]
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II |
20 and 22 Station Road 53°42′37″N 1°37′31″W / 53.71037°N 1.62538°W |
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c. 1870 | A pair of stone warehouses with moulded eaves cornice on consoles, a blocking course, and a slate roof. There are three storeys and a symmetrical front of eight bays, the middle two bays projecting forward and containing a round-arched carriage entry. The outer bays contain central doorways with round-arched heads, pilasters, vermiculated spandrels, and keystones. The windows in the lower two floors have round heads, keystones, and aprons, in the middle floor also with cornices, and the windows in the top floor have square heads.[2][42]
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II |
24 and 26 Station Road 53°42′37″N 1°37′31″W / 53.71022°N 1.62523°W |
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c. 1870 | A warehouse in | II |
31 and 33 Station Road and adjoining warehouse 53°42′39″N 1°37′31″W / 53.71076°N 1.62530°W |
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c. 1870 | The warehouses are in stone with moulded sill bands, a moulded cornice over the ground floor, a moulded eaves cornice on square brackets, and a hipped slate roof. There are three storeys and a basement, the basement vermiculated, a front of four bays, two similar bays on the sides, and plainer eight bays behind these. Steps lead up to the round-arched doorway that has pilasters, carved spandrels, and a cornice on console brackets. The ground floor windows have round arches, two lights and a central colonnette with a foliated capital, the windows in the middle floor are round-headed with a segmental pediment, and the top floor windows are square-headed.[2][44]
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II |
32, 34 and 40 Station Road 53°42′35″N 1°37′28″W / 53.70975°N 1.62431°W |
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c. 1870 | A row of warehouses, the central ones demolished, in lintels and lobed arches. In front of the building are squat piers with segmental pedimented heads, and between them is Gothic ironwork.[2][45]
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II |
35 and 37 Station Road 53°42′38″N 1°37′30″W / 53.71050°N 1.62505°W |
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c. 1870 | A pair of warehouses in stone, the ground floor rock-faced, with moulded sill bands, a moulded eaves cornice on triangular brackets, and a slate roof. There are four storeys and a symmetrical front of four bays. The round-headed doorways in the outer bays and the windows in the lower two storeys have rock-faced voussoirs and surrounds. The windows in the second floor are round headed with quoined surrounds, and those in the top floor have segmental arches.[46]
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II |
Batley Barless Fire Company 53°42′43″N 1°37′38″W / 53.71199°N 1.62718°W |
c. 1870 | A shop and offices on a corner site, the building is in stone with moulded eaves cornice, and a slate roof. There are three storeys and a basement, four bays on each side, and a curved bay on the corner. On the Hick Lane front is a portico with Tuscan columns, a full entablature, and a pediment, and the door has a fanlight. The windows in the ground floor have round arches, aprons, and cornices on consoles, in the middle floor they are round-arched with vermiculated keystones, and in the top floor they have segmental heads.[47]
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II | |
Methodist Sunday School 53°42′44″N 1°37′42″W / 53.71216°N 1.62820°W |
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1870 | The former Sunday school is in stone, with moulded brackets, and a hipped slate roof. There are two storeys, a front of five bays, and six bays along the sides. The central doorway and the ground floor windows have segmental-arched heads and a continuous impost band. The windows in the upper floor have round heads and rusticated voussoirs, those on the front divided into two tiers.[27][48]
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II |
Former Staincliffe Vicarage 53°42′30″N 1°39′09″W / 53.70823°N 1.65241°W |
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1870 | The former vicarage was designed by W. H. Crossland, it is in stone, and has a slate roof with numerous coped gables. There are two storeys and an attic, and three bays. The central porch is gabled and has buttresses and a hood mould with the date. To the right is a two-storey canted bay window, and the other windows are mullioned and transomed.[49] | II |
The Xclusiv 53°42′36″N 1°37′27″W / 53.71004°N 1.62419°W |
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c. 1870 | A warehouse and office, later a club, in Italian Gothic style, it is in stone with a brick parapet. The building has been reduced to one storey, and has a flat roof and a curved front of seven bays. The central doorway has pilasters with square pedestals and foliated capitals. Above it is a round arch containing an oculus, and a Gothic arch, all in a square surround with carved spandrels. There is a similar doorway in the right bay. The other bays contain windows with blind arches and Gothic arched hoods with alternately coloured voussoirs.[50] | II |
St Saviour's Church, Brown Hill 53°43′43″N 1°39′23″W / 53.72855°N 1.65640°W |
1870–71 | The church, which is in | II | |
Purlwell Infant School 53°42′26″N 1°38′25″W / 53.70718°N 1.64018°W |
1873–74 | The school is in stone and has a slate roof with chamfered gable copings. There is a single storey, with gabled cross-wings at the ends. In the centre is a gabled block containing three lancet windows, and to its left is a square tower with and entrance and a louvred bell openings and a saddleback roof. Between these are blocks with gablets and gabled entrances. At the extreme right is a lower tower with a pyramidal roof.[27][53] | II | |
Wall, gate piers and gates, Infant school 53°42′25″N 1°38′25″W / 53.70697°N 1.64014°W |
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1873–74 | The wall enclosing the school grounds are in stone, and incorporate three pairs of carved gate moulded caps. In the centre are iron gates with an inscription.[54]
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II |
1–12 Market Place and 2, 4, 6 and 7 Back Providence Street 53°42′52″N 1°38′02″W / 53.71444°N 1.63401°W |
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c. 1875 | A row of eight shops on a curved and sloping site, they are in stone with impost bands, sill bands, bracketed eaves, and slate roofs. There are three storeys, in the ground floor are shop fronts, and above are sash windows with round, segmental or flat heads, some of them tripartite. Above the two central shops are round-headed dormers, and to the left is a gabled dormer.[55] | II |
231 Bradford Road 53°42′10″N 1°37′48″W / 53.70286°N 1.63004°W |
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c. 1875 | A stone warehouse in quoins, a bracketed cornice, and a Welsh slate roof. There are three storeys, and the front facing the street has three bays. The ground floor is rusticated, and in the left bay is a round-headed doorway with an ornate surround, fluted pilasters, a fanlight, and a segmental pediment on paired brackets containing a cartouche. To the right are segmental-headed sash windows with vermiculated keystones and panelled aprons. The middle floor contains casement windows with pediments, two with false balconies, and in the top floor are casement windows with segmental heads, and decorative surrounds.[56]
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II |
Bagshaw Museum 53°43′40″N 1°38′44″W / 53.72790°N 1.64543°W |
1875 | A large house, The Woodlands, converted into a museum in 1911. It is in stone on a | II* | |
Park Road School, walls and gates 53°42′55″N 1°37′46″W / 53.71514°N 1.62945°W |
1877 | The school and schoolmaster's house, which are in quoins, and roofs with coped gables, kneelers, and finials. There are two storeys, eleven bays on the front and 14 bays at the rear on the left. On the front is a two-storey gabled porch with a pointed arch and a datestone. To the left is a gabled wing with a large pointed window with wheel tracery. To the right is a four-bay gabled wing, a lower four-bay block, and two large gabled wings. In front of the grounds is a stone wall containing square chamfered piers with pyramidal caps, ornate iron railings, and a cast iron gate.[27][58]
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II | |
Former Barclays Bank, wall and gate piers 53°42′46″N 1°37′43″W / 53.71269°N 1.62866°W |
1877 | The former bank and manager's house, later used for other purposes, is in stone, with paired moulded gutter brackets, and a slate roof with coped gables and finials. There are three storeys and seven bays. In the left bay is a gabled porch flanked by three engaged columns with foliate capitals, the doorway has a round inscribed arch with coats of arms in the tympanum, and in the gable is diapering and the date. The windows have engaged colonnettes, and those in the right three bays have hood moulds. In front of the building are stone walls with iron railings and gate piers with octagonal pointed caps.[27][59]
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II | |
St John's Church, Carlinghow 53°43′14″N 1°38′50″W / 53.72068°N 1.64724°W |
1878–79 | The church, which is in Gothic Revival style, is built in stone with a slate roof. It consists of a nave with a clerestory, north and south aisles, a chancel, and a north vestry. At the western end of the south aisle is the base of an unbuilt tower that forms a porch, with buttresses and a round angle turret.[4][60] | II | |
233 Bradford Road 53°42′10″N 1°37′48″W / 53.70291°N 1.62989°W |
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c. 1880 | A warehouse in stone on a | II |
51 Station Road 53°42′36″N 1°37′26″W / 53.71013°N 1.62398°W |
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c. 1880 | Offices and a warehouse, later used for other purposes, the building is in stone on a corner site, with string courses and a slate roof. There are three storeys and a basement, seven bays curving round the corner, and on the left is a single gabled bay. In the left bay, steps lead up to a porch with red granite columns and richly carved capitals, a cornice carved with foliage, and a keystone with a carved bust. In the gable pediment is a shield flanked by figures, and on the apex is a squatting dog. In the other bays, the ground floor windows are round headed with carved voussoirs and keystones. The upper floor windows are square-headed, in the middle floor is a decorated frieze, and at the top is a decorative cornice and a perforated parapet. On the right corner is a round turret with a conical roof.[62]
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II |
Cross Bank Methodist Sunday School 53°42′58″N 1°38′26″W / 53.71624°N 1.64047°W |
1882 | The former Sunday school is in stone with a hipped slate roof, two storeys, five bays at the front and seven bays along the sides. The middle three bays on the front project under an open pediment with a vase acroterion. It contains a central doorway above which is an open segmental pediment containing an inscription. Flanking the doorway are pilasters with foliated impost bands and round-headed windows with keystones. In the upper floor are three windows divided by red granite colonnettes, flanked by pilasters with foliated capitals, over them are arches with carvings in the tympani, and under the outer windows are tiled panels. The windows in the outer bays and along the sides have round-arched heads and impost bands, those in the upper floor with hood moulds and alternately coloured voussoirs.[63] | II | |
Hyrstlands 53°42′16″N 1°38′28″W / 53.70434°N 1.64117°W |
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1891 | A large house, later used for other purposes, it is in stone, with a | II |
Public Baths 53°42′45″N 1°38′04″W / 53.71256°N 1.63436°W |
1893 | The public baths are in stone with | II | |
Former Technical School 53°42′45″N 1°38′05″W / 53.71257°N 1.63469°W |
1893 | The building is in stone, and has moulded surround and a semicircular fanlight. The next block is gabled with two storeys, and contains mullioned windows with entablatures, and between the storeys is an inscribed tablet. The right block has three storeys, and to the left is a segmental-headed doorway with a moulded surround and a mermaid keystone. The windows in the lower two floors are cross mullions, and in the top floor are dormer windows breaking through the eaves with pediments.[66]
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II | |
Former Midland Bank 53°42′43″N 1°37′39″W / 53.71191°N 1.62752°W |
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1890s | The former bank building, which is in | II |
Former National Westminster Bank 53°42′42″N 1°37′38″W / 53.71172°N 1.62734°W |
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c. 1905 | The former bank and manager's house were designed by | II |
Public Library 53°42′50″N 1°38′03″W / 53.71378°N 1.63425°W |
1906 | A Carnegie library, it is in stone with a hipped slate roof. There are two storeys and a basement, and a symmetrical front of five bays. The middle and outer bays have pediments containing carved tympani, the middle one also with an oculus. The central round-arched doorway has paired engaged Ionic columns, a segmental archivolt, and rich carving with foliage, shields and the date. Above it is an arched window with an inscribed panel below. The ground floor windows are round-headed with alternately blocked voussoirs, and the windows in the upper floor have flat heads and are divided by Ionic pilasters. In the centre of the roof is a two-stage clock tower with a leaded dome and a cupola.[25][70] | II | |
War memorial 53°42′47″N 1°38′02″W / 53.71311°N 1.63389°W |
1923 | The war memorial is in the centre of the War Memorial Gardens, and consists of a bronze statue of a soldier standing and holding a rifle. The statue is on a square stone column with an inscription, on a square base with a cornice. Surrounding it is a circular wall with iron railings containing four iron gates. On the wall are plaques with the names of those lost in the two World Wars and other conflicts.[71] | II | |
Pair of telephone kiosks 53°42′50″N 1°38′03″W / 53.71399°N 1.63415°W |
1935 | The telephones kiosks are on the north side of the public library. They are the K6 type, designed by Giles Gilbert Scott, and constructed in cast iron with a square plan and a dome. The kiosks have replacement Elizabeth II crowns in the top panels.[72] | II |
References
Notes
- ^ The list contains, broadly, the listed buildings in the wards of Batley East and Batley West, with some buildings in those wards nearer the centre of Dewsbury being included in Listed buildings in Dewsbury.
Citations
- ^ Harman & Pevsner (2017), p. 117
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Harman & Pevsner (2017), p. 121
- ^ Historic England
- ^ a b c d Harman & Pevsner (2017), p. 118
- ^ Historic England & 1184122
- ^ Harman & Pevsner (2017), pp. 117–118
- ^ Historic England & 1134620
- ^ Historic England & 1313718
- ^ Historic England & 1134637
- ^ Historic England & 1134635
- ^ Historic England & 1313681
- ^ Historic England & 1313680
- ^ Historic England & 1300522
- ^ Historic England & 1300337
- ^ Historic England & 1135381
- ^ Historic England & 1134638
- ^ Historic England & 1134647
- ^ Historic England & 1419722
- ^ Historic England & 1313682
- ^ Historic England & 1183807
- ^ Historic England & 1452197
- ^ Historic England & 1452195
- ^ Historic England & 1313693
- ^ Historic England & 1134650
- ^ a b c d e f g Harman & Pevsner (2017), p. 119
- ^ Historic England & 1300324
- ^ a b c d e f g h Harman & Pevsner (2017), p. 120
- ^ Historic England & 1300340
- ^ Historic England & 1184080
- ^ Historic England & 1134640
- ^ Historic England & 1134641
- ^ Historic England & 1183956
- ^ Historic England & 1134612
- ^ Historic England & 1134644
- ^ Historic England & 1271725
- ^ Historic England & 1271724
- ^ Historic England & 1313694
- ^ Historic England & 1183965
- ^ Historic England & 1184110
- ^ Historic England & 1134614
- ^ Historic England & 1134618
- ^ Historic England & 1184116
- ^ Historic England & 1134619
- ^ Historic England & 1134615
- ^ Historic England & 1300286
- ^ Historic England & 1300308
- ^ Historic England & 1134634
- ^ Historic England & 1134645
- ^ Historic England & 1134613
- ^ Historic England & 1134617
- ^ Harman & Pevsner (2017), p. 127
- ^ Historic England & 1134636
- ^ Historic England & 1134610
- ^ Historic England & 1134611
- ^ Historic England & 1261506
- ^ Historic England & 1268334
- ^ Historic England & 1119738
- ^ Historic England & 1313695
- ^ Historic England & 1254003
- ^ Historic England & 1134643
- ^ Historic England & 1268335
- ^ Historic England & 1134616
- ^ Historic England & 1313692
- ^ Historic England & 1134621
- ^ Historic England & 1253988
- ^ Historic England & 1313326
- ^ Historic England & 1313696
- ^ Harman & Pevsner (2017), pp. 120–121
- ^ Historic England & 1135383
- ^ Historic England & 1313699
- ^ Historic England & 1134639
- ^ Historic England & 1313306
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- Harman, Ruth; ISBN 978-0-300-22468-9