Yorkshire Post

How they cornered the market in getting their way

Plaque is unveiled to mark the spot where traders banded together in 1899 to fight for their rights

- DAVID BEHRENS COUNTY CORRESPOND­ENT Email: david.behrens@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

THE MOOD was grim as the market traders gathered in the Wentworth Cafe... the roof above their stalls was leaking and they couldn’t afford to use the railway cloakrooms.

It was the last year of the 19th century but the beginning of the modern markets era, their tenancies newly passed from private landowners to the municipali­ty.

Yesterday, as they unveiled a plaque in the centre of Sheffield, opposite where the cafe had stood, there was a consensus that while much had improved, some problems were perennial.

“Those leaky roofs – still a bone of contention,” said Chris Savage, project manager for the National Market Traders’ Federation.

It was his organisati­on that the stallholde­rs of South Yorkshire had founded on that day in 1899.

“They were from market tenants’ associatio­ns in Yorkshire and they all felt the need for a collective voice to lobby for their rights and add weight to their calls for changes,” Mr Savage said.

The railway cloakrooms were a particular­ly pressing issue, for they all came in by steam train. They got their way – as the old century fell away, so did the fees.

There are an estimated 32,000 market traders in the UK, and about two in three are members of the federation, which now has its national headquarte­rs in Barnsley.

But it was Pinstone Street, the original site of Sheffield market, where the Peace Gardens now stand, that was the focus for yesterday’s short ceremony. It followed the annual conference of the federation at the Novotel, five minutes away.

Sheffield’s Lord Mayor, Coun Anne Murphy, wore a large pink hat as she helped to unveil the roundel that now commemorat­es the first meeting.

Word of it had evidently spread quickly, for by 1905, some 220 members from across Yorkshire had joined. Six years later, it went national.

“In Sheffield, the Dukes of Norfolk had run the city markets for hundreds of years, and it was said they collected their tolls only twice yearly,” Mr Savage said.

“But during the industrial revolution, the local authoritie­s in a lot of the big cities up north bought the rights from the landowners and began to exercise control, to be able to more effectivel­y feed the local population.”

Sheffield, whose market halls, slaughterh­ouses and outdoor stalls were concentrat­ed around the old Castle area, was teeming with traders of every kind. Such was their collective muscle that when the First World War came, the federation was able to extract a guarantee from the council’s markets committee for a new stall for every trader who had given one up to go to fight. Its members also secured a concession from the private rail companies which allowed them each to carry up to 60lbs of their stock, free of charge.

The federation itself settled in Sheffield’s Corn Exchange. When that burned down in 1947, it moved to a pub and then to rented offices in Chapeltown and Spital Hill.

“There is a very strong market heritage in Yorkshire,” Mr Savage said.

“Many northern towns saw their market halls especially as badges of civic pride.”

There is a very strong market heritage in Yorkshire. Chris Savage, project manager for the National Market Traders’ Federation.

 ??  ?? SETTING OUT THEIR STALL: Main picture, the Moor Market in 1983 in Sheffield, the city where traders banded together to found the National Market Traders’ Federation; above from left, a 1947 market in Barnsley, which is now home to the federation’s...
SETTING OUT THEIR STALL: Main picture, the Moor Market in 1983 in Sheffield, the city where traders banded together to found the National Market Traders’ Federation; above from left, a 1947 market in Barnsley, which is now home to the federation’s...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom