Perserverance Street

Off-topic discussions, musings and chat
Brandy
Posts: 1550
Joined: Wed 21 Feb, 2007 8:03 am

Post by Brandy »

Ive just found this photo on Leodis of some kids playing on Perserverance Street.What a great name for a street that is.I wish i lived on preservation streetAnyone got any old maps of the place?heres the link-http://www.leodis.org/display.aspx?reso ... 119_171517
There are only 10 types of people in the world -those who understand binary, and those that don't.

User avatar
chemimike
Posts: 475
Joined: Fri 14 Mar, 2008 7:23 pm
Location: Reading

Post by chemimike »

Perseverence st was within the triangle of Wakefiel rd, Pontefract road and Queen St, as seen in the 1908 map below,Sorry doesn't seem to want to imbed. The map is athttp://s431.photobucket.com/albums/qq38/jeemikejee/?action=view&current=perserverencest1908.jpg    

Chrism
Posts: 1828
Joined: Sun 20 Jan, 2008 8:26 am

Post by Chrism »

Here
Attachments
__TFMF_u2nbjxqxaoo2nwj0kuaogi45_377ee1e8-11eb-4e84-89af-55199df6ddef_0_main.jpg
__TFMF_u2nbjxqxaoo2nwj0kuaogi45_377ee1e8-11eb-4e84-89af-55199df6ddef_0_main.jpg (96.98 KiB) Viewed 3010 times
Sit thissen dahn an' tell us abaht it.

User avatar
Leeds Hippo
Posts: 584
Joined: Sun 04 Jul, 2010 2:59 pm

Post by Leeds Hippo »

Always amused me that the Victorian ruling classes were always full of advice for the poor to the extent they named their streets after motivational expressions - I prefer names like Strawberry lane in Armley - mind you if you had to live in a back to back with ten others and have outside toilets you would need perserverance!Other streets I've seen areHope Street Faith StreetThrift StreetAny others?Maybe the government have some planned"Get off your backside and get to work street" ;-)

The Parksider
Posts: 1581
Joined: Sat 10 Nov, 2007 3:55 am

Post by The Parksider »

Brandy wrote: What a great name for a street that is.I wish i lived on preservation streethttp://www.leodis.org/display.aspx?resourceIde ... 119_171517 Anyone got a history of the place. Wasn't Stourton efectively an industrial "village" created soley for the local workers? Isn't it therefore true that it is an abandoned village as there's no houses there now???

User avatar
liits
Posts: 1153
Joined: Sun 25 Mar, 2007 11:24 am
Location: North London
Contact:

Post by liits »

Google Earth + Map
Attachments
__TFMF_a2cp4e4514yd2iqxzhxmlq45_e367d12d-42c7-48eb-a429-336cc53f0edf_0_main.jpg
__TFMF_a2cp4e4514yd2iqxzhxmlq45_e367d12d-42c7-48eb-a429-336cc53f0edf_0_main.jpg (323.19 KiB) Viewed 3010 times

jim
Posts: 1898
Joined: Sun 17 May, 2009 10:09 am

Post by jim »

I remember Stourton very well from the late 1950s - 1960s. my work took me to the engine sheds and wagon repair works there at frequent intervals, and I believe that these two places of employment had a lot to do with the creation of Stourton and possibly it's demise.Looking at the two inch to the mile OS maps published in "The Village Atlas" for the area, in 1842 the area of the triangle is taken up almost completely by the grounds of Stourton Lodge. in 1892 the later village is completely built up, and other than the railway premises alluded to above, the only other place of local employment is the Iron Works on the later site of Yorkshire Tar Distillers. The 1908 map shows the then new GNR Hunslet East Goods railway embankment in place, which appears to have involved the demolition of some relatively recent housing.Up until the 1960s/70s the railways owned substantial quantities oflow cost housing which were rented out to employees, and Stourton could easily be one of the larger areas of this type, but I am not certain if this was the case. Certainly a large number of the occupants were railwaymen, including several of my work colleagues.In later years the area was totally surrounded by industry - the Yorkshire Copperworks, Cameron Ironworks, Bison Concrete, Yorkshire Tar Distillers, and a plethora of industrial estates, followed by the huge expanse of the industrial estate built to the south of the railway on the site reserved for the never-to-be-builtMarshalling Yard.Presumably when the housing became life-expired the railway work had gone and the surrounding industry made it sensible for the site to be zoned for none-residential purposes.    

tinks
Posts: 21
Joined: Fri 14 Dec, 2007 3:39 pm

Post by tinks »

'Tranquility' the street up near Cross Gates Post Office...What a lovely name for a street, pity its always gridlocked with Wheels taxi's!

drapesy
Posts: 2614
Joined: Sat 24 Feb, 2007 4:50 pm

Post by drapesy »

Chrism wrote: Here Pub at the end of Atkinson Street was the' Baron'.Had a few pints in there - it survived into the late 1980s/early 90s
there are 10 types of people in the world. Those that understand ternary, those that don't and those that think this a joke about the binary system.

carith
Posts: 187
Joined: Mon 18 Feb, 2008 2:06 pm

Post by carith »

The last time I was in the Baron it was?.

Post Reply