Public Events in Town & Valley 2018/19
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Yorkshire Wildlife Park, Doncaster
Near by - Abbeydale Industrial Hamlet, Sheffield Aeroventure, Doncaster Brodsworth Hall and Gardens, Doncaster Cannon Hall Museum, Barnsley Conisbrough Castle and Visitors' Centre, Doncaster Cusworth Hall/Museum of South Yorkshire Life, Doncaster Elsecar Heritage Centre, Barnsley Eyam Hall, Eyam,Derbyshire Five Weirs Walk, Sheffield Forge Dam Park, Sheffield Kelham Island Museum, Sheffield Magna Science Adventure Centre, Rotherham Markham Grange Steam Museum, Doncaster Museum of Fire and Police, Sheffield Peveril Castle, Castleton, Derbyshire Sheffield and Tinsley Canal Trail, Sheffield Sheffield Bus Museum, Sheffield Sheffield Manor Lodge, Sheffield Shepherd's Wheel, Sheffield The Trolleybus Museum at Sandtoft, Doncaster Tropical Butterfly House, Wildlife and Falconry Centre, Nr Sheffeild Ultimate Tracks, Doncaster Wentworth Castle Gardens, Barnsley) Wentworth Woodhouse, Rotherham Worsbrough Mill Museum & Country Park, Barnsley Wortley Top Forge, Sheffield Yorkshire Wildlife Park, Doncaster West Yorkshire Abbey House Museum, Leeds Alhambra Theatre, Bradford Armley Mills, Leeds Bankfield Museum, Halifax Bingley Five Rise Locks, Bingley Bolling Hall, Bradford Bradford Industrial Museum, Bradford Bronte Parsonage Museum, Haworth Bronte Waterfall, Haworth Chellow Dean, Bradford Cineworld Cinemas, Bradford Cliffe Castle Museum, Keighley Colne Valley Museum, Huddersfield Colour Museum, Bradford Cookridge Hall Golf and Country Club, Leeds Diggerland, Castleford Emley Moor transmitting station, Huddersfield Eureka! The National Children's Museum, -
Place to the Meeting of the Keighley Area Committee to Be Held on 21 January 2020 V
Report of the Strategic Director – Place to the meeting of the Keighley Area Committee to be held on 21 January 2020 V Subject: Community engagement activities, April - September 2019 Summary statement: This report provides information about community engagement activities undertaken by Keighley Area Co-ordinator’s Office during April - September 2019. Steve Hartley Portfolio: Strategic Director – Place Neighbourhoods & Community Safety Report contact: Jonathan Hayes Overview and Scrutiny Area: Keighley Area Co-ordinator Phone: 01535 618008 Corporate E-mail: [email protected] Report to the Keighley Area Committee 1. SUMMARY 1.1 This report provides information about community engagement activities undertaken by Keighley Area Co-ordinator’s Office during April - September 2019. 2. BACKGROUND 2.1 One of the functions of Keighley Area Co-ordinator’s Office is to work with elected Members to organise and develop varied ways of engaging with the public that are appropriate to the Wards they represent, e.g. Neighbourhood Forums, Special Forums – on a specific topic of current local interest, events and activities targeted at specific people groups (e.g. older people or parents with young children), stalls at events organised by local community groups (e.g. Galas and Fun Days) and digital engagement (e.g. Facebook, Twitter and local websites). 2.3 Appendix A gives details of the community engagement activities that have been undertaken by Keighley Area Co-ordinator’s Office (KACO) during the period April - September 2019. These have included ‘traditional’ Neighbourhood Forums, public meetings organised by KACO staff open to all but run on a different format to a Neighbourhood Forums, meetings targeted at particular ‘people groups’ (e.g. -
Dog Control Public Spaces Protection Orders for the Bradford District Pdf 1
Report of the Assistant Director Neighbourhoods and Customer Services to the meeting of Regulatory and Appeals Committee (the Committee) to be held on the 15th October 2020 Subject: AL A report relating to the proposed extension variation of the six existing Dog Control Public Spaces Protection Orders for the Bradford District or the making of a district wide order under the powers arising from the Anti-social Behaviour Crime and Policing Act 2014 (the Act). Summary statement: th On 18 July 2019 the Committee resolved as follows:- (1) That the Assistant Director, Neighbourhoods and Customer Services be authorised to undertake the statutory consultation exercise in order to establish the evidence required to extend the following orders: The 2016 Drinking City Centre Order; (i) The 2002/03 City Centre Designated Public Places Order; (ii) The Street Drinking Orders for areas outside the City Centre; (iii) and The existing Dog Control Orders (iv) That further reports in relation to Drinking Orders be submitted to the (2) Committee in September 2019 and Dog Control Orders during 2020. This report provides a summary of the responses to the statutory consultation on the proposed extension or variation of the Councils existing six Public Spaces (Dog Control ) Protection Orders and a possible composite order for whole of the Bradford District and the submission of recommendations arising from the responses to the consultation. Steve Hartley Portfolio: Neighbourhoods and Community Strategic Director Safety Place Report Contact: Amjad Ishaq Overview & Scrutiny Area: Corporate Environmental Services & Enforcement Manager Phone: Tel: 01274 433682 Mob: 07582 100549 Email: [email protected] City Solicitor-Parveen Akhtar 1.0 SUMMARY STATEMENT This report relates to the extension (and or variation ) of the existing Dog Control Public Spaces Protection Orders (PSPO) for the Metropolitan District of Bradford or a proposed district wide order. -
Novelty Pottery Wares
Ceramics Novelty Pottery Wares by Jack Tempest The sale of a set of three novelty pottery Their main novelty products were the so- items made in the Sunderland area at a local called puzzle jugs and the frog mugs, items auction for £4,000 at the beginning of the that are still amusing the collectors of such twenty-first century helped signal a general rural pottery. The jugs would have been real increase in values of these simple rustic enigmas when they first made their products. These fascinating domestic wares, appearance. The puzzle was how to drink known as ‘frog mugs’, were produced beer from a receptacle that had a perforated wherever suitable clay deposits existed, neck without letting the liquid leak out over mainly in the North of England and into the their shirtfronts! Easy if you knew how: the Midlands during the seventeenth to the jug was designed to allow the liquid content nineteenth centuries. It was a business that to be sucked up through a secret straw, offered locals a range of necessary everyday namely the hollow jug handle! This was a useful pottery at affordable prices. novelty jug that was widely appreciated and Most of these smaller potteries found their replicas are still produced today by modern trade increased as the expanding local cities arty-crafty potteries around the country. created more wealth after the mechanisation Frog mugs were also popular creators of 19thC West Yorkshire ‘puzzle jug’. Its of the Victorian Industrial Revolution. Many public house hilarity because a full mug ornamental design makes the jug hopeless to potteries also found a good market in would hide the ceramic frog seated at the drink from. -
Family Places to Go in and Around Ilkley
FAMILY PLACES TO GO IN AND AROUND ILKLEY We've put together a huge list of suggestions for places to visit and explore during the school holidays, or at any other time. You’ll never be able to say you have nowhere to go again! Please let us know if we’ve missed off one of your local favourites. Our list includes: Local Attractions, Parks & Estates, Museums & Exhibitions Railways, Tramways & Canals Art Galleries & Sculpture Parks Swimming Pools Theatres & Cinemas Nearby Villages & Towns Moors & Woodlands More Suggestions! LOCAL ATTRACTIONS Mother Shipton's Cave BIlly Bob's Ice-Cream Parlour Dan’s Den, Ilkley http://www.dansdenilkley.co.uk Clip ‘n’ Climb, Ilkley http://clipnclimbilkley.co.uk/ Create (Pottery) Café, Ilkley http://www.createcafe.co.uk/ Riverside Gardens, Ilkley http://www.bradforddistrictparks.org/sites/parks/parks.php?ID=75 Billy Bob’s Ice-cream Parlour, Bolton Abbey http://www.billybobsparlour.com Otley Courthouse, Otley http://otleycourthouse.org.uk Skipton Castle http://www.skiptoncastle.co.uk/ Mother Shipton’s Cave, Knaresborough http://www.mothershipton.co.uk Tree Top Nets, Ripon https://www.treetopnets.co.uk/ripon PARKS & ESTATES Bolton Abbey Estate http://boltonabbey.com Hesketh Farm Park, Bolton Abbey http://www.heskethfarmpark.co.uk Ilkley Pre-school Playgroup – Helping Young Minds Grow www.ilkleypreschool.org.uk RHS Harlow Carr Gardens https://www.rhs.org.uk/gardens/harlow-carr Brimham Rocks https://www.nationaltrust.org.uk/brimham-rocks St Ives Estate http://www.bradforddistrictparks.org/sites/parks.php Stockeld Park, Wetherby www.stockeldpark.co.uk Harewood House Estate, Leeds http://harewood.org/ MUSEUMS & EXHIBITIONS There are so many museums to visit in our area, and most of them have free admission. -
Digital Consultancy Brief Bradford Museums and Galleries Is on The
Digital Consultancy Brief Bradford Museums and Galleries is on the move! We’re a local authority Museums and Galleries Service with award winning sites, collections and learning. In a normal year we attract close on 250,000 people to our sites, including 20,000 schoolchildren. We operate right across Bradford district working in areas of rich diversity alongside considerable deprivation. Our sites are Cartwright Hall Art Gallery, Bradford Industrial Museum, Bolling Hall Museum and Cliffe Castle Museum. Our collections reflect the rich and diverse story of the district, spanning industrial heritage, local social history, natural history, archaeology and art and design. We have Designated textile collections and an internationally known South Asian Art collection. We’re part of one of the UK’s youngest and most diverse city districts with an exciting future bidding to be City of Culture 2025. We are actively engaging our communities, addressing our diversity, thinking about wellbeing and sustainability and rethinking our business models as we get going on this new agenda. Our Museums and Galleries are more than just venues or collections; during Covid - 19 the service has found new ways to engage with audiences online and we’ve also reopened 3 out of 4 of our venues in a Covid safe way. DCMS’s Cultural Recovery Fund has given us a substantial grant to get this work underway and we’re now keen to have expert input in a number of areas. Digital Bradford Museums and Galleries has 4 active social media accounts, Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube, which run alongside our website bradfordmuseums.org. -
Bradford Libraries, Museums and Galleries Volunteer Policy
Bradford Libraries, Museums & Galleries Volunteers’ Handbook Contents Welcome ................................................................................................................... 2 Our Mission ............................................................................................................... 4 About us .................................................................................................................... 5 Support for Volunteers ............................................................................................. 10 Code of Conduct ..................................................................................................... 12 Health and safety .................................................................................................... 15 Policies and procedures .......................................................................................... 17 Bradford Libraries, Museums and Galleries Volunteer Policy ................................. 19 Volunteer Agreement .............................................................................................. 23 Volunteer Exit Form ................................................................................................. 24 Volunteer Training Record ........................................................................................ 25 Additional Notes ...................................................................................................... 26 Appendix 1 Volunteer role description exemplars .................................................. -
Hidden Places
Resource Sheet 6.2 • Geography: Hidden Places Geographical Landmarks of Yorkshire • Thornborough Henges - Unusual ancient monument complex which includes three • Longest River - River Aire which runs from perfectly aligned Bronze Age henges. Nicknamed Malham Tarn to Airmyn and passes through the Stonehenge of the North due to its Gargrave, Skipton, Keighley, Bingley, Shipley, importance. Leeds and Castleford. It is 88 miles (142 km) long. • Wharram Percy - deserted medieval village • Largest Cave System - Gapin Gill, North Yokshire (DMV) on the western edge of the Wolds. Perhaps is part a vast cave network, it’s main chamber 648 the best known in the whole of England because ft deep underground. of extensive archaeological digs and surveys. • Highest Waterfall - Hardraw Force, Yorkshire Museums Dales National Park, 100ft. • Largest Lake - Hornsea Mere, East Yorkshire, 467 • Bolling Hall – Bolling Hall was a former stately acres. home for numerous leading families in Bradford • Highest Mountain - Mickle Fell, North Pennines, for over 500 years. It has played a significant part 2585 ft. in the city’s history. It has now been preserved as a museum with objects dating back from the • Yorkshire Dales - A designated area of Medieval period to the Georgian period. outstanding natural beauty and declared a national parkland in 1952. It is home to some of the most • Bradford Industrial Museum – Housing a wide famous landmarks in the region – Malham Cove, variety of textile machinery, steam power, printing Goredale Scar, Kilnsey Cragg and Brimham Rocks machinery and motor vehicles specifically related to name a few. to the history of the city. Archaeological sites • Brontë Parsonage Museum – Maintained by the Brontë Society, this former home of the famous • 1st Windmill - The first known reference to a literary sisters is a very popular place of pilgrimage windmill in England dates back to 1185. -
News from Museum Development Yorkshire
Subscribe Past Issues Translate View this email in your browser Newsletter - Fri 7 December 2018 In this Issue Dear <<First Name>> • MDY Notices • Other Notices This bulletin is issued fortnightly to keep you up to date with all the latest news from the Yorkshire • Workshops and museums sector. Training • Still time to book... We hope you find something of interest below - we • Job Opportunities always welcome new subscribers so please feel • Contacts free to circulate the bulletin to any friends or colleagues who may also find it useful. However, if you decide not to receive future bulletins please click the unsubscribe button in the footer below. Subscribe ** Date of next bulletin ** Friday 21 December 2019 ** Deadline for submissions ** 5pm on Wed 19 December MDY Notices Northern Museums Volunteer Pass 2019-2021 Registration now open The Northern Museums Volunteer Pass is one of the largest Volunteer schemes in England: • Over 150 participating institutions • Over 7,000 participating volunteers • Open to ALL accredited museums, or those working towards accreditation, in the North East, North West and Yorkshire and Humberside Museum Development regions. What’s the benefit to your museum? • Raises awareness of your museum • Learning Opportunities • Networking and Benchmarking. Find out more, hear what previous participants have to say and download the 2018 leaflet to see the list of museums taking part at: www.museumdevelopmentyorkshire.org.uk/2018/09/05/northern- museums-volunteer-pass-2019-2021. Or for further information contact Gillian Waters on: [email protected]. To sign up to the scheme, complete the form on survey monkey to express your interest: www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/NMVP2019. -
Loanfile Loans
Long-Term Loans Out by Region Region Borrowing institution Venue Name Collection Museum Number Description East Midlands Belton House (National Trust) Belton House (National Trust) GC ? Mirror, Silver-gilt, raised, cast, applied, engraved and mirror glass. Rollos, Philip (the Elder). 1695 East Midlands Belton House (National Trust) Belton House (National Trust) GC ? Casket. Raised, cast, applied and engraved silver-gilt. Engraved with the crest and coronet of the Earls Brownlow. Rollos, Philip (the Elder) . Ca East Midlands Belton House (National Trust) Belton House (National Trust) GC ? Casket. Raised, cast, applied and engraved silver-gilt. Engraved with the crest and coronet of the Earls East Midlands Belton House (National Trust) Belton House (National Trust) GC ? Casket. Raised, cast, applied and engraved silver-gilt with velvet. Engraved with the crest and coronet of East Midlands Belton House (National Trust) Belton House (National Trust) GC ? Box. Gilded silver (silver-gilt) raised, cast, applied, and engraved. Engraved with the crest and coronet for the Earls of Bromlow. Rollos, Philip (the Elder). East Midlands Belton House (National Trust) Belton House (National Trust) GC ? Box. Gilded silver (silver-gilt) raised, cast, applied, and engraved. Engraved with the crest and coronet for the Earls East Midlands Belton House (National Trust) Belton House (National Trust) GC ? Box. Gilded silver (silver-gilt) raised, cast, applied, and engraved. Engraved with the crest and coronet for the Earls of Bromlow. Rollos, Philip (the Elder). East Midlands Belton House (National Trust) Belton House (National Trust) GC ? Box. Gilded silver (silver-gilt) raised, cast, applied, and engraved. Engraved with the crest and coronet for the Earls of Bromlow. -
A History of the Steel Family of Silsden & Merseyside
A HISTORY OF THE STEEL FAMILY OF SILSDEN AND MERSEYSIDE by T.M. STEEL 12 November 2016 1 1. INTRODUCTION We begin this account by tracing the descent, as far as has been found possible, of five Steel siblings, all born on Merseyside in the third quarter of the nineteenth century: Joseph (1861–1941); Benjamin Joseph (1864– 1944); Mary Alice (1868–1891); Thomas Mather (1869–1958); and William Eaton (1872–1942).1 They were all children of Joseph Steel (1817–1874) and of his second wife Mary Hodgkinson (1829–1903). Although all five began life on Merseyside, their father Joseph was born into a farming family at Braithwaite, near Keighley in Yorkshire’s West Riding. Joseph’s father was Benjamin Steel (1775–1818), whom we shall call ‘Benjamin Steel junior’, born at Holden Beck House, the family’s freehold farm (of which, with his brothers and cousins, he was to be a part inheritor) at Holden Park, in Silsden, some three miles north-east of Braithwaite. Joseph’s mother was Benjamin’s second wife, Lydia Laycock (1785–1828). Benjamin junior’s parents were Benjamin Steel (1718–1793), whom we shall call ‘senior’, also born at Holden Beck House and inheritor of a half share in the farm from his father; and Benjamin senior’s wife and first cousin Elizabeth Steel (1735–1814). Benjamin senior’s parents were Richard Steel (1683–1758), whom we shall call ‘Richard Steel junior’, born at Upper Holden in Holden Park, who first leased and then purchased the family farm at nearby Holden Beck House; and Richard’s wife Anne Heaton (died 1751). -
Steeton, Eastburn and Silsden Neighbourhood Plan, Regulation 14 Draft, January 2016
Steeton, Eastburn and Silsden Neighbourhood Plan, Regulation 14 Draft, January 2016 0 Steeton, Eastburn and Silsden Neighbourhood Plan, Regulation 14 Consultation Draft, February 2017 Front cover image: Steeton and view over Aire Valley taken from Lightbank Lane Silsden © Copyright Roger Marshall and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence. 1 Steeton, Eastburn and Silsden Neighbourhood Plan, Regulation 14 Consultation Draft, February 2017 "Our aim for the neighbourhood development plan is to promote and protect a healthy and pleasant environment for those who live, work and play in the area, offering opportunities for employment, leisure, education, shopping and housing and improving connectivity. The plan will act as an advocate for the area and will ensure involvement in higher level decision making processes." 2 Steeton, Eastburn and Silsden Neighbourhood Plan, Regulation 14 Consultation Draft, February 2017 Contents 1. Introduction ..................................... 5 2. Why are we preparing a Neighbourhood Development Plan for Steeton-with-Eastburn and Silsden?................7 3. How long will it take to prepare the Neighbourhood development plan? ......................... 9 4. Background, Overall Aim, Key Issues, and Objectives…….11 5. Strategic Planning Policy………..28 6. Policies and proposals.......... ……35 7. How to comment on this document………..73 8. Monitoring and Review……..75 Appendix 1. Conservation Areas Appendix 2. National Heritage List for England 3 Steeton, Eastburn and Silsden Neighbourhood Plan, Regulation 14 Consultation Draft, February 2017 Figure 1 – Steeton-with-Eastburn and Silsden Neighbourhood Development Plan Area (Source: CBMDC, 2014) N 4 Steeton, Eastburn and Silsden Neighbourhood Plan, Regulation 14 Draft, January 2016 1 Introduction 1.1 In 2014 the parishes of Steeton-with-Eastburn and Silsden came together to work on a Neighbourhood Development Plan (NDP) for the two parishes.