West Bretton

West Bretton is a village and civil parish in the City of Wakefield in West Yorkshire, England. It lies 7 miles (11 km) from Wakefield, 8 miles (13 km) from Barnsley, 9 miles (14 km) from Dewsbury, and 11 miles (18 km) from Huddersfield, close to junction 38 of the M1 motorway. It has a population of 546,[1] reducing to 459 at the 2011 Census.[2]

West Bretton

War Memorial, West Bretton
West Bretton
Location within West Yorkshire
Population459 (2011)
OS grid referenceSE285135
Civil parish
  • West Bretton
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townWAKEFIELD
Postcode districtWF4
Dialling code01924
PoliceWest Yorkshire
FireWest Yorkshire
AmbulanceYorkshire

There is a school in the village, West Bretton Junior and Infant School, and a church, which is an Anglican-Methodist local ecumenical partnership.

History

Toponymy

Bretton derives from the Old English Brettas, the Britons and tūn meaning an enclosure, farmstead, village or estate.[3] The Briton's farm or settlement was recorded as Bretone in the Domesday Book of 1086 and West Bretton in 1200.[4]

Manor

This part of Yorkshire was laid waste in the Harrying of the North after the Norman conquest of England.[5] Most of West Bretton was granted to the de Lacys, lords of the Honour of Pontefract by William I and a small part to the Manor of Wakefield.[6] After the devastation, growth was slow but more land was eventually cultivated to sustain a growing population. A water-powered corn mill was recorded in 13th century and in 1379 there was a smith. The population at this time was approximately 70 people and one family had adopted the surname "de Bretton".[7] The de Bretton, Dronfield and Wentworth families became pre-eminent and Sir Willian Dronfield held the manor when he died in 1406.[8]

Swein de Bretton granted the right to pasture 200 cattle and sheep on land north of the village to the monks of Byland Abbey.[9] The population suffered the effects of the Black Death in 1350.[10] Richard Wentworth inherited the manor and hall in 1477.[11] His great grandson, Sir Thomas Wentworth was Henry VIII's Knight Marshall and keeper of Sandal Castle. An oak bed from this time, supposedly slept in by the king, is preserved at Temple Newsam.[12] The old hall, on a different site to the present hall, was recorded on Christopher Saxton's Yorkshire map of 1577 but its exact location is unknown.[13]

Thomas Wentworth fought with the Royalists in the English Civil War and was captured at the Battle of Naseby and his estates confiscated. His estates were returned and he was knighted in 1660 when the monarchy was restored.[12] Bretton Hall was built by Sir William Wentworth who inherited the estate in 1706. He was a Captain of Horse in the Trained Guards in the Jacobite rising of 1745. He was buried in the park chapel.[14] Sir Thomas Wentworth (1735–1792) transformed the parkland to what it is today. He changed his name to Blackett, his mother's name, when he inherited the Blackett fortune. He was unmarried but his illegitimate daughter Diana, wife of Lt Colonel Thomas Beaumont MP for Northumberland inherited the estate.[14]

The Beaumonts' main residence was Bretton Hall and a considerable amount of money was spent on it during their time there.[15] Their son Thomas Wentworth Beaumont was Liberal MP for seats in Stafford and Northumberland and supporter of the Reform Act 1832.[16] His son Wentworth Blackett Beaumont spent more time in the north east where he owned more than 14,000 acres of land as well as the Bretton estate. He was ennobled as Baron Allendale of Allendale. His son Wentworth Canning Blackett Beaumont was MP for Hexham and a lord-in-waiting to George V.[15] Wentworth Henry Canning Beaumont made Bretton his home.[17] During the Second World War the hall was used by the military and maintenance cost rose leading to its sale to the West Riding County Council in 1947 followed by the estate land ten years later.[18] The National Union of Mineworkers had wanted to turn it into a convalescent home.[19]

Agriculture

The West Yorkshire Archaeological Society has documents relating to the three-field system that operated in the village in medieval times.[20] Its fields were enclosed by 1759. Home Farm was built by 1800. Other farms were Town Farm and Manor Farm. Evidence of brewing is the old malt kiln at the farm of the same name.[21]

Industry

After the Dissolution of the Monasteries Matthew Wentworth bought "all the myne, and delff of ironstone" around Bentley Grange, the Byland Abbey property. Though the ironstone was exhausted by the mid-1600s, smithies continued to operate fuelled by charcoal. The furnace at Bretton supplied pig iron to Colnebridge, Wortley Top Forge and Kirkstall in 1728.[22] The furnace at Bretton was taken over by the Cockshutts of Wortley and pig iron was produced there in 1806[23] but the site had closed by 1820.[24] Attempts were made to exploit coal which outcropped in Bretton but were small in scale. A mine was operated by Thomas Wood in 1806, Bretton Colliery managed by Tweedale and Watson paid rent to the estate in 1820s and bell pits, the Gate Royd Pits, (near the motorway service area) operated in 1849, The Jagger Brothers who owned Emley Colliery opened shafts on Malt Kiln Farm between 1856 and 1871.[24]

Where millstone grit outcropped it was quarried, mostly between the 17th and 19th centuries and is the building stone for farmhouses and boundary walls. There was a brickworks producing rustic red bricks from fireclay outcrops near Bower Hill Lane.[25] From 1723 until 1737 William Harrison who had moved from Burslem was making pots in the village.[26]

Governance

Historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, the chapelry of West Bretton was partly in the parish of Sandal Magna in the wapentake of Agbrigg and Morley and partly in the parish of Silkstone in the wapentake of Staincross. It became part of the Wakefield poor law union in 1837.[27][28] West Bretton became part of Wakefield Rural District, created in 1894 and abolished 1974, when it became part of the City of Wakefield Metropolitan District Council.[29]

Geography

West Bretton covers 849 acres (344 ha) of hilly land from 122 metres (400 ft) to 152 metres (499 ft) above sea level. It is at the watershed of the Rivers Dearne and Calder.[30] The River Dearne flows west to east through the landscaped valley in Bretton Park where it is dammed to form two lakes.

The underlying geology is that of the Carboniferous period and comprises 18 coal seams of coal measures and the Tankersley ironstone seam. Millstone grit outcrops were quarried for building stone and dry stone boundary walls.[31]

West Bretton is on the A637 Barnsley to Huddersfield road, south west of the junction with the A636 Wakefield to Denby Dale road and close to the M1 motorway, which passes to the east of the village.

Education

Sir Thomas Wentworth (who changed his name to Blackett) built a school sometime after he inherited the estate in 1763. Sir Thomas paid a schoolmaster £20 per year. It became a national school and was used as a Sunday School. In 1865–1866 it had 65 pupils and when education was made compulsory to the age of 13 in 1881 there were 100.[32] West Bretton J & I School, with 89 pupils on roll aged from 3 to 11,[33] occupies the original Grade II-listed school house.[34]

Bretton Hall College opened in 1949 as a teacher training college, and specialist arts college of higher education. Among its more well known alumni are the TV comedy team known as The League of Gentleman, writers Colin Welland, Kay Mellor and John Godber and educationalist Sir Ken Robinson. John Godber wrote a play about life as a drama student at the college, It Started With a Kiss. The college offered University of Leeds degrees and was later, subsequently affiliated to the University of Leeds but closed in their care in 2007.[35]

Religion

West Bretton was divided between the parishes of Sandal Magna and Silkstone and a chapel of ease was built by the Dronfields in 1358.[36] St Bartholemew's Chapel was mentioned in a will of 1406.[8] In 1744 the old chapel was replaced on a different site by the present Park Chapel which contained the Wentworth's family pew.[36] It was given to the Diocese of Wakefield in 1959.[37]

Methodism came to the village in 1811. A cottage, rented from the estate, was registered as a place of worship for Protestant Dissenters, Primitive Methodists in 1861.[38] Methodists and Anglicans created a local ecumenical partnership, the Church in West Bretton, in 1982. It uses the mid-19th century Methodist premises.[39]

Yorkshire Sculpture Park

Yorkshire Sculpture Park entrance

The Yorkshire Sculpture Park, consists of 0.80 square kilometres (200 acres) of landscaped ground with a large collection of sculptures including some by Elisabeth Frink, some by Auguste Rodin, and others by local sculptors Barbara Hepworth, born in Wakefield, and Henry Moore, born in Castleford.[40]

Sport

West Bretton Cricket Club on Park Lane and has two teams in the Pontefract & District Cricket League, in Divisions 2 and 5. The Sunday side plays in the Barnsley & District Sunday League, in Division 1.[41] In 2007 the club celebrated its centenary year, and marked the occasion by inviting the former England wicket-keeper turned artist Jack Russell to visit the ground and paint a landscape of the pitch and clubhouse.

gollark: We have that *now* and palaiologos is already abusing it for censorship.
gollark: On the plus side, they do not plan to utterly obliterate Toki Pona?
gollark: I think the worst change is probably #10, which seems ridiculously broad and, er, strict.
gollark: Yes, nobody enforced it.
gollark: The English-only thing was in fact a rule even in the early lyrical era.

References

  1. Office for National Statistics : Census 2001 : Parish Headcounts : Wakefield Retrieved 12 September 2009
  2. "Civil Parish population 2011". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
  3. West Bretton, the University of Nottingham, retrieved 7 November 2017
  4. Mills 1998, p. 53.
  5. Wilkinson 1989, p. 4.
  6. Wilkinson 1989, p. 5.
  7. Wilkinson 1989, p. 7.
  8. Wilkinson 1989, p. 9.
  9. Wilkinson 1989, p. 10.
  10. Wilkinson 1989, p. 11.
  11. Wilkinson 1989, p. 12.
  12. Wilkinson 1989, p. 13.
  13. Wilkinson 2002, p. 45.
  14. Wilkinson 1989, p. 14.
  15. Wilkinson 1989, p. 16.
  16. Wilkinson 1989, p. 17.
  17. Wilkinson 1989, p. 45.
  18. Wilkinson 2002, p. 18.
  19. Wilkinson 1989, p. 18.
  20. Wilkinson 1989, p. 6.
  21. Wilkinson 1989, p. 30.
  22. Wilkinson 1989, p. 20.
  23. Wilkinson 1989, p. 21.
  24. Wilkinson 1989, p. 22.
  25. Wilkinson 1989, p. 23.
  26. Wilkinson 1989, p. 24.
  27. Lewis, Samuel (1848), "Bretton, West", A Topographical Dictionary of England, British History Online, pp. 357–362, retrieved 29 March 2010
  28. Wakefield Workhouse, workhouses.org, archived from the original on 5 June 2011, retrieved 3 April 2010
  29. Unit History of West Bretton, Vision of Britain, retrieved 3 April 2010
  30. Wilkinson 1989, p. 1.
  31. Wilkinson 1989, pp. 1–2.
  32. Wilkinson 1989, pp. 52–53.
  33. Local Schools Information, Wakefield Council, retrieved 21 April 2013
  34. Historic England, "The School House (West Bretton Primary School) (1299994)", National Heritage List for England, retrieved 21 April 2013
  35. A history of Bretton Hall, Wakefield Council, archived from the original on 27 January 2010, retrieved 21 April 2013
  36. Wilkinson 1989, p. 38.
  37. Wilkinson 1989, p. 41.
  38. Wilkinson 1989, p. 44.
  39. The Church in West Bretton, A Church Near You, retrieved 21 April 2013
  40. Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Yorkshire Sculpture Park, retrieved 29 March 2010
  41. West Bretton CC, West Bretton CC, retrieved 29 March 2010

Bibliography

  • Mills, A. D. (1998), Dictionary of English Place-Names, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-280074-4
  • Wilkinson, John (2002), Exploring the Upper Dearne Valley, Bridge Publications, ISBN 0-947934-34-0
  • Wilkinson, John F. (1989), Farmstead of the Britons, Bridge Publications, ISBN 0-947934-25-1

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