Yorkshire Post

Village’s secret history unearthed

A former mining area might also have been the birthplace of industry in the region, and a ‘seaside’ resort

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

FOR YEARS it was a pit village, an important cog on the wheel of coal that kept the West Riding turning.

But a raft of new discoverie­s suggests that the settlement of Elsecar, midway between Barnsley and Rotherham, may also have been the cradle of the industrial revolution in Yorkshire – and the first “model village”, half a century before Saltaire.

And though it is 70 miles inland, it might even have served as one of the region’s early “seaside” resorts.

Historians piecing together the history of the area have found the remnants of a complete industrial “estate village” built for the Earls Fitzwillia­m, whose family seat a mile down the road was the biggest privately owned house in Britain.

The fourth and fifth Earls built cottages, schools, pubs and a church for the workers at their mighty ironworks, and also put in a canal and basin to transport the finished product.

“It is absolutely the precursor of model villages like Saltaire and it is hugely significan­t to the industrial revolution – it’s Yorkshire’s Ironbridge Gorge,” said Trevor Mitchell, a planning director for Historic England, which last year designated Elsecar as one of 10 “heritage action zones” across the country.

“We hadn’t realised there was so much evidence and such a big scale of ironworkin­g around Elsecar,” Mr Mitchell said. “People always thought of it as a coal mining heritage site but it’s actually an iron site.”

He added: “We’re excited by what we’ve discovered. We didn’t know the ironworker­s’ houses were still there, or the extent of the survival of the ironworks themselves.

“It’s an example of how the whole of the UK industrial­ised and a reminder that these aristocrat­ic estates were enormous businesses, with a whole army of workers – an entire cross-section of society in this one place.”

Among the newly discovered clues to Elsecar’s past is the entrance in a private garden to a mine. The future King William IV is thought to have used it to get access in 1828.

But the area’s most distinctiv­e feature was its canal, for which the Fitzwillia­ms also put in a reservoir further up the hill to keep it topped up. It became such a popular feature that day-trippers from Sheffield used it as a cheaper alternativ­e to Scarboroug­h for a few hours’ fresh air and a paddle. A shooting gallery was establishe­d later, and the village became known as Elsecar-by-the-Sea, a name that has stuck today. Mr Mitchell said: “Fitzwillia­m made a decision to invest in exploiting his iron, and the canal and its basin was the turning point.

“It was one thing getting it out of the ground, but transporti­ng it 200 miles to where it was needed was an expensive process if you only had donkeys. With a canal they could load the iron onto barges and increase their production and their market share.”

Wentworth Woodhouse, the country seat of the Earls Fitzwillia­m, which has a façade twice as long as that of Buckingham Palace, is the subject of a £7.6m Government restoratio­n package.

It is hugely significan­t to the industrial revolution. Trevor Mitchell, a planning director for Historic England, on Elsecar.

 ?? MAIN PICTURE: SCOTT MERRYLEES. ?? INDUSTRIAL HERITAGE: Left, historian John Tanner looks at some of the remains of Elsecar’s former ironworks; the ‘model village’ pre-dates Saltaire and was once known as a ‘seaside resort’; below, its rifle range.
MAIN PICTURE: SCOTT MERRYLEES. INDUSTRIAL HERITAGE: Left, historian John Tanner looks at some of the remains of Elsecar’s former ironworks; the ‘model village’ pre-dates Saltaire and was once known as a ‘seaside resort’; below, its rifle range.
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