Discover Glorious Yorkshire with Great Rail Journeys
08/11/2024 · By Rob Payne
Discover Yorkshire with Great Rail Journeys from a base in historic York. Tour York Minster, visit Harrogate and ride the North Yorkshire Moors Railway.
Read moreWhen mentioned in the Domesday Book, a survey of England
completed in 1086, Cichhelai was little more than a tiny
agricultural settlement but by 1305, when it was granted a charter
to hold a weekly market, Keighley had grown into a town with more
than a hundred residents.
By the end of the eighteenth century the town had become a
rest-stop at the crossroads of several historic turnpikes;
stagecoach routes between cities in the counties of Yorkshire,
Lancashire and Cumbria and over the following century had
established itself as a prosperous industrial town manufacturing
both textiles and the looms and sewing machines with which they
were produced.
Although Keighley's golden era of industrial prosperity has largely been consigned to history, the town's location, where the Aire and Worth rivers meet amid the scenic dales of Yorkshire's West Riding region, naturally lends itself to tourism. A handsome town with an abundance of Victorian architecture and numerous attractions, Keighley is a delightful destination that rewards exploration, but it is also a comfortable base from which to discover Brontë Country; the wild and dramatically beautiful moors, and the dark-stone mill towns and cobbled villages within them, that inspired literary sisters Anne, Emily and Charlotte Brontë when writing classic stories such as Wuthering Heights, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall and Jane Eyre.
Housed in the stunning former mansion and grounds of a Victorian textile millionaire, Cliffe Castle Museum has been lovingly restored and contains exhibitions covering a diversity of themes ranging from local geology and fossils, antique dolls and toys, items of stained-glass produced by William Morris and even a display dedicated to Britain's indigenous wild owl species.
A National Trust property, East Riddlesden Hall, on the outskirts of Keighley, is an immaculately-preserved manor house built in 1642; the home of another wealthy textile merchant. The house has a comfortable and homely atmosphere, featuring period décor, furnishings and artefacts to recreate rooms as they would have been at the height of Keighley's industrial prosperity. The grounds and gardens, complete with lake, have also been lovingly restored and maintained, providing a tranquil and scenic spot for a picnic.
Located near Ingrow station, the first stop after Keighley on the Worth Valley Railway, this remarkable 'living' museum showcases the work of the Vintage Carriages Trust; a group of volunteers dedicated to the preservation of historic wooden-bodied train carriages and features beautifully restored examples of rolling stock built from 1876 onwards.