Churwell

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Churwell
Yorkshire
West Riding
Churwell Working Mens' Club (23rd October 2021) 002.jpg
Churwell Working Men's Club
Location
Data
Post town: Leeds
Postcode: LS27
Dialling code: 0113
Local Government
Council: Leeds
Parliamentary
constituency:
Morley and Outwood

Churwell is a village which has become suburb of Leeds, in the West Riding of Yorkshire, It is found between Leeds city centre and Morley; three miles south-west of Leeds city centre and a mile and a half from the Leeds United's Elland Road Football Ground.

The village, particularly the New Village development, is very near the Cottingley railway station on the Huddersfield Line, between Leeds and Morley.

Churwell still retains its semi-rural feel with farms nearby cultivating, in particular, vegetables and rhubarb.

Name

The name Churwell is first attested in 1226 in the forms Churlewell and Churlewall. The names comes from the Old English words ceorla (the genitive plural of ceorl, 'free man of the lower class, peasant') and wella ('well, spring, stream'). Thus the name once meant 'spring of the peasants'.[1]

Historical landmarks

Back of Clarendon Terrace, Park Street, Churwell

Churwell is centred on Churwell Hill which is made up of the A643. About three-quarters of the way up Churwell Hill, the road changes name from Elland Road to Victoria Road. There have historically been three local public houses, of which two remain: The Commercial, the Golden Fleece (demolished) and the New Inn. These are known locally as top oyle, middle oyle and bottom oyle, relating to their position on the hill. The Golden Fleece was demolished in 2010 and is now occupied by a Tesco Express store which still has the Golden Fleece sign outside of it. In spring of 2017 opposite the Tesco Express on Old Road, Bar 27 opened on the premises of the old fish and chip shop. This has become known locally as the little oyle due to its size.

Churwell once had a poorhouse. The building, Grade II listed, was built in 1865.[2] It is just off Elland Road, and was used as a community centre up until May 2011, at which point the Stanhope Memorial Hall, across the road from the Poor Hall, became the community centre.

The village expanded considerably in the early 1960s with new private and council housing developments, particularly to the north on land between School Street and the then-Leeds City boundary. In 1993, the old stone Churwell Primary School in School Street was demolished and moved to modern premises in the village. Houses now stand on the old school site.

In 1923, a runaway tram ran down Churwell Hill and ended in tragedy: six people were killed and 35 injured when the brakes failed and the tram crashed into a field wall at Cottingley.[3]

Tragedy hit the village again in 1962, when a motorcyclist ploughed into a group of girls returning from Sunday school on Churwell Hill, killing two and injuring several others.

St Brigid's R.C. Church

Churwell New Village

Since 2001, a considerable amount of housing development has taken place, one notable area is Churwell New Village a development with more than 350 new residencies, planners estimated 0.5 cars per household. The development was built on a green field industrial area that once had a pit, brick works and later a reclamation yard on it.

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Churwell)

References

  1. Harry Parkin, Your City's Place-Names: Leeds, English Place-Name Society City-Names Series, 3 (Nottingham: English Place-Name Society, 2017), p. 36.
  2. National Heritage List 1250731: Old Poor House (Grade II listing)
  3. "From the Archive - Leeds tram crash see reverse.JPG". The Yorkshire Post. 17 June 2014. http://yorkshirepost.newsprints.co.uk/view/27920121/leeds%20tram%20crash%20see%20reverse_jpg.