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Over Wyresdale

Over Wyresdale maps (2 available)

Old map of Over Wyresdale

Over Wyresdale books (13 available)

Over Wyresdale memories

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You can also read memories of nearby places in Lancashire below.

Lancashire memories

The Ormerod family.

Burnley, Ormerod Hall 1895

Ormerod House passed out of the Ormerod family when the male line died out and the three daughters of the last Ormerod married. Their husbands were John Hargreaves, a local coal mine owner, the Rev William Thursby who became vicar of the local church and General Scarlett who led the Charge of the Heavy Brigade to retake the field after the Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaclava. The family fortunes grew with the mines during the Industrial Revolution and the boom in the cotton industry but in their enthusiasm to mine more and more coal they managed to extend the mine workings from the pit head some four miles away, under the house which caused ...read more here
A memory of Burnley contributed by I Ormerod

Platers and Stampers

I worked here as a Plater for about 1yr.Not a good memory.They sacked me for taking time off to join the RAF so I joined the RAF.Best move I ever made.
A memory of Burnley contributed by Brian Brierley

My Early Years

On the 2nd September 1952 I was born at Manor Farm. I lived there with my parents, my maternal grandfather and two older brothers. I know my grandmother was alive when I was born but, unfortunately died soon after. My grandfather was called Seriah Butler and was the tenant of Manor Farm and when my mother Dorothy Butler married Albert Shorrock at the village church my father worked on the farm, in fact we all did.
I remember travelling down the Dykes to bring the cattle home for milking. I would sit on the handlebars of my Dads bike to help with the cows.
There was an orchard around the farmhouse and I can remember my mother making damsom jam ...read more here
A memory of Yealand Conyers contributed by Sue Tomlinson

Coopers and Booths

My Great, Great Great Grandfather, William Booth, used to push a cart up and down the streets of Clayton le Moors with his son John Booth, selling shellfish. He was known as 'Muscle Bill' and his son, 'Oyster Jack'. (This is actually a memory passed down from my ancestors to my 3rd cousin.)
They lived at 'Old Sparth House' from around 1895 onwards. William died in 1900 age 79. Most of the family married and brought their children up in Clayton le Moors. A few emigrated abroad. Robert Booth to Australia, Ellen Booth married Charles Battersby and moved to Canada. John Booth's daughter Luciana Booth married William Cooper from Great Harwood at All Saints, and my Grandfather, Robert Cooper was born ...read more here
A memory of Clayton Le Moors contributed by DONNA COOPER

Extracts From Over Wyresdale & Lancashire books

Hodder River, Lower Hodder Bridges 1858

Here we see the pack-horse bridge at Hurst Green. The newer road bridge, built in 1826, is behind it. Clitheroe and Great Mitton are to the right, and Stoneyhurst to the left. In 1648 Oliver Cromwell himself led 4,000 men across that old bridge in single file. He had stayed the night at Stoneyhurst, and it took most of the day for the horses, mules and men to cross. The bridge was built in the mid 1500s at a cost of £70, and was paid for by Richard Sherburne, lord of the manor. It is still there today; it is being restored at the moment, as it was deemed unsafe by the authorities.
An extract from from"Heart of Lancashire Photographic Memories".

Slaidburn, Church Street 1921

Now very much part of Lancashire, the village of Slaidburn was in Yorkshire at the time of our photograph. Slaid means ‘flat marshy ground’, burn is the Old English word for brook, so the name means ‘flat marshy ground by the brook’, which describes the area well. The Black Bull public house on the left was later to become a Youth Hostel. Note the very large board with the landlord’s name (A Walker) on it. This was the local custom at the turn of the 19th/20th century, and it led to many pubs taking the landlord’s name or nickname as their name in later years. This is where Church Street meets Chapel Street. On the right we see the famous Hark to Bounty Inn, which was used as an area court house.
An extract from from"Heart of Lancashire Photographic Memories".

Slaidburn, Town End c1955

Slaidburn nestles in a hollow with higher ground around it. As well as the River Hodder at the east of the village, it has Crossdale Brook running through it. That brook has a weir just before it enters the village, which was built to keep the water deeper for a mill that was here two centuries ago. It was at Slaidburn that many of the ancient pack-horse trails used to meet or cross. Here we see the outskirts of Slaidburn.
An extract from from"Heart of Lancashire Photographic Memories".

Slaidburn, Hammerton Hall 1921

This is the most northerly of all the photographs in our book. The Hall lies in a crook of the River Hodder, with a stream called Barn Gill and its waterfall in the Hall grounds. The bridge in the foreground is over the Barn Gill. Hammerton Hall is really an enlarged and fortified farm-house.
An extract from from"Heart of Lancashire Photographic Memories".

Dunsop Bridge, Brennand Valley 1921

This lovely view was taken just a few miles north of Dunsop Bridge. We can see the tiny River Brennand running down to join the Whitendale River to make the River Dunsop, which gives the town its name. The Ordnance Survey department has declared Dunsop Bridge to be the village nearest to the exact centre of the British Isles.
An extract from from"Heart of Lancashire Photographic Memories".