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Wikipedia

Keighley

Keighley (/ˈkθli/ KEETH-lee[3][4]) is a market town and a civil parish[5] in the City of Bradford Borough of West Yorkshire, England. It is the second largest settlement in the borough, after Bradford.

Keighley
Clockwise from top : View over Keighley, Dalton Mills, Markazi Jamia Mosque, North street, Town Hall
Keighley
Location within West Yorkshire
Population57,345 (2021 Census)[1]
OS grid referenceSE058412
Civil parish
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townKEIGHLEY
Postcode districtBD20, BD21, BD22
Dialling code01535
01274
PoliceWest Yorkshire
FireWest Yorkshire
AmbulanceYorkshire
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Yorkshire
53°52′01″N 1°54′40″W / 53.867°N 1.911°W / 53.867; -1.911

Keighley is eight miles (thirteen kilometres) north-west of Bradford city centre, 3+34 mi (6 km) north-west of Bingley, 10+12 mi (17 km) north of Halifax and 7+12 mi (12 km) south-east of Skipton. It is governed by Keighley Town Council and Bradford City Council. Keighley is located in West Yorkshire, close to the borders of North Yorkshire and Lancashire. Historically in the West Riding of Yorkshire, it lies between Airedale and Keighley Moors. At the 2011 census, Keighley had a population of 56,348.[6]

History edit

Toponymy edit

The name Keighley, which has gone through many changes of spelling throughout its history, means "Cyhha's farm or clearing",[7] and was mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086: "In Cichhelai, Ulchel, and Thole, and Ravensuar, and William had six carucates to be taxed."

Town charter edit

Henry de Keighley, a Lancashire knight, was granted a charter to hold a market in Keighley on 17 October 1305 by King Edward I.[8] The poll tax records of 1379 show that the population of Keighley, in the wapentake of Staincliffe in the West Riding of Yorkshire, was 109 people (47 couples and 15 single people).[9]

1700s and 1800s edit

From 1753, the Union stage coach departed on the Keighley and Kendal Turnpike from what was the Devonshire Arms coaching inn on the corner of Church Street and High Street. Rebuilt about 1789, this public house has a classical style pedimented doorcase with engaged Tuscan columns in the high fashion of that age. The original route towards Skipton was Spring Gardens Lane – Hollins Lane – Hollins Bank Lane.[10] Keighley was to become an intersection with other turnpikes, including the Two-Laws to Keighley branch of the Toller Lane – Blue Bell turnpike (1755) from Bradford to Colne, the Bradford to Keighley turnpike (1814), and the Keighley—Halifax turnpike.

The 1842 Leeds Directory description of Keighley reads, "Its parish had no dependent townships though it is about six miles [10 km] long and four miles [6 km] broad, and comprises 10,160 acres [4,110 ha] of land (including a peaty moor of about 2,000 acres or 800 ha) and a population which amounted, in the year 1801, to 5,745."

Christopher Ingham edit

Utley Cemetery contains the grave of Christopher Ingham, a veteran of the conflict against Napoleon. He was a member of the Duke of Wellington's elite 95th Rifle Regiment and fought in ten battles against the French in Spain, France and Belgium, including the Spanish Peninsula War and the Battle of Waterloo, for which he was awarded several medals, including the Peninsula Medal. He died in 1866. Some local historians believe Mr Ingham's heroism may have inspired the author Bernard Cornwell's saga about Major Richard Sharpe.[11] The TV series episode Sharpe's Justice, which focuses on the roots of the title character, is set in and around Keighley.

Hindenburg parcel edit

On 22 May 1936, the Zeppelin Hindenburg crossed Yorkshire in a diversion of her normal route between the United States and Germany.[12] As the airship passed over the town, a parcel was dropped and landed in the High Street, where two boys, Jack Gerrard and Alfred Butler, picked it up. The parcel contained a bunch of carnations, a small silver and jet crucifix, some postage stamps, a picture postcard and some Hindenburg notepaper.[13]

The note was written by John P Schulte, who called himself the first flying priest. The note requested that the carnations and crucifix be placed on the grave of his brother, Lieutenant Franz Schulte, who had died of Spanish flu, during the deadly influenza pandemic of 1918, as a Prisoner of War at Raikeswood Prisoner of War Camp, Skipton, originally built as a training camp for the Bradford Pals, in 1915. Schulte was, at that time, buried at Morton Cemetery, two miles (three kilometres) east of Keighley (though the letter stated that he was buried at Skipton, which was incorrect).[14]

To the finder of this letter. Please deposit these flowers and the cross on the grave of my dear brother, Lieutenant Franz Schulte, I. Garde Regt zu Fuss. Prisoner of War in Skipton Cemetery in Keighley near Leeds. Many thanks for your kindness, John P Schulte, the first flying priest. N.B. Please accept the stamps and picture as a small souvenir from me. God bless you![15]

— Hindenburg note, 22 May 1936

The carnations were placed on the grave and the two boys kept the postage stamps and the postcard. The crucifix was placed in St Anne's Church to avoid it being stolen.[15]

Governance edit

Constituency edit

Keighley is represented in the House of Commons by Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) Robbie Moore, who won the seat by defeating his predecessor John Grogan at the 2019 general election. Grogan had a majority of just 249 over the previous incumbent, Conservative Kris Hopkins.[16]

In 2015, Hopkins won the seat at the 2015 general election – securing a second term. Hopkins increased the Conservatives vote share in the area from 41.9%[17] in 2010 to 44.3%[18] in 2015. The Conservatives won the seat in 2010, taking over from Ann Cryer, who had been in office since 1997.

Keighley was contested by the British National Party (BNP) in the May 2005 general election, when the party's leader Nick Griffin stood for Parliament. He was defeated by Ann Cryer, one of a small number of Labour MPs with an increased majority. In March 2006, the town's mayoress, Rose Thompson, announced she had joined the BNP and was immediately dismissed by the mayor Tony Wright.[19]

Parish edit

 
Keighley Town Hall

The town was incorporated as a municipal borough on 28 July 1882 under the provisions of the Municipal Corporations Act 1882 in the West Riding of Yorkshire. In 1938, the boundaries of the borough and civil parish of Keighley were expanded to include the former urban districts and civil parishes of Haworth, Oakworth and Oxenhope, along with the parish of Morton from the abolished Keighley Rural District and a small part of the Bingley urban district.

On 1 April 1974, Keighley borough became part of the City of Bradford Metropolitan District in accordance with the Local Government Act 1972 in the newly formed county of West Yorkshire. The merger caused a lot of bitterness among Keighley people, who resented being 'taken over' by Bradford and accused the city's council of neglecting the town.[20] Civil parish status was restored to Keighley in 2002,[21] providing it with its own town council.[22]

The council's 30 members elect a mayor from amongst their number once a year. The parish boundaries are based on but not identical to the pre-1938 borough boundaries. In June 2006, the leader of Bradford District Council, Conservative Councillor Kris Hopkins, was quoted in the Craven Herald & Pioneer as suggesting it might be a good idea for Keighley to become an independent authority once again.[23] The town has a local history society, Keighley and District Local History Society, and a family history society, Keighley and District Family History Society.[24]

Arms edit

Coat of arms of Keighley
Notes
Originally granted February 1883 to Keighley Borough Council [25]
Crest
On a wreath of the colours in front of a dragon's head erased Gules entwined by a serpent Or a fountain Proper.
Escutcheon
Argent on a fess Sable between three stags' heads caboshed a Fountain proper all within a Bordure embattled Azure.
Motto
By Worth

Geography edit

Keighley lies at the confluence of the rivers Worth and Aire in Airedale, in the South Pennines. It benefits from an electrified railway service with connections to Leeds, Bradford, Shipley, Bingley, Skipton, Carlisle and Morecambe.

The post town of Keighley's northern boundary is with Bradley and its southern limit is the edge of Oxenhope. To the west, the town advances up the hill to the suburb of Black Hill, and in the east it terminates at the residential neighbourhoods of Long Lee and Thwaites Brow. The outlying north-eastern suburb of Riddlesden is sometimes incorrectly referred to as a separate village but is part of the town.

Past Black Hill and via Braithwaite Edge Road lies Braithwaite village, which leads to Laycock, which was also mentioned in the Domesday Book. Laycock is a conservation area which overlooks the hamlet of Goose Eye.

The River Aire passes through north-eastern Keighley, dividing the neighbourhood of Stockbridge and running roughly parallel to the Leeds and Liverpool Canal. The Worth links up with the Aire in Stockbridge and runs south-westerly, dividing eastern Keighley from central and western districts of the town. The Worth is lined with abandoned, semi-derelict industrial sites and tracts of waste ground dating from the period when Keighley thrived as a major textile centre.

Parts of Keighley are prone to flooding, and the town was particularly badly hit by floods in 2000.[26][27] Since then, millions have been spent on strengthening flood defences.

Other outlying villages around the town are Oakworth, Cross Roads, Haworth, Stanbury and Oxenhope. The two main settlements to the north are Silsden and Steeton. Although these villages are often referred to as separate places, they are part of the wider Keighley area. These areas add a total of 22,669 people to the Keighley area, taking the population of the wider Keighley area up to 74,098 (2001 Census).

To the north-east is Rombalds Moor, which contains many signs of Stone Age and Bronze Age occupation, including cup and ring marks;[28] as it drops back down into Wharfedale and the town of Ilkley, approximately five miles away, it becomes the more famous Ilkley Moor.

Demography edit

Census population of the ancient parish/civil parish of Keighley
Year 1801 1811 1821 1831 1841 1851 1861 1871 1881 1891
Population 5,745 6,864 9,223 11,176 13,413 18,259 18,819 24,704 30,395 36,176
Source: Vision of Britain – Keighley AP/CP: Total Population.[29]
Census population of the municipal borough of Keighley
Year 1901 1911 1921 1931 1939 † 1951 1961 1971 2011
Population 41,564 43,487 41,921 40,441 56,631 56,944 55,845 55,325 56,348
Source: Vision of Britain – Keighley MB: Total Population.[30]

The 1939 population is estimated from the National Registration Act figures.[31] The 1941 census did not take place because of the Second World War.

Economy edit

 
Hattersley Domestic Loom built by Geo. Hattersley, Keighley on display at Queen Street Mill Textile Museum, Burnley

The town's industries have typically been in textiles, particularly wool and cotton processing. In addition to the manufacture of textiles, there were several large factories making textile machinery. These included Dean, Smith & Grace, George Hattersley & Son, and Prince, Smith & Stell. The first of these operated as a manufacturer of CNC machine tools, particularly precision lathes, until 2008.

Keighley is home to Timothy Taylor Brewery, the makers of CAMRA, Champion Beer of Britain award-winning ales Landlord and Boltmaker (previously known as 'Best Bitter'). They also brew Ram Tam, Golden Best, Dark Mild, Knowle Spring and a new French style blonde ale, Le Champion, which was first brewed for the Tour de France in 2014 and has been brewed for the Tour de Yorkshire in 2015 and 2016.[32] They also own many pubs in the area, including the Albert Hotel, Boltmakers Arms, Lord Rodney, Royal Oak and The Fleece Inn in Haworth.

Community and culture edit

Much of the town centre has been pedestrianised. Keighley has four large supermarkets, Morrisons, Sainsbury's, Aldi and Asda. There are several budget supermarkets situated in small retail parks around the town.

 
Airedale Centre

The Airedale shopping centre is a large indoor shopping precinct which houses most of the town's high street retail chains. The Airedale Shopping Centre housed the 12-foot-tall (3.7 m) statue of the giant Rombald holding a boulder above his head. It was moved to a different part of the centre when a glass ceiling was added to the whole complex. A public consultation favoured placing the statue on the Beechcliffe roundabout on the A650 road approaching Keighley from the east.[33] According to local legend, the giant Rombald threw a giant rock at his enemies (or in some versions of the tale his wife) killing them. The rock is the "calf" of "cow and calf" rock fame, which can be seen today at the top of Rombald's Moor on Ilkley Moor.

Keighley has one cinema, The Picture House on North Street. It opened in 1913, making it one of the oldest in Britain. A brief closure in the mid-1990s prevented it from being listed as one of the oldest in continuous operation – a record that goes to the Curzon Cinema, which opened in Clevedon, Somerset, in 1911. It was restored from its derelict condition in 1996 by Northern Morris Associated Cinemas and operates to this day.[34]

Keighley has a popular local music scene. There have been various venues where local bands play. Most notable was the now-defunct CJ's bar (also known as Chrome, VW's, Cheese and Trumpet) that played host to many popular touring bands. Examples of local bands are the Sailmakers, the Undecided, Foxes Faux, Random Hand, the Get Guns, Eyesore Angels and Dead Message, who recently parted ways after 9 years. The British rock bands Skeletal Family and Terrorvision were also originally formed in Keighley.

Media edit

Local news and television programmes are provided by BBC Yorkshire and ITV Yorkshire. Television signals are received from the local TV transmitter. [35] Keighley's local radio stations are BBC Radio Leeds on 102.7 FM, Heart Yorkshire on 107.6 FM, Capital Yorkshire on 105.6 FM, Pulse 1 on 97.5 FM, Greatest Hits Radio West Yorkshire on 96.3 FM, and Rombalds Radio, a community based radio station that broadcast online.[36] Local newspapers are the Keighley News and Telegraph & Argus. [37][38]


Town twinning edit

 
Keighley Hall in Poix-du-Nord

Keighley has the unique record of having the first recorded town twinning agreement in the world, having entered into an agreement with Poix-du-Nord, France in 1920.[39][40] This actually followed an even earlier sister city arrangement with two communes on the outskirts of Paris, France – Suresnes and Puteaux – starting in 1905.[39][41]

Landmarks edit

Architecture edit

 
Keighley War Memorial
 
Former Mechanics' Institute on Lord Street

Like many other British towns and cities, Keighley was extensively remodelled in the 1960s and lost many historic buildings. However, the town managed to retain some of its heritage and has many Victorian buildings. The local millstone grit gives many of the buildings a distinctive look.

East Riddlesden Hall, Cliffe Castle Museum and Whinburn Mansion are fine country houses. There are large townhouses along Skipton Road, which contrast with the rows of smaller terraces in the streets behind them, although many of these larger buildings have since been converted into flats and bedsits.

The town's central library was the first Carnegie library in England, opened in 1904 with a grant of £10,000 from Andrew Carnegie.[43] The library has undergone refurbishment, which was completed in 2007. Many of the town's former mill buildings are still intact.

The town centre contains modern buildings, such as Leeds City College, and examples of Victorian commercial architecture, including the long terrace of Cavendish Street with its 220-yard (⅛ mile/a furlong) ornamental canopy. There is a bus station which opened in 2002 near the Airedale Shopping Centre.[44][45] There are several tower blocks in Parkwood Rise, Holycroft and Ingrow and a central multi-storey car park.

Amongst the modern houses in Laycock, two miles (three kilometres) outside Keighley town centre, is a 17th-century, three-storey manor house (which is said to be the former wing of a much bigger property), converted barns and 18th-century cottages.

Attractions edit

On the outskirts of town is Cliffe Hall, also known as Cliffe Castle, now Keighley Museum.[46]

 
Locomotive on the Keighley & Worth Valley Railway

The Keighley and Worth Valley railway is a heritage steam railway, which links the town with Haworth, Oakworth, Oxenhope and the Bronte Country. Keighley is the location of the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway, a heritage railway that passes through Haworth (part of the Brontë Country, home of Anne, Charlotte and Emily Brontë) and terminates at Oxenhope. At Ingrow is the Museum of Rail Travel.

Top Withens and the Brontë Waterfall are within walking distance of Stanbury, a mile and a half from Haworth. East Riddlesden Hall is in Riddlesden. Keighley Police Museum is in the Keighley Civic Centre opposite the Town Square. The old police station has many pieces of police memorabilia, including a Victorian horse-drawn Black Mariah.

Education edit

Local high schools are Carlton Keighley in Utley,[47] Beckfoot Oakbank,[48] Parkside School in Cullingworth[49] and the Holy Family Catholic School.[50]

 
Keighley College buildings in 2010

Keighley College, formerly the local campus of Leeds City College, itself formerly known as Park Lane College, is situated near Keighley railway station on Bradford Road.[51] In 2010, the college opened this new £30 million campus, moving away from the former site on Cavendish Street, which was in need of repair and has since been demolished. The college includes an Industrial Centre of Excellence and a nationally acclaimed Star Centre facility,[52] designed to encourage more young people to study STEM subjects (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics). This features a mock mission control centre, a planetarium, a simulated rocky planet surface and many other space-related items.

Religion edit

 
Central Hall, an old Methodist chapel converted to a community resource centre by infrastructure support group KIVCA[53]
 
Keighley Shared Church, the parish church of Keighley

Keighley has a parish church, Keighley Shared Church,[54] and is home to many Christian denominations. It has churches and places of worship for Anglicans, Methodists, United Reformed, Mormons, Quakers, Salvation Army and Jehovah's Witnesses. Keighley has a significant Roman Catholic, minority re-established following the repeal of the penal laws. The Catholic population was boosted in the mid-19th century with the arrival of Irish immigrants escaping the 1840s Great Famine, who came to work in the textile and weaving industries. Keighley has two Roman Catholic churches (St Anne's – 1840 and St Joseph's – 1934) and four Roman Catholic schools (St Anne's – 1857, St Joseph's – 1922, Our Lady of Victories – 1960 and Holy Family – 1964).

The first spiritualist church in Britain was founded at Keighley in 1853 by David Richmond,[55] who, although not originally from the town, stayed for many years and helped to establish the movement throughout the country. Spiritualism was at its height during Victorian times and Keighley Spiritualist church remains open.

 
The mosque on Bradford Street

Muslims make up the second-largest religious group in the town. According to the 2011 census, there were more than 12,400 Muslims in Keighley in March of that year. Most had started coming to Britain in the 1960s from the Mirpur region of Azad Kashmir, in Pakistan, and the Sylhet region of Bangladesh. As of 2013, there were eight mosques in Keighley, including the purpose-built Markazi Jamia Masjid ('Central Community Mosque') in Emily Street and the purpose-built Jamia Masjid Ghosiyah (Ghosiyah Community Mosque – named after the saint Abdul Qadir Jilani), on Skipton Road. The rest are buildings which have been converted into Mosques, with the oldest being the Shahjalal Jami Masjid and Jamiah Quraniah (ShahJalal Community Mosque and Quran Teaching School – named after the saint Shah Jalal), on Temple Row, which was previously the Wesleyan Methodist Church, 1845–46.

There is a Buddhist centre on Lawkholme Crescent, in the town centre. The Keighley Kadampa Buddhist Centre is used by lay and ordained Buddhist practitioners and also runs day and evening classes for newcomers to the faith.

Sport edit

Keighley Cougars are a semi-professional rugby league team based at Royd Ings Avenue. The ground's historical name is Lawkholme Lane but has been known as Cougar Park since 1992. Keighley RUFC rugby union team are based at Rose Cottage, Utley, and play in the amateur Yorkshire Second Division.

Keighley Central F.C., was a football club that won the Yorkshire Football League Division 3 title in 1964.[56]

On 6 July 2014, Stage 2 of the 2014 Tour de France from York to Sheffield, passed through the town. It was also the location of the stage's intermediate sprint after 42.6 miles (68.6 km). The 20 points for the Points jersey was claimed by Blel Kadri of AG2R La Mondiale.[57]

Filmography edit

Film edit

Keighley was the setting for the film Blow Dry, starring Josh Hartnett, Alan Rickman and Bill Nighy. Blow Dry opens with the announcement that the small town of Keighley will host the year 2000 British Hair Championships. Keighley's mayor (Warren Clarke) is thrilled about the news, but when he announces it to the town's press, they all yawn disapprovingly. The film, although set in Keighley, was shot in several locations.[58]

Most of the 2004 film Yasmin was shot in Keighley. Written by Simon Beaufoy and mostly filmed in Lawkholme, it tells the story of a British Muslim woman who has her life disrupted by the impact of the September 11 attacks on America. Beaufoy said the film was originally set in Oldham, but "worked its way across the Pennines".[59]

The Keighley and Worth Valley Railway (KWVR), running steam trains from Keighley to Haworth and Oxenhope, has been used in several films, including The Railway Children, Yanks, the film of the Pink Floyd musical The Wall and an episode of the long-running situation comedy, The Last of the Summer Wine.[60] A Touch of Frost, starring David Jason, was also filmed at the railway line close to Ingrow West.[61]

The 1950s set British feature film Between Two Women (2000) was filmed extensively in and around Keighley and its mills, in particular around the railway and close to the main town railway station.[62] The same director's next film, The Jealous God, (2005) also featured Keighley railway station and nearby streets.[63]

The film God's Own Country about the young life of a sheep farmer was filmed in Laycock and also at Keighley bus station[64]

Television edit

The 2004 documentary Edge of the City, about the City of Bradford Social Services, and the people and problems they deal with, was partly filmed in Keighley, and concerned sexual abuse of underage white girls by some Asian men.[65]

A great part of the 2004 BBC television drama North and South was shot on Keighley, with Dalton Mills being one of the serial's main locations.[66]

Notable people edit

The following people were born in Keighley, have lived there in the past or are currently resident in the town.

Freedom of the Town edit

The following people and military units have received the Freedom of the Town of Keighley.

Individuals edit

Military Units edit

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  • Keighley Town Council
  • Keighley Shared Church
  • Keighley at Curlie
  • Keighley Online – News, business and Keighley community site
  • The ancient parish of Keighley: historical and genealogical information at GENUKI.

keighley, other, uses, disambiguation, keeth, market, town, civil, parish, city, bradford, borough, west, yorkshire, england, second, largest, settlement, borough, after, bradford, clockwise, from, view, over, dalton, mills, markazi, jamia, mosque, north, stre. For other uses see Keighley disambiguation Keighley ˈ k iː 8 l i KEETH lee 3 4 is a market town and a civil parish 5 in the City of Bradford Borough of West Yorkshire England It is the second largest settlement in the borough after Bradford KeighleyClockwise from top View over Keighley Dalton Mills Markazi Jamia Mosque North street Town HallKeighleyLocation within West YorkshirePopulation57 345 2021 Census 1 OS grid referenceSE058412Civil parishKeighley 2 Metropolitan boroughCity of BradfordMetropolitan countyWest YorkshireRegionYorkshire and the HumberCountryEnglandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townKEIGHLEYPostcode districtBD20 BD21 BD22Dialling code0153501274PoliceWest YorkshireFireWest YorkshireAmbulanceYorkshireUK ParliamentKeighleyList of places UK England Yorkshire 53 52 01 N 1 54 40 W 53 867 N 1 911 W 53 867 1 911 Keighley is eight miles thirteen kilometres north west of Bradford city centre 3 3 4 mi 6 km north west of Bingley 10 1 2 mi 17 km north of Halifax and 7 1 2 mi 12 km south east of Skipton It is governed by Keighley Town Council and Bradford City Council Keighley is located in West Yorkshire close to the borders of North Yorkshire and Lancashire Historically in the West Riding of Yorkshire it lies between Airedale and Keighley Moors At the 2011 census Keighley had a population of 56 348 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Toponymy 1 2 Town charter 1 3 1700s and 1800s 1 4 Christopher Ingham 1 5 Hindenburg parcel 2 Governance 2 1 Constituency 2 2 Parish 2 3 Arms 3 Geography 4 Demography 5 Economy 6 Community and culture 7 Media 7 1 Town twinning 8 Landmarks 8 1 Architecture 8 2 Attractions 9 Education 10 Religion 11 Sport 12 Filmography 12 1 Film 12 2 Television 13 Notable people 14 Freedom of the Town 14 1 Individuals 14 2 Military Units 15 See also 16 References 17 External linksHistory editToponymy edit The name Keighley which has gone through many changes of spelling throughout its history means Cyhha s farm or clearing 7 and was mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086 In Cichhelai Ulchel and Thole and Ravensuar and William had six carucates to be taxed Town charter edit Henry de Keighley a Lancashire knight was granted a charter to hold a market in Keighley on 17 October 1305 by King Edward I 8 The poll tax records of 1379 show that the population of Keighley in the wapentake of Staincliffe in the West Riding of Yorkshire was 109 people 47 couples and 15 single people 9 1700s and 1800s edit From 1753 the Union stage coach departed on the Keighley and Kendal Turnpike from what was the Devonshire Arms coaching inn on the corner of Church Street and High Street Rebuilt about 1789 this public house has a classical style pedimented doorcase with engaged Tuscan columns in the high fashion of that age The original route towards Skipton was Spring Gardens Lane Hollins Lane Hollins Bank Lane 10 Keighley was to become an intersection with other turnpikes including the Two Laws to Keighley branch of the Toller Lane Blue Bell turnpike 1755 from Bradford to Colne the Bradford to Keighley turnpike 1814 and the Keighley Halifax turnpike The 1842 Leeds Directory description of Keighley reads Its parish had no dependent townships though it is about six miles 10 km long and four miles 6 km broad and comprises 10 160 acres 4 110 ha of land including a peaty moor of about 2 000 acres or 800 ha and a population which amounted in the year 1801 to 5 745 Christopher Ingham edit Utley Cemetery contains the grave of Christopher Ingham a veteran of the conflict against Napoleon He was a member of the Duke of Wellington s elite 95th Rifle Regiment and fought in ten battles against the French in Spain France and Belgium including the Spanish Peninsula War and the Battle of Waterloo for which he was awarded several medals including the Peninsula Medal He died in 1866 Some local historians believe Mr Ingham s heroism may have inspired the author Bernard Cornwell s saga about Major Richard Sharpe 11 The TV series episode Sharpe s Justice which focuses on the roots of the title character is set in and around Keighley Hindenburg parcel edit On 22 May 1936 the Zeppelin Hindenburg crossed Yorkshire in a diversion of her normal route between the United States and Germany 12 As the airship passed over the town a parcel was dropped and landed in the High Street where two boys Jack Gerrard and Alfred Butler picked it up The parcel contained a bunch of carnations a small silver and jet crucifix some postage stamps a picture postcard and some Hindenburg notepaper 13 The note was written by John P Schulte who called himself the first flying priest The note requested that the carnations and crucifix be placed on the grave of his brother Lieutenant Franz Schulte who had died of Spanish flu during the deadly influenza pandemic of 1918 as a Prisoner of War at Raikeswood Prisoner of War Camp Skipton originally built as a training camp for the Bradford Pals in 1915 Schulte was at that time buried at Morton Cemetery two miles three kilometres east of Keighley though the letter stated that he was buried at Skipton which was incorrect 14 To the finder of this letter Please deposit these flowers and the cross on the grave of my dear brother Lieutenant Franz Schulte I Garde Regt zu Fuss Prisoner of War in Skipton Cemetery in Keighley near Leeds Many thanks for your kindness John P Schulte the first flying priest N B Please accept the stamps and picture as a small souvenir from me God bless you 15 Hindenburg note 22 May 1936 The carnations were placed on the grave and the two boys kept the postage stamps and the postcard The crucifix was placed in St Anne s Church to avoid it being stolen 15 Governance editConstituency edit Keighley is represented in the House of Commons by Conservative Member of Parliament MP Robbie Moore who won the seat by defeating his predecessor John Grogan at the 2019 general election Grogan had a majority of just 249 over the previous incumbent Conservative Kris Hopkins 16 In 2015 Hopkins won the seat at the 2015 general election securing a second term Hopkins increased the Conservatives vote share in the area from 41 9 17 in 2010 to 44 3 18 in 2015 The Conservatives won the seat in 2010 taking over from Ann Cryer who had been in office since 1997 Keighley was contested by the British National Party BNP in the May 2005 general election when the party s leader Nick Griffin stood for Parliament He was defeated by Ann Cryer one of a small number of Labour MPs with an increased majority In March 2006 the town s mayoress Rose Thompson announced she had joined the BNP and was immediately dismissed by the mayor Tony Wright 19 Parish edit nbsp Keighley Town Hall The town was incorporated as a municipal borough on 28 July 1882 under the provisions of the Municipal Corporations Act 1882 in the West Riding of Yorkshire In 1938 the boundaries of the borough and civil parish of Keighley were expanded to include the former urban districts and civil parishes of Haworth Oakworth and Oxenhope along with the parish of Morton from the abolished Keighley Rural District and a small part of the Bingley urban district On 1 April 1974 Keighley borough became part of the City of Bradford Metropolitan District in accordance with the Local Government Act 1972 in the newly formed county of West Yorkshire The merger caused a lot of bitterness among Keighley people who resented being taken over by Bradford and accused the city s council of neglecting the town 20 Civil parish status was restored to Keighley in 2002 21 providing it with its own town council 22 The council s 30 members elect a mayor from amongst their number once a year The parish boundaries are based on but not identical to the pre 1938 borough boundaries In June 2006 the leader of Bradford District Council Conservative Councillor Kris Hopkins was quoted in the Craven Herald amp Pioneer as suggesting it might be a good idea for Keighley to become an independent authority once again 23 The town has a local history society Keighley and District Local History Society and a family history society Keighley and District Family History Society 24 Arms edit Coat of arms of Keighley Notes Originally granted February 1883 to Keighley Borough Council 25 Crest On a wreath of the colours in front of a dragon s head erased Gules entwined by a serpent Or a fountain Proper Escutcheon Argent on a fess Sable between three stags heads caboshed a Fountain proper all within a Bordure embattled Azure Motto By WorthGeography edit nbsp Victorian era terraced buildings on Cavendish Street nbsp A ground level view of the Victorian commercial quarter nbsp North Street nbsp Keighley railway station Keighley lies at the confluence of the rivers Worth and Aire in Airedale in the South Pennines It benefits from an electrified railway service with connections to Leeds Bradford Shipley Bingley Skipton Carlisle and Morecambe The post town of Keighley s northern boundary is with Bradley and its southern limit is the edge of Oxenhope To the west the town advances up the hill to the suburb of Black Hill and in the east it terminates at the residential neighbourhoods of Long Lee and Thwaites Brow The outlying north eastern suburb of Riddlesden is sometimes incorrectly referred to as a separate village but is part of the town Past Black Hill and via Braithwaite Edge Road lies Braithwaite village which leads to Laycock which was also mentioned in the Domesday Book Laycock is a conservation area which overlooks the hamlet of Goose Eye The River Aire passes through north eastern Keighley dividing the neighbourhood of Stockbridge and running roughly parallel to the Leeds and Liverpool Canal The Worth links up with the Aire in Stockbridge and runs south westerly dividing eastern Keighley from central and western districts of the town The Worth is lined with abandoned semi derelict industrial sites and tracts of waste ground dating from the period when Keighley thrived as a major textile centre Parts of Keighley are prone to flooding and the town was particularly badly hit by floods in 2000 26 27 Since then millions have been spent on strengthening flood defences Other outlying villages around the town are Oakworth Cross Roads Haworth Stanbury and Oxenhope The two main settlements to the north are Silsden and Steeton Although these villages are often referred to as separate places they are part of the wider Keighley area These areas add a total of 22 669 people to the Keighley area taking the population of the wider Keighley area up to 74 098 2001 Census To the north east is Rombalds Moor which contains many signs of Stone Age and Bronze Age occupation including cup and ring marks 28 as it drops back down into Wharfedale and the town of Ilkley approximately five miles away it becomes the more famous Ilkley Moor Demography editCensus population of the ancient parish civil parish of Keighley Year 1801 1811 1821 1831 1841 1851 1861 1871 1881 1891 Population 5 745 6 864 9 223 11 176 13 413 18 259 18 819 24 704 30 395 36 176 Source Vision of Britain Keighley AP CP Total Population 29 Census population of the municipal borough of Keighley Year 1901 1911 1921 1931 1939 1951 1961 1971 2011 Population 41 564 43 487 41 921 40 441 56 631 56 944 55 845 55 325 56 348 Source Vision of Britain Keighley MB Total Population 30 The 1939 population is estimated from the National Registration Act figures 31 The 1941 census did not take place because of the Second World War Economy edit nbsp Hattersley Domestic Loom built by Geo Hattersley Keighley on display at Queen Street Mill Textile Museum Burnley The town s industries have typically been in textiles particularly wool and cotton processing In addition to the manufacture of textiles there were several large factories making textile machinery These included Dean Smith amp Grace George Hattersley amp Son and Prince Smith amp Stell The first of these operated as a manufacturer of CNC machine tools particularly precision lathes until 2008 Keighley is home to Timothy Taylor Brewery the makers of CAMRA Champion Beer of Britain award winning ales Landlord and Boltmaker previously known as Best Bitter They also brew Ram Tam Golden Best Dark Mild Knowle Spring and a new French style blonde ale Le Champion which was first brewed for the Tour de France in 2014 and has been brewed for the Tour de Yorkshire in 2015 and 2016 32 They also own many pubs in the area including the Albert Hotel Boltmakers Arms Lord Rodney Royal Oak and The Fleece Inn in Haworth Community and culture editMuch of the town centre has been pedestrianised Keighley has four large supermarkets Morrisons Sainsbury s Aldi and Asda There are several budget supermarkets situated in small retail parks around the town nbsp Airedale Centre The Airedale shopping centre is a large indoor shopping precinct which houses most of the town s high street retail chains The Airedale Shopping Centre housed the 12 foot tall 3 7 m statue of the giant Rombald holding a boulder above his head It was moved to a different part of the centre when a glass ceiling was added to the whole complex A public consultation favoured placing the statue on the Beechcliffe roundabout on the A650 road approaching Keighley from the east 33 According to local legend the giant Rombald threw a giant rock at his enemies or in some versions of the tale his wife killing them The rock is the calf of cow and calf rock fame which can be seen today at the top of Rombald s Moor on Ilkley Moor Keighley has one cinema The Picture House on North Street It opened in 1913 making it one of the oldest in Britain A brief closure in the mid 1990s prevented it from being listed as one of the oldest in continuous operation a record that goes to the Curzon Cinema which opened in Clevedon Somerset in 1911 It was restored from its derelict condition in 1996 by Northern Morris Associated Cinemas and operates to this day 34 Keighley has a popular local music scene There have been various venues where local bands play Most notable was the now defunct CJ s bar also known as Chrome VW s Cheese and Trumpet that played host to many popular touring bands Examples of local bands are the Sailmakers the Undecided Foxes Faux Random Hand the Get Guns Eyesore Angels and Dead Message who recently parted ways after 9 years The British rock bands Skeletal Family and Terrorvision were also originally formed in Keighley Media editLocal news and television programmes are provided by BBC Yorkshire and ITV Yorkshire Television signals are received from the local TV transmitter 35 Keighley s local radio stations are BBC Radio Leeds on 102 7 FM Heart Yorkshire on 107 6 FM Capital Yorkshire on 105 6 FM Pulse 1 on 97 5 FM Greatest Hits Radio West Yorkshire on 96 3 FM and Rombalds Radio a community based radio station that broadcast online 36 Local newspapers are the Keighley News and Telegraph amp Argus 37 38 Town twinning edit nbsp Keighley Hall in Poix du Nord Keighley has the unique record of having the first recorded town twinning agreement in the world having entered into an agreement with Poix du Nord France in 1920 39 40 This actually followed an even earlier sister city arrangement with two communes on the outskirts of Paris France Suresnes and Puteaux starting in 1905 39 41 nbsp Poix du Nord Nord Hauts de France France nbsp Myrtle Beach South Carolina US 42 nbsp Manzini Eswatini citation needed Landmarks editArchitecture edit Further information Listed buildings in Keighley nbsp Keighley War Memorial nbsp Former Mechanics Institute on Lord Street Like many other British towns and cities Keighley was extensively remodelled in the 1960s and lost many historic buildings However the town managed to retain some of its heritage and has many Victorian buildings The local millstone grit gives many of the buildings a distinctive look East Riddlesden Hall Cliffe Castle Museum and Whinburn Mansion are fine country houses There are large townhouses along Skipton Road which contrast with the rows of smaller terraces in the streets behind them although many of these larger buildings have since been converted into flats and bedsits The town s central library was the first Carnegie library in England opened in 1904 with a grant of 10 000 from Andrew Carnegie 43 The library has undergone refurbishment which was completed in 2007 Many of the town s former mill buildings are still intact The town centre contains modern buildings such as Leeds City College and examples of Victorian commercial architecture including the long terrace of Cavendish Street with its 220 yard mile a furlong ornamental canopy There is a bus station which opened in 2002 near the Airedale Shopping Centre 44 45 There are several tower blocks in Parkwood Rise Holycroft and Ingrow and a central multi storey car park Amongst the modern houses in Laycock two miles three kilometres outside Keighley town centre is a 17th century three storey manor house which is said to be the former wing of a much bigger property converted barns and 18th century cottages Attractions edit On the outskirts of town is Cliffe Hall also known as Cliffe Castle now Keighley Museum 46 nbsp Locomotive on the Keighley amp Worth Valley Railway The Keighley and Worth Valley railway is a heritage steam railway which links the town with Haworth Oakworth Oxenhope and the Bronte Country Keighley is the location of the Keighley and Worth Valley Railway a heritage railway that passes through Haworth part of the Bronte Country home of Anne Charlotte and Emily Bronte and terminates at Oxenhope At Ingrow is the Museum of Rail Travel Top Withens and the Bronte Waterfall are within walking distance of Stanbury a mile and a half from Haworth East Riddlesden Hall is in Riddlesden Keighley Police Museum is in the Keighley Civic Centre opposite the Town Square The old police station has many pieces of police memorabilia including a Victorian horse drawn Black Mariah Education editLocal high schools are Carlton Keighley in Utley 47 Beckfoot Oakbank 48 Parkside School in Cullingworth 49 and the Holy Family Catholic School 50 nbsp Keighley College buildings in 2010 Keighley College formerly the local campus of Leeds City College itself formerly known as Park Lane College is situated near Keighley railway station on Bradford Road 51 In 2010 the college opened this new 30 million campus moving away from the former site on Cavendish Street which was in need of repair and has since been demolished The college includes an Industrial Centre of Excellence and a nationally acclaimed Star Centre facility 52 designed to encourage more young people to study STEM subjects science technology engineering and mathematics This features a mock mission control centre a planetarium a simulated rocky planet surface and many other space related items Religion edit nbsp Central Hall an old Methodist chapel converted to a community resource centre by infrastructure support group KIVCA 53 nbsp Keighley Shared Church the parish church of Keighley Keighley has a parish church Keighley Shared Church 54 and is home to many Christian denominations It has churches and places of worship for Anglicans Methodists United Reformed Mormons Quakers Salvation Army and Jehovah s Witnesses Keighley has a significant Roman Catholic minority re established following the repeal of the penal laws The Catholic population was boosted in the mid 19th century with the arrival of Irish immigrants escaping the 1840s Great Famine who came to work in the textile and weaving industries Keighley has two Roman Catholic churches St Anne s 1840 and St Joseph s 1934 and four Roman Catholic schools St Anne s 1857 St Joseph s 1922 Our Lady of Victories 1960 and Holy Family 1964 The first spiritualist church in Britain was founded at Keighley in 1853 by David Richmond 55 who although not originally from the town stayed for many years and helped to establish the movement throughout the country Spiritualism was at its height during Victorian times and Keighley Spiritualist church remains open nbsp The mosque on Bradford Street Muslims make up the second largest religious group in the town According to the 2011 census there were more than 12 400 Muslims in Keighley in March of that year Most had started coming to Britain in the 1960s from the Mirpur region of Azad Kashmir in Pakistan and the Sylhet region of Bangladesh As of 2013 there were eight mosques in Keighley including the purpose built Markazi Jamia Masjid Central Community Mosque in Emily Street and the purpose built Jamia Masjid Ghosiyah Ghosiyah Community Mosque named after the saint Abdul Qadir Jilani on Skipton Road The rest are buildings which have been converted into Mosques with the oldest being the Shahjalal Jami Masjid and Jamiah Quraniah ShahJalal Community Mosque and Quran Teaching School named after the saint Shah Jalal on Temple Row which was previously the Wesleyan Methodist Church 1845 46 There is a Buddhist centre on Lawkholme Crescent in the town centre The Keighley Kadampa Buddhist Centre is used by lay and ordained Buddhist practitioners and also runs day and evening classes for newcomers to the faith Sport editKeighley Cougars are a semi professional rugby league team based at Royd Ings Avenue The ground s historical name is Lawkholme Lane but has been known as Cougar Park since 1992 Keighley RUFC rugby union team are based at Rose Cottage Utley and play in the amateur Yorkshire Second Division Keighley Central F C was a football club that won the Yorkshire Football League Division 3 title in 1964 56 On 6 July 2014 Stage 2 of the 2014 Tour de France from York to Sheffield passed through the town It was also the location of the stage s intermediate sprint after 42 6 miles 68 6 km The 20 points for the Points jersey was claimed by Blel Kadri of AG2R La Mondiale 57 Filmography editFilm edit Keighley was the setting for the film Blow Dry starring Josh Hartnett Alan Rickman and Bill Nighy Blow Dry opens with the announcement that the small town of Keighley will host the year 2000 British Hair Championships Keighley s mayor Warren Clarke is thrilled about the news but when he announces it to the town s press they all yawn disapprovingly The film although set in Keighley was shot in several locations 58 Most of the 2004 film Yasmin was shot in Keighley Written by Simon Beaufoy and mostly filmed in Lawkholme it tells the story of a British Muslim woman who has her life disrupted by the impact of the September 11 attacks on America Beaufoy said the film was originally set in Oldham but worked its way across the Pennines 59 The Keighley and Worth Valley Railway KWVR running steam trains from Keighley to Haworth and Oxenhope has been used in several films including The Railway Children Yanks the film of the Pink Floyd musical The Wall and an episode of the long running situation comedy The Last of the Summer Wine 60 A Touch of Frost starring David Jason was also filmed at the railway line close to Ingrow West 61 The 1950s set British feature film Between Two Women 2000 was filmed extensively in and around Keighley and its mills in particular around the railway and close to the main town railway station 62 The same director s next film The Jealous God 2005 also featured Keighley railway station and nearby streets 63 The film God s Own Country about the young life of a sheep farmer was filmed in Laycock and also at Keighley bus station 64 Television edit The 2004 documentary Edge of the City about the City of Bradford Social Services and the people and problems they deal with was partly filmed in Keighley and concerned sexual abuse of underage white girls by some Asian men 65 A great part of the 2004 BBC television drama North and South was shot on Keighley with Dalton Mills being one of the serial s main locations 66 Notable people editSee also Category People from Keighley This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Keighley news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message The following people were born in Keighley have lived there in the past or are currently resident in the town Simon Beaufoy 1967 an Oscar Bafta and Golden Globe award winning British screenwriter who was born in Keighley Steve Binns 1960 long distance runner who competed in the 1988 Olympic Games Gordon Bottomley 1874 1948 poet Asa Briggs 1921 2016 historian and academic Bronte Sisters lived in the village of Haworth which is two miles 3 km south of Keighley Anne 1820 1849 novelist Charlotte 1816 1855 novelist Emily 1818 1848 novelist Harry Brook 1999 cricketer for Yorkshire and England Alastair Campbell 1957 former Labour party spin doctor 67 John Tiplady Carrodus 1836 1895 violinist Peter Dixon British Lions and England rugby union Captain Kiki Dee 1947 singer songwriter originally from Bradford Ian Dewhirst local librarian and historian Sandra Dorne 1924 1992 actress in 1940s and 1950s films and parts in TV series Roma Gill 1934 2001 academic and literary scholar Jeff Hall 1929 1959 footballer for Birmingham City FC and England FC Born in Scunthorpe but raised in Keighley Willis Hall 1929 2005 playwright lived in Oldfield near Keighley in the 1970s and 1980s Peter Hartley 1960 former county cricketer for Yorkshire Warwickshire and Hampshire Denis Healey 1917 2015 a Labour Chancellor of the Exchequer and Secretary of State for Defence 68 Mike Hellawell 1938 2023 footballer for Birmingham City Queens Park Rangers Sunderland and 2 appearances for England FC Trevor Hockey 1943 1987 Welsh international footballer who also played with Bradford City and Birmingham City Sir Isaac Holden 1st Baronet 1807 1897 inventor and manufacturer known for Lucifer Matches and served as Liberal MP for Keighley 1888 1895 Lesley Horton crime novelist and author of the detective inspector John Handford series lives in Keighley Paul Hudson 1971 local television weather forecaster Keith Jessop 1933 2010 salvage diver and marine treasure hunter Alexander Keighley 1861 1947 pictorialist photographer amp member of the Linked Ring group Henry de Keighley 1313 Lancashire knight granted the first charter to hold a market in Keighley on 17 October 1305 by King Edward I 8 Dougie Lampkin 1976 born in Silsden a motorcycle trials rider Tommy Lee 1986 footballer who is a goalkeeper for Chesterfield Robin Ling 1927 2017 orthopaedic surgeon Leigh Marklew 1968 of Bradford rock band Terrorvision Peter Mayhew 1944 2019 British actor who played Chewbacca in the Star Wars films lived in Keighley between 1987 and 2000 69 Chris Melling 1979 professional pool player and former world number one Sir Tom Moore 1920 2021 former British Military Officer fundraiser for NHS Charities during the COVID 19 pandemic 70 Herbert Morley 1883 Victorian explorer citation needed Ian Mosey professional golfer Winner of two European Tour events Reynold A Nicholson 1868 1945 was an English orientalist scholar of Islamic literature Rumi and Islamic mysticism George Nicholson 1760 1825 printer 71 Matty Pearson 1993 professional footballer for Huddersfield F C Eric Pickles 1952 former Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government and a former Chairman of the Conservative Party Michael Sams 1941 murderer 72 Geoff Smith 1928 2013 former Bradford City goalkeeper lived in Keighley Michelle Smith 1983 rifle shooter who won Silver at the 2010 Commonwealth Games in Delhi India J Keighley Snowden 1860 1947 journalist and novelist Philip Snowden 1864 1937 the first Labour Chancellor of the Exchequer Editor of the Keighley Labour Journal MP for Blackburn Mollie Sugden 1922 2009 television comedy actress Sir John Taylor Baron Ingrow Lord Ingrow 1917 2002 a soldier and politician From 1985 to 1992 he was Lord Lieutenant of West Yorkshire Timothy Taylor 1826 1898 local brewer who opened the Timothy Taylor Brewery in 1858 Percy Vear 1911 1983 a British professional boxer during the 1920s and 1930s Ricky Wilson 1978 musician and part of Leeds five piece Kaiser Chiefs Margaret Wintringham 1879 1955 the second woman to take a seat in the House of Commons 73 Frank Whitcombe 1913 1958 Bradford Northern amp Great Britain rugby league footballer Frank Whitcombe Jr 1936 2010 Bradford RFC Keighley RUFC Yorkshire RUFC amp North Eastern Counties RUFC Martin Whitcombe 1961 Leicester Tigers Bedford RFC Leeds Tykes Yorkshire RUFC amp England B International Rugby Union player Jake Wright 1986 professional footballer who plays for Oxford United Freedom of the Town editThe following people and military units have received the Freedom of the Town of Keighley This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items May 2020 Individuals edit Benjamin Septimus Brigg First Mayor 74 Sir John Brigg citation needed W A Brigg Mayor citation needed Henry Isaac Butterfield Textiles Manufacturer and owner of Cliffe Castle citation needed Andrew Carnegie citation needed John Tiplady Carrodus 5 February 1895 75 John Clough mill owner and owner of Haincliffe House 76 William Clough citation needed 8th Duke of Devonshire citation needed Sir Isaac Holden 1st Baronet citation needed H C Longsdon Mayor in 1901 74 citation needed James Lund Mill Owner 1829 1903 and builder of Lund s Tower citation needed Captain Sir Thomas Moore 16 April 2020 77 Sir Swire Smith March 1918 78 Sir Bracewell Smith 6 February 1957 79 Lord Snowdon of Ickornshaw citation needed Military Units edit The Yorkshire Regiment 2011 See also editBaildon Bingley Bradford Cowling Cross Hills Cross Roads Cullingworth Damems East Morton Eastburn Hainworth Harden Haworth Ingrow Laycock Long Lee Lumbfoot Oakworth Oldfield Oxenhope Riddlesden Ryecroft Silsden Stanbury Steeton Sutton in CravenReferences edit Yorkshire and the Humber City Population Retrieved 10 December 2023 Keighley Town Council Keighley West Yorkshire England Retrieved 4 May 2020 Keighley Collins Online Dictionary HarperCollins Retrieved 30 April 2020 Keighley Dictionary by Merriam Webster Merriam Webster Retrieved 30 April 2020 Keighley CP Parish Neighbourhood Statistics Office for National Statistics Retrieved 3 February 2008 UK Census 2011 Local Area Report Keighley Parish E04000165 Nomis Office for National Statistics Retrieved 10 June 2019 Keighley Name Meaning ancestry com Retrieved 24 January 2009 a b Latin Expert Sought to Decipher Charter Keighley News 15 January 2009 Retrieved 24 January 2009 1379 Yorkshire Poll Tax Subsidy Rolls Retrieved 28 November 2023 Keighley Town Centre Conservation Area Assessment PDF Transportation Planning and Design Department the City of Bradford Metropolitan District Council Retrieved 18 October 2012 Woman pays tribute to Sharpe hero Telegraph amp Argus 7 November 2003 Retrieved 7 December 2017 The Day The Hindenburg Visited Yorkshire Yorkshire Air Museum 17 March 2016 Retrieved 1 November 2016 Keighley schoolchildren to make film about Hindenburg visit before Second World War Keighley News 12 February 2015 Retrieved 1 November 2016 Riddlesden man made famous by crucifix find dies aged 89 Telegraph amp Argus 14 July 2014 Retrieved 1 November 2016 a b Dewhirst Ian 1974 10 A History of Keighley Keighley Tempus p 135 OCLC 41722645 Election results 2017 Labour increase hold on West Yorkshire BBC News 9 June 2017 Retrieved 14 June 2017 BBC Election Results BBC Retrieved 20 June 2015 BBC Election Results BBC BNP Mayoress stripped of position BBC News 13 March 2006 Retrieved 24 January 2009 Keighley grappling to find Voice for the future Keighley News 9 July 2001 Retrieved 7 December 2017 Town council makes history Telegraph amp Argus 24 May 2002 Retrieved 7 December 2017 Keighley Town Council Retrieved 5 November 2021 South Craven could split from Bradford Craven Herald amp Pioneer 14 July 2006 Retrieved 24 January 2009 kdfhs org uk www kdfhs org uk Yorkshire Region Civic Heraldry Retrieved 2 March 2021 Flood Hundreds Homeless as Floods Hit Telegraph amp Argus 3 November 2000 Retrieved 7 December 2017 Floods Could Cost Millions Keighley News 1 November 2000 Retrieved 7 December 2017 Rombald s Moor Stone Circles Retrieved 24 January 2009 Keighley AP CP Total Population Vision of Britain Retrieved 1 March 2008 Keighley MB Total Population Vision of Britain Retrieved 1 March 2008 National Registration Act 1939 Rootsweb com Retrieved 8 June 2007 Our Range of Beer Timothy Taylor Retrieved 1 November 2016 Rombald is to stay put Bradford Telegraph and Argus 6 August 2004 Retrieved 3 June 2018 Picture House Cinema Keighley Movies Latest Films Book Online Cinema in Keighley keighley nm cinemas co uk Retrieved 4 May 2020 Full Freeview on the Keighley Bradford England transmitter UK Free TV 1 May 2004 Retrieved 30 September 2023 Romsbalds Radio Retrieved 30 September 2023 Keighley News British Papers 22 January 2014 Retrieved 30 September 2023 Telegraph amp Argus British Papers 24 May 2014 Retrieved 30 September 2023 a b France Magazine Twin Towns www francemag com Archived from the original on 25 July 2020 Retrieved 6 November 2009 Handley Susan 2006 Take your partners The local authority handbook on international partnerships London Local Government International Bureau p 4 Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 20 September 2009 Frank Crane 2008 War and World Government BiblioBazaar LLC p 200 ISBN 978 0 559 44381 7 Retrieved 20 September 2009 Sister Cities Program City of Myrtle Beach Retrieved 10 October 2022 Keighley Public Library Archived from the original on 6 January 2009 Retrieved 24 January 2009 Shopping Centre Award for Keighley Bus Station Archived from the original on 24 June 2004 Retrieved 24 January 2009 New bus station is just the ticket Keighley News 8 February 2002 Archived from the original on 3 August 2007 Retrieved 24 January 2009 keighleyonline Retrieved 3 February 2008 University Academy Keighley Retrieved 3 August 2011 Oakbank School Retrieved 3 February 2008 Parkside School Retrieved 3 February 2008 The Holy Family Catholic School Retrieved 3 February 2008 Further amp Higher Education Opportunities Keighley College Retrieved 4 May 2020 STAR centre may be leading light in next space race Keighley News 2 March 2008 Retrieved 24 January 2009 KIVCA Keighley Shared Church www keighleysharedchurch org uk Retrieved 4 May 2020 History of Modern Spiritualism Archived from the original on 17 February 2009 Retrieved 24 January 2009 Football Club History Database Yorkshire League 1963 64 fchd info Tour de France Stage 1 Archived from the original on 25 July 2014 Retrieved 15 July 2014 Blow Dry 2001 IMDb Retrieved 4 May 2020 Bafta winner tackles racial divide Bradford Telegraph and Argus 5 January 2005 Retrieved 23 July 2018 Jos Simon 2015 A Rough Guide to Yorkshire Chalfont St Peter Bradt p 110 ISBN 978 1409371045 Keighley and Worth Valley Railway Culture amp Art Haworth West Yorkshire Welcome to Yorkshire www yorkshire com Retrieved 23 July 2018 Film shot in Keighley is released Bradford Telegraph and Argus 7 April 2006 Retrieved 23 July 2018 Jealous God a reel cinema hit Bradford Telegraph and Argus 19 September 2005 Retrieved 23 July 2018 Knights David 29 April 2016 New movie God s Own Country filmed at Keighley bus station Keighley News Retrieved 11 January 2017 Edge of the City Channel 4 Archived from the original on 5 August 2010 Retrieved 24 January 2009 North and South Soundtrack and Location information BBC Drama Archived from the original on 23 June 2006 Retrieved 24 January 2009 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Campbell cashes in his chips Scotland on Sunday 31 August 2003 Denis Healey biography spartacus educational Archived from the original on 30 December 2006 Retrieved 27 February 2019 Sat sic Wars giant returns Telegraph amp Argus 2 May 2003 Retrieved 7 December 2017 Captain Sir Tom Moore National inspiration dies with Covid 19 BBC News 2 February 2021 Retrieved 3 February 2021 Oxford Online Dictionary of National Biography George Nicholson Yorkshire and Lincolnshire The Price of Justice BBC News Oxford Online Dictionary of National Biography Margaret Wintringham a b Keighley mayoral regalia keighley gov uk Retrieved 6 July 2022 John Tiplady Carrodus a tale of seven violins themessiahviolin Retrieved 6 July 2022 About Hainworth Woods hainworth co uk Retrieved 6 July 2022 Veteran Capt Tom Moore to be given freedom of Keighley after raising 13m for NHS ITV News Retrieved 4 May 2020 The Times 18 March 1918 p 5 Photograph of Sir Bracewell Smith s Freedom of Keighley Scroll Flickr Retrieved 11 March 2022 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Keighley Keighley Town Council Keighley Shared Church Keighley at Curlie Keighley Online News business and Keighley community site The ancient parish of Keighley historical and genealogical information at GENUKI Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Keighley amp oldid 1219425817, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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