Harden Beck

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Goit Stock Waterfall in Goit Stock Wood

Harden Beck is a stream nine miles long, much altered by the hand of man in its upper reaches, in the West Riding of Yorkshire. It flows from Hewenden Reservoir, over Goit Stock Waterfall to the River Aire in Bingley.

The headwaters of the stream abd above the resrvoir, further up the valley where the waters are those of the Denholme Beck, Hewenden Beck and Hallas Beck. Feeding the stream too are the Thornton Moor Reservoir, Stubden Reservoir, Doe Park Reservoir and Hewenden Reservoir.

Harden Beck is an overflow channel of Glacial Erosion which was carved out during the last Ice Age.[1] The section after the waterfall down to the bridge under the road to Wilsden, is locally referred to as 'The Hidden Valley.'[2]

In his book, Chronicles of Old Bingley, Harry Speight says that the Beck starts at the confluence of Hallas and Cow House Becks, and that Harden Beck was a dividing line in the parishes, deaneries and the Wapentakes.[3]

Historical interest

The name of the beck has appeared variously Heredene, Heredenbroc and Hardenbrok which translates as either Rock Valley or Hare Valley Beck.[4] In the Topographical Dictionary of England, Lewis describes the Beck as "powerful Harden Beck, which abounds with trout, runs through a hamlet, and propels the machinery of three worsted mills in which the greater part of the population is employed."[5]

There were six mills on the beck; (from upstream down) Hewenden Mill, Bents Mill, Hallas Bridge Mill, Goit Stock Mill, Harden Bridge Mill and Beckfoot Mill. Hewenden, Bents and Beckfoot mills have all since been converted into private accommodation buildings. Hallas Bridge Mill was destroyed by fire. Goit Stock Mill was later utilised as a café and ballroom. It too burnt down (in 1927) with no reports of casualties. Its chimney and flue are still extant: the chimney was built on the northern ridge to aid the dispersal of smoke from the narrow valley.[6][7] Harden Bridge Mill is still in private use as a printer's works.

Hewenden Reservoir was built as a compensation reservoir for the mill owners on Harden Beck who demanded a structure of its type when the Bradford Corporation started abstracting water from Manywells Spring to their reservoirs, seven miles away at Chellow Dean.[8]

Course of the beck

The watercourse starts at the eastern edge of the A629 Keighley to Halifax road in Denholme. Here, several springs feed Denholme beck which flows into Doe Park Reservoir. Doe Park is also fed by Stubden and Thornton Moor reservoirs via Stubden Beck.[9] The outflow from the reservoir flows northwards into Hewenden Reservoir, where it in turns flows north eastwards as Hewenden Beck as far as Hallas Bridge where it becomes Hallas Beck. On entering Goit Stock Wood, the course becomes Harden Beck at the confluence of Cow House Beck and Hallas Beck.[10]

Form here it flows mostly eastwards with Midgram Beck and Mytholmes Beck joining the course adjacent to Ruin Bank Wood. The Beck skirts the northern edge of Shipley Golf Course, through the ford and then under the bridge at Beckfoot before joining the River Aire in Bingley.

Bridges

Hewenden Viaduct is to the immediate north east of the dam head of Hewenden Reservoir and was built by the Great Northern Railway in 1884[11] and after the railway closed became part of the Great Northern Trail.[12] Hallas and Goit Stock have footbridges. There is a bridge over the beck by The Malt Shovel Public House in Harden which links Harden village with Wilsden. This bridge is a Grade II listed structure from the 18th century.[13]

Where the Beck curves between Ruin Bank Wood and Harden Grange is a Grade II listed footbridge. The footbridge is on the north-west corner of Shipley Golf Course and was listed in 1974.[14]

Another Grade II listed crossing is Beckfoot Bridge.[15] and spans the beck just before it enters into the right fork of the River Aire in Bingley. The bridge here dates from at least 1723 and is a packhorse bridge.[16] There is a ford adjacent as the bridge is only wide enough for a single horse. The ford is deceptively deep and the water is fast flowing. People have had their vehicles washed downstream whilst trying to cross here and it would be unwise to cross, even in a 4 x 4.[17]

Ecology and environment

The beck flows through Goit Stock Wood, which is known for being a good example of broadleaf woodland. The water cascades over Goit stock waterfall which is 20 feet high.[18] The waterfall was known as Hallas Lumb until the early 1820s when its name was changed to Goit Stock.[19]

The beck has seen pollution over its history, but trout and crayfish have been observed in the water.[20] Goit Stock Woods and Harden Beck are listed as a 'Site of Ecological and Geological Importance'.

In 2017, the weir at Beckfoot Mill was removed in the central portion to allow grayling to navigate upstream. As the mill is now private dwellings, its goit was no longer necessary and as the weir was a barrier to fish passage, it was cut open.[21]

Literary connections

By Harden Beck lived John Nicholson, The Airedale Poet, in the early nineteenth century. He was often out walking alongside the beck, looking for inspiration.[22] He is said to have written many works beside the beck and by Goit Stock Waterfall, which he often visited in the dead of night.

In 2012, as part of the Ilkley literature festival, the walk alongside Harden Beck became part of the Stanza Stones Poetry Trail. Developed by poet Simon Armitage and Tom Lonsdale. The walk takes in 47 miles across moorland and water to inspire walkers.[23]

Location

Outside links

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about Harden Beck)

References

  1. "Landscape Character SPD Wilsden". Bradford Council. October 2008. p. 3. https://www.bradford.gov.uk/media/2987/vol9_wilsden_october2008.pdf. 
  2. "The Hidden Valley". http://thehidden-valley.co.uk/. 
  3. Speight, Harry (1898). Chronicles of Old Bingley. Eliot Stock. p. 96. https://archive.org/stream/chroniclesstorie00speiiala#page/96/mode/2up. Retrieved 4 December 2015. 
  4. Smith, A H (1961). The place names of the West Riding of Yorkshire Pt 4. p. 329. http://www.abebooks.co.uk/book-search/title/place-names-in-west-riding/author/a-h-smith/. Retrieved 4 December 2015. 
  5. Lewis, Samuel (1848). "British History Online". S Lewis. pp. 404–407. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/topographical-dict/england/pp404-407. 
  6. "Goit Stock Woods and Harden Beck". Bradford Council. https://www.bradford.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/C99AD44A-70D6-471A-A5DC-EE8D9F4EC768/0/GoitstockWoodsandHardenBeck.pdf. 
  7. "Goit Stock – The Hidden Valley". 20 February 2014. http://mycommunityhub.co.uk/hidden-valley-goit-stock/. 
  8. Cudworth, William (1896). Manningham, Heaton, and Allerton : (townships of Bradford) treated historically and topographically. Bradford: Cudworth. p. 324. OCLC 1069555989. https://archive.org/details/manninghamheaton00cudwuoft. 
  9. Airey (2008). "Bradford Area Reservoirs' Group – Flood Routing Remedial". p. 2. http://www.britishdams.org/2008conf/papers/Construction%20remedial%20works%20and%20discontinuance/P1_Airey_final.pdf. 
  10. Hansen, Astrid (26 June 2014). "The Mills of the Hewenden Valley 3". http://mycommunityhub.co.uk/mills-of-the-hewenden-valley-hewenden-mill-part-3/. 
  11. "Hewenden Viaduct". http://www.forgottenrelics.co.uk/bridges/gallery/hewenden.html#null. 
  12. "Great Northern Railway Trail". http://www.sustrans.org.uk/ncn/map/route/great-northern-railway-trail. 
  13. National Heritage List 1200795: Harden Beck bridge to west of Malt Shovel Inn (Grade II listing)
  14. National Heritage List @: Footbridge over Harden Beck to South East of the Lodge to Harden Grange, Bingley (Grade II listing)@ http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/en-337940-footbridge-over-harden-beck-to-south-eas#.VkTEAVUnzmI
  15. National Heritage List 1199392: Beckford Bridge (Grade II listing)
  16. "Bingley and the St Ive's Estate". AA. http://www.theaa.com/walks/bingley-and-the-st-ives-estate-421290#directions. 
  17. Griffiths, Kathie (16 June 2007). "Downpours bring chaos to rivers and transport". Telegraph and Argus. http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/news/1477067.Downpours_bring_chaos_to_rivers_and_transport/. 
  18. "The Broadleafed Woodlands of Harden Beck". http://www.theaa.com/walks/the-broadleaved-woodlands-of-harden-beck-421307#directions. 
  19. Hird, W G (1876). The Poetic Works of John Nicholson. London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co. p. xxxix. https://archive.org/stream/poeticalworksjo22unkngoog#page/n46/mode/2up. Retrieved 27 November 2015. 
  20. "'Beck dead? We've seen 12-inch trout!'". Telegraph and Argus. 11 November 2000. http://www.thetelegraphandargus.co.uk/news/8049359._Beck_dead__We_ve_seen_12_inch_trout__/. 
  21. Robinson, Wendy (9 September 2017). "Harden Beck just got better! | Aire Rivers Trust". https://aireriverstrust.org.uk/harden-beck-loses-another-weir/. 
  22. Hird, W G (1876). The Poetical Works of John Nicholson. London: Simpkin, Marshall & Co. p. xxxviii. https://archive.org/stream/poeticalworksjo22unkngoog#page/n46/mode/2up. Retrieved 27 November 2015. 
  23. Lonsdale, Tom. "Stanza Stones" (2012). ILF. pp. 1–40. http://www.ilkleyliteraturefestival.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Stanza-Stones-Trail-Guide.pdf.