Todmorden

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Todmorden
Location on map of United Kingdom
Statistics
Population: 11,826
Ordnance Survey
OS grid reference: SD936241
Administration
Metropolitan borough: Calderdale
Metropolitan county: West Yorkshire
Region: Yorkshire and the Humber
Constituent country: England
Sovereign state: United Kingdom
Other
Ceremonial county: West Yorkshire
Historic county: Yorkshire, Lancashire
Services
Police force: West Yorkshire Police
Fire and rescue: {{{Fire}}}
Ambulance: Yorkshire
Post office and telephone
Post town: TODMORDEN
Postal district: OL14
Dialling code: 01706
Politics
UK Parliament: Calder Valley
European Parliament: Yorkshire and the Humber
Todmorden c.1870
Enlarge
Todmorden c.1870

Todmorden is a town in West Yorkshire, northern England. It forms part of the metropolitan borough of Calderdale and lies in the Upper Calder Valley. Other villages and towns in this part of the valley include Walsden, Hebden Bridge, Mytholmroyd and Sowerby Bridge.

The town centre occupies the confluence of three steep sided valleys in the Pennines. The valleys constrict the shape of the town. Todmorden is surrounded by moorlands with occasional outcrops of gritstone sandblasted by constant winds.

The historic border between Yorkshire and Lancashire was marked by the river River Calder which runs through the centre of the town. The border was altered by the Local Government Act 1888, placing all of Todmorden within Yorkshire.

Contents

[edit] Early history

The name itself Todmorden is usually thought to derive from Tott-mer-den - “the valley of Totta’s marsh”. An alternative theory is that the name derives from two words for death. "Tod" and "mor" (as in "mort"): "Death-death-wood" (Birch, R., see below).

The earliest written record of the area is in the Domesday Book (1086). Settlement in Medieval Todmorden was dispersed. Most people living in scattered farms or in isolated hilltop agricultural settlements. Packhorse trails were marked by ancient and mystical stones of which many still survive.

For hundreds of years streams from the surrounding hills provided water for corn and fulling mills. Todmorden grew to relative prosperity by combining farming with the production of woollen textiles. Some Yeomen clothiers were able to build fine houses, a few of which still exist today. Increasingly, though, the area turned to cotton. The proximity of Manchester, as a source of material and trade was undoubtedly a strong factor. Another was that the strong Pennine streams and rivers were able to power the machine looms. Improvements in textile machinery (by Kay, Hargreaves and Arkwright, along with the development of turnpike roads (1751 - 1781) helped to develop the new cotton industry and increase the local population.

[edit] Nineteenth Century history

In 1801 the majority of people still lived in the uplands, Todmorden itself could be considered as a mere village. During the years 1800 - 1845 great changes took place in the communications and transport of the town which were to have a crucial effect on promoting industrial growth. These included the building of: (1) better roads; (2) the Rochdale Canal (1804); and (3) the main line of the Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway (1841) between Manchester and Leeds. This railway line incorporated the (then) longest tunnel in the world, the 2,885 yard Summit Tunnel; and is now the Caldervale Railway line.

The Industrial Revolution caused a concentration of industry and settlement along the valley floor and a switch from woollens to cotton. One family in the area was particularly influential on the town; the Fielden family. They created a "dynasty" that changed the town forever by establishing several large mills, putting up assorted impressive building and bringing about social and educational change.

Todmorden coat of arms
Enlarge
Todmorden coat of arms

[edit] Twentieth Century history

Like the rest of the Upper Calder Valley, Todmorden's economy experienced a slow decline from around the end of the First World War onwards, accelerating after the Second World War until around the late 1970s. During this period there was a painful restructuring of the local economy with the closure of mills and the demise of heavy industry.

In December 1984 a freight train carrying petrol derailed in the Summit Tunnel between Todmorden and Littleborough causing what is still considered as one of the biggest underground fires in transport history.

Harold Shipman, the G.P. who is believed to have killed over 200 patients in the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, claimed some of his victims while working as a doctor in Todmorden, between March 1974 and September 1975.

Modern Todmorden
Enlarge
Modern Todmorden

[edit] Todmorden today

Heavy industry is now part of Todmorden's history, not its present. The industrial chimneys have largely gone and the remaining mills have mostly been converted for other purposes. The town's industrial base is much reduced (at one time Todmorden had the largest weaving shed in the world). There has been a great deal of regeneration activity and Todmorden is now increasingly a commuter town for people working in Manchester, Leeds, Bradford, Huddersfield and smaller towns. Todmorden also services the local rural area and attracts visitors through its various events, heritage and the local pennine countryside. Changing work patterns may have influenced the fact that the town was the first rural telephone exchange in Britain to be broadband-enabled through public demand. Rising house prices over recent years are a particular problem as there is limited land available in the valley for building affordable housing.

In June 2000, torrential rains flowing into an already saturated river system saw river walls break their banks in the worst flooding Todmorden has ever seen. Almost 1,000 properties were affected causing £20 million worth of damage, along the valley floor. The floods made national headlines and the Environment Agency quickly began formulating plans to minimise the risk of something so devastating happening again. A £25 million flood alleviation scheme is due for completion in 2007.

The population of Todmorden in the 2001 UK census was 11,826. [1].

[edit] Attractions

Todmorden has many attractions. It lies alongside the Pennine Way and Calderdale Way and is popular for outdoor pursuits such as walking, mountain biking and bouldering. It has a canal and lock, Sports Centre, skateboard park, tennis courts, golf course, aquarium, cricket ground, large park and woods, many eating places and thriving indoor and outdoor markets. The Hippodrome Theatre shows films as well as putting on live performances. The town also has a Toy and Model Museum, library, second hand bookshops and a Tourist Information Centre. The visual arts are particularly strong in the town. Annual events include a carnival, agricultural show, beer festival, music festival and the traditional Easter Pace Egg plays.

Todmorden has the look of a Victorian mill town and has some notable buildings include Dobroyd Castle (completed in 1869), now home to a Buddhist community (Losang Dragpa Centre); the Hippodrome Theatre (Edwardian); an imposing Italianate town hall (built 1866 - 1875) that dominates the centre of town; a Grade I listed Unitarian church (built 1865-1869); and the 110ft Stoodley Pike monument (built 1814 and rebuilt in 1854). Older buildings include two Eighteenth Century pubs; Todmorden Old Hall, a Grade II listed manor house (Elizabethan) in the centre of town and currently in use as a restaurant; and St Mary’s Church, (dates from 1476).

[edit] UFO phenomena

There have been many alleged sightings of UFOs in the town and surrounding Pennine hills. In 1980, there were two internationally reported incidents that involved Todmorden. On June 11th, the body of Zigmund Adamski was found on top of a heap of coal in a coal yard. There is no logical explanation how he got there as he had been missing for five days without being sighted. Six months later, the policeman who was called to the scene, Alan Godfrey, spotted a UFO near Burnley Road when in his car, then claimed under hypnotic regression to have been abducted by mysterious extra-terrestrials. Godfrey was later interviewed on the Johnny Carson Show in the USA.

[edit] Witchcraft claims

There have been some claims that witchcraft has been practiced in the town in distant and more recent times. In the 1970s a coven supposedly practiced in a small woodland area in the district of Cornhome, at the crossing point of 2 ley lines. The death of an occultist on the Moors above Todmorden in September 2002 made national news.

[edit] Twin towns

Todmorden's twin towns are:

And as part of Calderdale, Todmorden has another twin:

[edit] Famous people from Todmorden

[edit] Trivia

(1) The Calder Valley is a very popular setting for film and TV. Todmorden was used as the setting for the following: A Day Out (1972, TV, written by Alan Bennett); Juliet Bravo (1980 - 1985, police series); Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit (1990, TV series); The Life and Times of Henry Pratt (TV, 1992); Sparkhouse (film, 2002); The League of Gentlemen (TV, parts of series 3); and the BAFTA winning My Summer of Love (film, 2004).

(2) iKnow Yorkshiredescribes Todmorden and its neighbour Hebden Bridge as among its list of top gay friendly areas.

(3) Todmorden and the surrounding areas have had big cat sightings over a prolonged period. The Halifax Courier of 20 November 2006 describes 5 sightings in 2005 and 3 sightings in 2006. The last of these was reported in October 2006 by a pub licensee as she walked her dog; her description was of a lynx-like creature with a smallish head and long hind legs.

(4) On March 2, 1868 an infamous double murder took place at Christ Church, Todmorden (built 1830 - 1832). The victims graves lie in the churchyard. Miles Weatherhill was forbidden from seeing his housemaid sweetheart, Mary Bell, by the Rev Anthony John Plow. Murderously angry Weatherhill armed himself with four pistols and an axe and took revenge first on the vicar and then on another maid who had informed Rev Plow of the secret meetings. He also seriously injuring the vicar’s wife. On April 4, 1868 Weatherhill became the last person to be publicly hanged in Manchester.

(5) Todmorden is geographically in Yorkshire. There is sometimes confusion because the postmark (OL14) is Oldham and the telephone code (01706) is Rochdale (both in Lancashire). Also, until the border was moved on 1 April 1889, the Lancashire-Yorkshire boundary used to run through the centre of Todmorden; thereby making it possible to dance in the Town Hall ballroom, forward and back, across two counties. Today the whole of the town is in West Yorkshire.

(6) The town boasts two Nobel prizewinners; John Cockcroft (Physics) and Geoffrey Wilkinson (Chemistry). Despite 24 years difference in their birth dates both attended the same school, Todmorden Grammar, and both had the same science master.

[edit] Further reading

Birch, R. Todmorden Album 4, The Woodlands Press, 2006.

Cass, E. The Pace-Egg Plays of the Calder Valley, London: FLS Books, 2004.

Heywood, M., Heywood, F. and Jennings, B. A History of Todmorden, Smith Settle Ltd, 1996.

Jennings, B. Pennine Valley: History of Upper Calderdale Dalesman Publishing Co Ltd, 1992.

Law, B. The Fieldens of Todmorden: A Nineteenth Century Business Dynasty, Littleborough: George Kelsall, I995.

MacDonald, M. The World From Rough Stones, Random House, 1975. (A novel set during the building of the Summit Tunnel).

Malcolm, F., and Heywood, F. Cloth Caps and Cricket Crazy, Upper Calder Valley Publications, 2004.

[edit] External links

In other languages