Bradford: Difference between revisions
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'''Bradford''' is |
'''Bradford''' is the major settlement in the [[City of Bradford|City of Bradford Metropolitan District]] of the [[Metropolitan county]] of [[West Yorkshire]]. |
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Part of the [[Historic counties of England|historic county]] of [[Yorkshire]], Bradford became a [[municipal borough]] of the [[West Riding of Yorkshire]] in 1847, and received its charter as a [[city status in the United Kingdom|city]] in 1897. The city status was transferred to the metropolitan district when it was formed in 1974 {{ref|city_status}}. It has a population of [[List of English cities by population|293,717]] with the district as a whole having [[List of English districts by population|485,000]] inhabitants. By urban sub-area, it is the 11th largest settlement in England. |
Part of the [[Historic counties of England|historic county]] of [[Yorkshire]], Bradford became a [[municipal borough]] of the [[West Riding of Yorkshire]] in 1847, and received its charter as a [[city status in the United Kingdom|city]] in 1897. The city status was transferred to the metropolitan district when it was formed in 1974 {{ref|city_status}}. It has a population of [[List of English cities by population|293,717]] with the district as a whole having [[List of English districts by population|485,000]] inhabitants. By urban sub-area, it is the 11th largest settlement in England. |
Revision as of 17:27, 19 December 2006
- The larger City of Bradford Metropolitan District includes other settlements in the surrounding area.
Template:Infobox England place Bradford is the major settlement in the City of Bradford Metropolitan District of the Metropolitan county of West Yorkshire.
Part of the historic county of Yorkshire, Bradford became a municipal borough of the West Riding of Yorkshire in 1847, and received its charter as a city in 1897. The city status was transferred to the metropolitan district when it was formed in 1974 [1]. It has a population of 293,717 with the district as a whole having 485,000 inhabitants. By urban sub-area, it is the 11th largest settlement in England.
History
The name Bradford is derived from the "broad ford" at Church Bank (below the site of Bradford Cathedral) around which a settlement had begun to appear before the time of the Norman Conquest. The ford crossed the stream called Bradford Beck [2].
Bradford has long been a centre of the West Riding wool industry. Bradford was one of the many English towns which became prosperous during the Industrial Revolution. Bradford's textile industry dates back as far as the thirteenth century, but it was not until the nineteenth century that it became world-famous. Wool was imported in vast quantities for the worsted cloth in which Bradford specialised. Other fibres were also processed, e.g., alpaca. Yorkshire boasted plentiful supplies of iron ore, coal and soft water which were used in cleaning raw wool, and a huge coal seam provided the power that the industry needed. Sandstone, Bradford's local stone, was an excellent resource for the building of the mills, and the large population of West Yorkshire meant there was a readily available workforce.
A culture of innovation was fundamental to Bradford's dominance in the 19th and 20th centuries. New textile technologies were invented in the city. A prime example being the work of Samuel Lister. This innovation culture continues today throughout Bradford's economy: from automotive Kahn Design [3] to electronics Pace Micro Technology.
To support the textile mills, a large manufacturing base grew up in the city, providing textile machinery, and this led to diversification with different industries thriving side-by-side. For example Bradford's proud manufacturing history includes the Jowett motor company, which had many great achievements during its fifty year existence. The textile industry started to decline in the 1920s, and Bradford has been cited as an example of deindustrialization. However, today a spirit of rebirth has taken hold and Bradford is one of the north's important cities, with modern technology, chemicals, engineering, academic and financial sectors replacing the "dark satanic mills" image of the industrial revolution.
The grandest of the mills (no longer used for textile production) is Lister's Mill (or Manningham Mills). The chimney of Lister's mill can be seen from most places in Bradford. It has recently become the beacon of regeneration in the city. 100 million GBP restoration project is ongoing [4].
Salts Mill [5] is another large mill that has an exciting new life in the modern era. The mill is occupied by high technology companies, contemporary design shops and gallery spaces. It is the hub of the world heritage site of Saltaire, three miles north of Bradford centre. The Bradford district also contains the villages of Thornton and Haworth, the birthplace and home of the world famous Brontë sisters. Clayton was home to Albert Pierrepoint, Britain's last hangman.
Ever since the industrial revolution there have been waves of immigration into the city and today there is a very diverse population (Figures for ethnic origin of inhabitants are given in the entry for the Metropolitan District). This is reflected in the different types of places of worship built over the years. Nonconformist chapels were frequently built in the nineteenth century, and mosques started appearing in the twentieth century. The city has been praised for its cultural diversity but on occasion conflict has arisen. In January 1989, copies of Salman Rushdie's The Satanic Verses were publicly burnt in Bradford, and the city's Muslim community took the lead in the campaign against the book in the UK. In July 2001 ethnic tensions and troubles in other northern towns led to serious rioting in Bradford "Bradford Riot".
Bradford was one of the contenders for 2008 European Capital Of Culture. Although in the end it lost out to Liverpool, the bid created confidence in the city and has led to new initiatives. In 2004, the Bradford Urban Regeneration Company commissioned architect Will Alsop to create a vision for the City's future and the role of a "City Centre" in the 21st century. The audacious (yet controversial) Alsop plan [6] envisions four regenerated quarters within the heart of the city — The Bowl, The Channel, The Market & The Valley — each creating new public spaces for commerce, education, leisure and showcasing Bradford's setting within the Pennine mountains.
Political history
During the English Civil War the town was Parliamentarian in sympathy, but changed hands several times as it was difficult to defend. A life-size statue of Oliver Cromwell decorates the facade of the nineteenth-century Town Hall, suggesting a continuing commitment to parliamentary values. However, Bradford did not gain its own MPs until the Reform Act 1832 gave it two. Other prominent statues of political figures include Robert Peel and Richard Cobden (campaigners for Free Trade which Bradford at one time saw as key to its commercial success) and W.E. Forster (perhaps Bradford's most famous MP). Bradford's politicians tended to identify with industrialists in the nineteenth century, but the city played an important part in the early history of the Labour Party. A mural visible from Leeds Road commemorates the centenary of the founding of the Independent Labour Party in 1893.
Bradford was incorporated as a municipal borough in 1847, covering the parishes of Bradford, Horton and Manningham. It became a county borough with the passing of the Local Government Act 1888. The County borough was granted city status by Letters Patent in 1897. Bradford was expanded in 1882 to include Allerton, Bolton, Bowling, Heaton, Thornbury and Tyersall. In 1899 it was further expanded by adding North Bierley, Eccleshill, Idle, Thornton, Tong and Wyke. Clayton was added in 1930.
The County borough was merged with borough of Keighley, the urban districts of Baildon, Bingley, Denholme,Cullingworth, Ilkley, Shipley and Silsden, along with part of Queensbury and Shelf urban district and part of Skipton Rural District by the Local Government Act 1972. One result of the boundaries of Bradford being widened in this way is that the district is marginal in terms of party political loyalty - at present no group is in overall control of the Council.
Industry and economy
Bradford's dominance in textiles may now have waned, however the strong work ethic of the population and the support of a thriving educational sector continues to create economic success in many areas, notably: Finance (Yorkshire Building Society, Bradford & Bingley plc, Abbey/Grupo Santander, Provident Financial plc), Retail (Morrisons supermarkets, Grattan mail order), Electronics (Pace Micro, Filtronic, NG Bailey), Manufacturing (Denso Marston, CIBA Chemicals).
Educational institutions
The University of Bradford has around 10,000 students. It received its Royal Charter in 1966, but traces its history back to the 1860s. It has always been a technical and technological institution, and has no true arts faculties; but it still covers a wide range of subjects including optometry, pharmacy, medical sciences, nursing studies, archaeology, and modern languages. Its peace studies department, founded with Quaker support in 1973, was for long the only such institution in the UK.
University of Bradford School of Management located near Lister Park, is currently rated the 65th best business school [7] in the world.
Bradford College has around 24,000 students. It developed from the nineteenth-century technical college whose buildings it has inherited. It now offers a wide range of Further and Higher Education courses, and is an Associate College of Leeds Metropolitan University. It has absorbed the Art School whose most famous alumnus is David Hockney.
Bradford Grammar School, in Frizinghall, dates back to 1548: it has been co-educational since 1999. The Girls' Grammar School, Bradford is a quite separate establishment dating from 1875: it continues to take only girls except for its infants' department. Woodhouse Grove School is another major private education establishment, located in the Aire valley at Apperley Bridge.
Health
There are three major hospitals in Bradford: Bradford Royal Infirmary, St Lukes, Airedale General Hospital. Plus significant local health centres and cottage hospitals. Private health care is also available at the Yorkshire Clinic, Shipley and the Yorkshire Eye Hospital, Greengates.
Bradford is home to one of the UK's largest ever birth cohort studies, known as Born in Bradford. Partly supported by European funding, it is the result of close collaboration between the University of Bradford, the NHS and other institutions in West Yorkshire. It will track the lives of all the babies born in the city from 2006 to 2008 and aim to find solutions to some of Bradford's public health problems, such as obesity and a higher than average infant mortality rate.
Development
Recently many significant developments have been completed in the Bradford district (last 10 years). In addition further large schemes are under construction and proposed.
Complete:
- Centenary Sq. city centre, public piazza and retail
- Connecting The City, [8] £20m clearance of 1960s structures over several acres of city centre, preparation for Broadway project
- Lister's Mill Silk Mill, Manningham, 131 apartments first phase of £100m project
- Victoria Mill, Shipley, £70m conversion and new build, 300 apartments [9] (part complete)
- City termination of M606
- Leisure Exchange, city centre, multiplex cinemas, bowling, restaurants
- New Class 333 electric trains (similar to Heathrow Express) from Forster Sq. station to Leeds/Ilkley/Skipton/Shipley/Bingley/Keighley
- Abbey offices, Yorkshire Building Society offices, city centre
- Valley Parade, Manningham, completion of 25,000 seat covered stands at Bradford City football stadium
- Manchester Road corridor, 2 mile guided bus route with innovative art installation/bus stops
- Bingley By-pass, £49m project creating 9 mile highspeed route through Airedale
- Rawson Quarter, redevelopment of the former Rawson Market.
Under construction and (Proposed):
- Lister's Mill Velvet Mill, 170 apartments
- Broadway Project, £300m city centre shops, offices and apartments (proposed, clearance complete)
- The Gatehaus, Little Germany, [10] £22m 11 floor apartment building [11] [12] (completion 2007)
- Eastbrook Hall, Little Germany, £12m rebuilding significant structure to create commercial and living space (completion summer 2007)
- Listerhills urban village, £90m mixed use project, student and key-worker housing, in city centre Thornton Road/Valley area (commences 2007)
- New Victoria Place, £55m hotel, public square, offices, retail, Bradford College, 205 apartments, adjacent Alhambra Theatre and Centenary Sq. (commences summer 2007, completion 2009)
- Channel neighbourhood, £350m waterside project in city centre Canal Road area, shops, offices, apartments, includes reopening Bradford Canal (in planning)
- University campus refurbishment, £75m project as part of 'Ecoversity' vision (part complete) [13]
- Lister's Mill further phases of £100m project, Chimney Square, Boiler House, link to Victor Road and Lister Park (proposed)
- Drummonds, Manningham, conversion of mills to apartments and offices (proposed)
- The Bowl, centrepiece of the Alsop Masterplan [14] large pool backed by City Hall, the future gathering place for Bradfordians (purchase of land in progress)
- Manchester Road project, hotel, residential and commercial buildings at city centre end of Manchester Road (completion 2010)
Twin towns
Bradford's current twin towns and cities are listed at http://www.bradford.gov.uk/life_in_the_community/twin_towns_and_villages:
- Skopje, Macedonia - twinned 1963
- Roubaix, France - twinned 1969
- Verviers, Belgium – twinned 1970
- Mönchengladbach, Germany – twinned 1971
- Galway, Ireland - twinned 1987
- Mirpur District Council, Azad Kashmir, Pakistan – friendship agreement 1998
It is sometimes claimed that Hamm, in Nordrhein-Westfalen, Germany is a twin of Bradford, an impression strengthened by the street name Hammstrasse in Bradford; but in fact Hamm is twinned with Shipley, a town about three miles from Bradford. As the small plaque at the bottom of the road indicates the street name was changed to express thanks to the people of Hamm for their support after the Bradford City disaster.
Bradford was formerly twinned with Tisma,Nicaragua, up until at least 2001. (see http://archive.thisisbradford.co.uk/2001/1/2/145547.html).
Geography
Bradford is located at 53°45′00″N 01°50′00″W / 53.75000°N 1.83333°W (53.7500, -1.8333)1.
The Bradford Metropolitan District has an estimated population (2003) of 477,775. About 300,000 of these live within the main city area itself, the rest living in the surrounding towns, villages and countryside.
Bradford Beck
Unusually for a major city, Bradford is not built on any substantial body of water. The ford from which it takes its name (Broad-Ford) was a crossing of the stream called Bradford Beck. The Beck rises in the hills to the west of the city, and is swelled by tributaries such as Horton Beck, the Westbrook, Bowling Beck and the Eastbrook. At the site of the original ford, just below the present Bradford Cathedral, it turns north, and flows more or less straight towards the River Aire at Shipley.
Bradford Beck's course through the city centre is entirely underground, and was mostly so by the middle of the nineteenth century. On the 1852 Ordnance Survey map of Bradford [15] it is visible as far as Sun Bridge, at the end of Tyrrell Street, and then again from beside the Railway Station at the bottom of Kirkgate. On the 1906 Ordnance Survey [16], it disappears at Tumbling Hill Street, off Thornton Road, and first appears again north of Cape Street, off Valley Road, though there are further culverts as far as Queens Road. This is substantially the position today (2006).
Bradford Beck is now a central element of the Alsop plan to regenerate the city centre. 'The Bowl' is an ambitious project to open up the Beck and create a huge pool to act as the pivotal point of the new city centre.
The Bradford Canal, built in 1774, took its water from Bradford Beck and its tributaries. This supply was often inadequate to feed the locks, and the polluted state of the Canal led to its temporary closure in 1866: the Canal was closed in the early twentieth century as uneconomic. Like the Beck, the Canal is about to be rejuvenated in the Alsop plan. 'The Channel' envisions the reopening of the Canal and the creation of a new canalside community.
Bradfordale
Bradfordale (or Bradforddale) is a name given by geographers to the valley of Bradford Beck (see for example Firth 1997 [17]). It can reasonably be regarded as one of the Yorkshire Dales, though as the site of a big city, it is often not recognised as such.
Culture and recreation
Museums and art galleries
The city is the location of the most visited museum outside London - the National Media Museum which has 3 cinemas including a gigantic Imax screen. Bradford's main art gallery is housed in the grand Edwardian Cartwright Hall in Lister Park. Salts Mill has the worlds largest collection of David Hockney artworks. Bradford Industrial Museum [18] celebrates and explains the significant achievements in Bradford's industrial past, from textiles to the manufacture of motor cars. Colour was important in the development of the textile industry and the educational Bradford Colour Museum [19] is unique in the UK. It is run by the Society of Dyers and Colourists.
Festivals
Each year the city hosts several successful festivals. In June the Bradford Festival [20] includes a Book Festival and the massive Bradford Mela [21], the biggest of its kind outside Asia. The Ilkley Literature Festival [22] in September/October is the largest and most pretigious in the north attracting big names from the arts and entertainment. There are several Continental Markets and Food Fairs throughout the city and district including the Yorkshire International Market, a four day spectacular in August. The city has an annual series of important film and cinema events: the Bradford Film festival in March, Bite The Mango (World Cinema) in September, plus the Bradford Animation Festival held each November.
Architecture
Bradford's oldest building is the Cathedral, which for most of its life was a parish church. Few other Medieval buildings have survived apart from Bolling Hall, which has been preserved as a museum.
Bradford boasts some fine Victorian buildings: apart from the mills mentioned elsewhere in this article, there is the City Hall (with statues of Rulers of England unusually including Oliver Cromwell), the Wool Exchange (now used as a bookshop), and a large Victorian cemetery at Undercliffe.
Little Germany is a splendid Victorian commercial district just east of the city centre which takes its name from nineteenth-century immigrants who ran businesses from some of the many listed buildings. Following decades of decay there have been successful conversions to office and residential use. In mid-2005 renovation began on the prominent Eastbrook Hall in Little Germany.
Like many cities, Bradford lost a number of notable buildings to developers in the 1960s and 1970s: particularly mourned at the time were the Swan Arcade and the old Kirkgate Market. In recent years some buildings from that era have themselves been demolished and replaced: Provincial House, next to Centenary Square, was demolished by controlled explosion in 2002 [23], and Forster House was pulled down in 2005 as part of the Broadway development [24].
Theatre
There are four theatres in Bradford: The Alhambra was built in 1914 for theatre impresario Frank Laidler, and later owned by the Moss Empire group (Oswald Stoll and Edward Moss) and refurbished in 1986; the Studio is a smaller studio theatre in the same complex. Both of these are operated by Bradford Council. The Theatre in the Mill is a small studio theatre in the University of Bradford which presents both student and community shows and small-scale touring professional work. The Priestley is a privately run venue with a medium-sized proscenium theatre and a small studio.
Among the professional theatre companies based in Bradford, are
- Kala Sangam
- the satirical madcap comedy troop, Komedy Kollective.
- Lost Dog (based at Theatre In The Mill)
- Mind the Gap, one of the longest established, who have always worked with a mixture of disabled and able-bodied performers.
Groups and organisations teaching theatre include
- The Asian Theatre School
- Bradford Stage and Theatre School
- Stage 84
Amateur theatre groups include:
- Actors Community Theatre (ACT)
- Bingley Little Theatre
- The Bradford Players
- Bradford University Society for Operettas and Musicals (BUSOM)
- Bradford University Theatre Group (BUTG),
- Bradford Youth Players
- Buttershaw (St Paul's) Church Amateur Operatic and Dramatic Society
- Drama Unlimited
- Great Horton Amateur Operatic Society
Music and dance
St George's Hall is a grand concert hall, designed by Lockwood and Mawson, dating from 1853. The Hallé Orchestra have been regular visitors over the years, as have a wide range of popular entertainers including Ken Dodd. It is sometimes used for theatrical productions.
Though the University does not have an academic music department, it has a Fellow in Music who organises a range of playing and performing groups, and regular concerts around the university, in venues such as the Tasmin Little Music Centre, and the Yorkshire Craft Centre at Bradford College; there are also occasional concerts further afield, in venues such as Bradford Cathedral.
Although Bradford was home to composer Frederick Delius, there are no prominent professional music ensembles based in Bradford at present. There are some prominent amateur groups, such as the Bradford Festival Chorus.
The Topic Folk Club has been in existence since 1956, though it has changed the pub it meets in every few years. It currently meets in the Cock and Bottle on Barkerend Road, on Thursday nights.
Jazz at the Priestley is a long-running series of jazz evenings in the cellar bar of The Priestley on Friday nights.
Boars Head Morris Men were a (mainly Cotswold) morris side in Bradford from the early 1970s until 2006. Persephone Ladies Morris are still active, as are Rainbow Morris in Shipley, and clog side Clogaire.
mono is a monthly rock fanzine published in Bradford, covering the local alternative/independent rock music scene.
Cinema
The National Media Museum celebrates cinema and movies. It contains an Imax cinema, the Cubby Broccoli cinema, and the Pictureville cinema - described by David Puttnam as the best cinema in Britain [25]. The museum has a rich and varied programme of films from around the world.
Traditional cinemas have been replaced by new entertainment complexes with multi-screen cinemas: Cineworld at the Leisure Exchange in the city centre, and another (a new Odeon) at Thornbury, on the outskirts of Bradford.
Nightlife
Since around 2000, several clubs and theme pubs have opened in the West End of Bradford, around the Alhambra Theatre, turning what was previously a fairly quiet area into one that is often crowded and vibrant at night.
Parks and countryside
Within the city district there are 37 parks and gardens. Lister Park with its boating lake and Mughal Water Gardens, was voted Britain's Best Park for 2006[26]. Peel Park is the venue for the annual Mela — a celebration of eastern culture. Beauty spot Chellow Dene has two Victorian reservoirs set in pleasant woodland. To the west and north of Bradford are picturesque and atmospheric moorlands: the famous Ilkley Moor and moors above Haworth known internationally for its connection with the Brontë sisters.
Sport
Bradford has a long and proud history in sport, especially Rugby League, Soccer and Cricket.
Bradford Bulls are one of the most successful rugby league clubs in the world. Currently (2006) World Club Champions and 7 times winners of the Rugby League Championship. The home of the Bulls is Odsal Stadium in the south of the city.
Football has a rich heritage in Bradford. Bradford City and Bradford (Park Avenue) are passionately supported. On May 11 1985, 56 people were killed at a fire at Valley Parade, home of Bradford City. Centenary Square now contains a monument to the Bradford City disaster. The fire led to new legislation to increase safety in all the UK's football grounds.
The Richard Dunn Sports Centre is just across the road from Odsal Stadium, home of the Bulls. The sports facilities at the University are also open to the public at certain times.
Local groups and societies
Bradford's former importance as a centre of international trade led to the creation of the Bradford Circle for Foreign Languages [27], which still survives today and is possibly unique among similar clubs in that it owns its own premises.
Also following the closure of the Bradford Trolleybus system, The Bradford Trolleybus Association [28] was founded to preserve Bradford's Trolleybuses.
Newspapers
The Telegraph and Argus is Bradford's daily evening newspaper, published six days each week from Monday to Saturday. It is known locally as the "T&A".
Religion
The City of Bradford and surrounding districts are home to a wealth of places of worship that contribute to the region's cultural heritage. These include Sikh and Hindu temples, mosques, synagogues and many Christian churches. The district has a tradition of nonconformity which is reflected in the number of chapels erected by Baptists, Methodists etc. The city was a major centre of the House Church movement in the 1980s, and the Christian charity Christians Against Poverty was founded in the city.
Two carved stones, probably parts of a Saxon preaching cross, were found on the site of Bradford cathedral. They indicate that Christians may have worshipped here since Paulinus of York came to the north of England in the year 627 on a mission to convert Northumbria. He preached in Dewsbury and it was from there that Bradford was first evangelised. The vicars of Bradford later paid dues to that parish.
Religious buildings
Bradford Cathedral
The most prominent Christian church in Bradford, is Bradford Cathedral, originally the Parish Church of St. Peter. The parish of Bradford was in existence by 1283, and there was a stone church on the shelf above the Beck by 1327.
The Diocese of Bradford was created from part of the Diocese of Ripon in 1919, and the church became a cathedral at that time.
Other Christian Churches
There are many fine churches in the Bradford area, some of them listed buildings, and also many buildings that were formerly churches but now in other uses. In 2006 the Roman Catholic diocese of Leeds proposed to close half the Roman Catholic churches in Bradford for demographic reasons [29].
The Abundant Life Centre, (formerly called the Abundant Life Church) is the home of a charismatic, evangelical Christian sect. The building is modern, low and unassuming, but it is visible from most of central Bradford, as it is sited high up on the eastern side of Bradfordale.
Several immigrant communities from central and eastern Europe have their own churches, such as the Ukrainian Bazilian Fathers and the Polish Catholic Church.
Mosques
Since the 1960s Bradford has had a significant Muslim population, and accordingly there are many mosques throughout the city. Some were converted from churches or other buildings, but there are several purpose-built mosques as well.
Hindu temples
There are two Hindu temples, the Hindu Cultural Society of Bradford on Leeds road and the Hindu Temple & Community Centre on Thornton Lane [30].
Sikh temples
The Sikh community has several places of worship in the Leeds Road area of Bradford. Ramgharia Gurdwara is on Bolton Road, Bradford, and the Guru Nanak Gurdwara is on Wakefield Road at the corner of Usher Street.
Synagogues
The Jewish community in Bradford was strong in the late 19th century, but small today. There is a 19th century Reform synagogue in Bowland Street in the Manningham area.
Notable Bradfordians
The people in this list were either born or brought up in Bradford (not necessarily both), or had a significant connection with the city later in life. Those marked with an asterisk ('*') are described in Lister, 2004 [31].
- Mohammed Ajeeb CBE* — the first Asian Lord Mayor in the United Kingdom
- Private Eric Anderson, VC* — Bradford's only winner of the Victoria Cross in the Second World War
- Sir Edward Appleton* — discoverer of the ionosphere and Nobel Prize winner
- Bob Appleyard* — Yorkshire and England cricketer
- Jonathan Falkingham — Architect, co-founder of award winning regeneration company Urban Splash.
- Tasmin Archer* — Singer-songwriter
- Inspector Martin Baines, race relations officer West Yorkshire Police (Bradford's best citizen 2000 (service sector)).
- David Bairstow* — Yorkshire and England cricketer
- Rodney Bewes* — Actor
- John Braine* Writer
- The Brontë sisters, Anne*, Emily*, and Charlotte* were born in Thornton on the outskirts of Bradford, but later lived in Haworth.
- Ian Clough* — mountaineer
- Phil Dean musician
- Frederick Delius* — Composer
- Joolz Denby (also known as Joolz) — poet and writer
- Andrea Dunbar*, playwright and scriptwriter. The film Rita, Sue and Bob Too was set in south Bradford.
- Richard Dunn* — Boxer.
- Adrian Edmondson* — actor and comedian, most notably Young Ones and Bottom
- W.E. Forster* Politician — commemorated by statue, and is the namesake of Forster Square.
- Edward Garvey — Garda Commissioner
- Gareth Gates* — Pop Idol runner up
- Ernest Gillick— sculptor
- Robert Hardy — bassist of Franz Ferdinand
- David Hockney* — Artist
- Allan Holdsworth — Guitarist
- Alice Jones — the child-actress who played Katie Rowan in ITV's Heartbeat (1992-present) born 4 March 1993
- Ken Kitson — Bradford born actor in Last of the Summer Wine
- Samuel Lister* — Industrialist & inventor, commemorated by a statue.
- Ken Morrison* — Executive Chairman of Wm Morrison Supermarkets
- Brian Noble — Great Britain Rugby League coach
- The Black Panther — career kidnapper and murderer
- Albert Pierrepoint — executioner from Clayton — put to death Ruth Ellis- the last woman executed in England, and many others.
- J. B. Priestley* — Writer, commemorated by a statue.
- Simon Rouse, plays DCI Jack Meadows in The Bill
- Lord John Sewel, a Labour Party member of the House of Lords
- Harry Corbett* — Sooty glove puppet
- Justin Sullivan — Musician and songwriter in New Model Army
- Peter Sutcliffe — The Yorkshire Ripper, serial killer
- Kimberley Walsh — Member of pop group Girls Aloud
- Stanley Wardley — City Engineer who oversaw the redevelopment of the 1950s and 1960s
- Richard Whiteley* — Television Presenter
- Sir Walter Womersley, World War II minister representing Grimsby
Wm Morrison Supermarkets originated in Bradford.
Bradford is the birthplace of rock bands New Model Army, Anti System, Smokie, Southern Death Cult/The Cult, The Scene, Terrorvision, Morbid Humour, Asian hip hop group Fun-Da-Mental, Violation,and new Hip-Hop record label DMB Records, also known as Defying Musical Boundaries.
Transport
In past centuries Bradford's location in Bradfordale made communications difficult, except from the north. Nonetheless, Bradford is now well-served by transport systems.
Roads
Bradford was first connected to the developing turnpike network in 1734, when the first Yorkshire turnpike was built between Manchester and Leeds via Halifax and Bradford. In 1740, the Selby to Halifax road was constructed through Leeds and Bradford. Several more local and long-distance roads were built through the rest of the century.
Today Bradford lies on several trunk roads:
- The A650 between Wakefield and Keighley
- The A647 to Leeds
- The A658 to Harrogate
- The A6036 to Halifax
The M606, a spur off the M62 motorway, connects Bradford with the national motorway network. Although it was originally planned to come right to the city centre, this has never been built and is unlikely now ever to be, as a hotel has been built across the proposed route.
Buses and trams
Bradford's tram system was begun by Bradford Corporation in 1882: at first the vehicles were horse-drawn. They were replaced by steam-driven trams in 1883, and by electric ones in 1898.
On 20 June 1911, Britain's first trolleybus service opened in Bradford, between Laisterdyke and Dudley Hill. It was often known as the trackless, in contradistinction to trams. The last trolleybus service in Bradford - and indeed in Britain - ceased operation on 26 March 1972. The Bradford Trolleybus Association {http://www.bradfordtrolleybusassociation.co.uk] bought some of Bradford's Trolleybuses but later sold them off to private owners or to be scrapped.
First Bus are now the main operator of most routes in Bradford, and are part of the First Group. Some routes that include Manchester Road use guided buses.
Canal
The Bradford Canal was a four-mile long spur off the Leeds and Liverpool Canal at Shipley. It was planned and built as part of the original Leeds and Liverpool project, to connect Bradford with the limestone quarries of North Yorkshire, the industrial towns on both sides of the Pennines and the ports on each coast. It opened in 1774, closed in 1866, reopened in 1871, and finally closed in 1922. There are plans to rebuild the canal as a key part of regenerating the city centre (see the main article).
Railways
The Leeds and Bradford Railway opened Bradford's first railway station at the bottom of Kirkgate on 1 July, 1846. It offered a service via Shipley to Leeds and through Leeds to other centres, including London. The line was soon absorbed by the Midland Railway, and the station was rebuilt in the early 1850s and again, much larger, in 1890. Today it is a smaller station dating from 1990, called Forster Square station though it is somewhat distant from the site of its predecessors, and from Forster Square itself. Modern electric trains connect directly to Leeds, Ilkley and Skipton. There is currently a 4 times daily GNER service linking Bradford with London King's Cross. A new company Grand Central Railway is proposing to significantly increase this London connection, with additional fast trains via Doncaster/East Coast Mainline and via Manchester/West Coast Mainline.
The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway opened its station at Drake Street on 9 May 1850, on its line between Manchester and Leeds. The Great Northern Railway opened a third terminus at Adolphus Street in 1854, serving Leeds and other places on its network, but the station was too far from the centre, and the two companies eventually agreed to build a joint station to replace the L&Y's station at Drake Street. This was Bradford Exchange station, opened in 1867: Adolphus Street remained as a goods terminal. The Exchange Station was completely rebuilt in 1880, with ten platforms; but by 1973 it was too large and again was rebuilt on a different site. In 1983 that station was renamed Bradford Interchange when a large bus station was built alongside. Bradford Interchange railway station connects directly to Leeds, to Manchester Victoria and to Blackpool. See this site
Both stations are under the control of the West Yorkshire Metro as part of the Leeds-Bradford Line routes.
From the 1870s, the Great Northern built several suburban railway lines around Bradford:
- from Laisterdyke via Idle to Shipley and Windhill
- from Exchange to Queensbury, and thence to Keighley and Halifax,
- from Low Moor to Dudley Hill, thence to the Pudsey loop, and to Dewsbury.
These all closed at various times between the 1930s and the 1960s.
There have been many schemes to build a link between Bradford's main rail termini, but none has ever come near fruition, and indeed the recent Bradford Masterplan for the city centre regeneration has not addressed this (indeed when asked the writer of the masterplan admit to not even considering it)[citation needed]. The main practical difficulty is the great difference in elevation: the Exchange/Interchange station is already at the bottom of a long slope, steep by railway standards, but it is several metres higher than Forster Square Station.
Air
- The city is served by Leeds Bradford International Airport 6 miles NE. Bradford and Leeds councils jointly opened the airport in 1931 as Yeadon Aerodrome. There has been rapid expansion in recent years and direct flights are now available to over 70 destinations (October 2006). Around 3 million passengers will use the airport in 2006. It is the home base of Jet2.com, voted Best European Short Haul Airline 2006.
External links
- Bradford Trolleybus Association
- / wikitravel.org/bradford
- Bradfordinfo.com: Facts and figures about the Bradford Metropolitan District
- MapsAndStats.com: Maps and statistics Bradford Metropolitan District
- 2001 Bradford Riots: A detailed report into the 2001 disturbances entitled, 'Fair Justice' was researched and authored by Chris Allen [32] for FAIR (the Forum Against Islamophobia & Racism) [33].
- Visit Bradford
- Bradford local Government page
- The City of Bradford
- Bradford Telegraph & Argus
- Bradford Cinemas History
- Bradford University
- Born in Bradford Research Project
- Bradford College
- Bradford Bulls
- Bradford City FC
- Leeds Bradford International Airport
- Bronte Country
- Bradford-Net Local Search
- Bolling Hall
- Priestley Centre For The Arts
- Bradford Community Resource Centre
- Bradford Centre Regeneration URC
- Bite The Mango Film Festival
- Bradford Museums Galleries & Heritage
- National Museum of Photography, Film and Television
- Diocese of Bradford (Anglican)
References
- ^ Allen, C (2003). Fair justice: the Bradford disturbances, the sentencing and the impact. London: Forum Against Islamophobia and Racism.
- ^ Lister, Derek A J (2004). Bradford's Own. Sutton. ISBN 0-7509-3826-9.
- ^ Ordnance Survey 1:10,560 County Series Map: Yorkshire Sheet 216. Heritage Cartography. ISBN 1-903004-34-9.. This was surveyed 1847-1850, and published in 1852, though it was reprinted at various dates with certain (unidentified) details updated. The modern edition from Heritage Cartography is 'redrawn' from the original, and titled Bradford 1849, but the railways shown indicate that it is from a printing of at least 1854.
Bibliography
- ^ Firth, Gary (1997). A History of Bradford. Phillimore. ISBN 1-86077-057-6.
- Wilmott, Elvira (1987). The Ryburn Map of Victorian Bradford. Ryburn. ISBN 1-85331-004-2. The map itself is a reproduction of the Plan of the Town of Bradford ... revised and corrected to the present time by Dixon & Hindle, 1871.