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Listed buildings in Hyndburn.
The list of buildings and monuments, with listed status in our area.
Including the now dilapidated Conservative Club in Paradise Street. Listed Buildings in Accrington, Lancashire, England | British Listed Buildings (Click on the blue heading, for more details of each building.) |
Re: Listed buildings in Hyndburn.
I've always thought it a bit strange that the Civic Theatre wasn't listed, BUT it's good that it wasn't or else we wouldn't have been able to make some of the changes that we have. :D
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Not very grand, or fancy, compared to neighbouring Town Halls, and considering the vast amount of brass that must have been rolling into the town's coffers, from the numerous mills etc., when it was built in 1874. It can hardly be described as being the height of mid to late Victoriana in style. It's quite puritanical, and utilitarian, by design. Perhaps my Primitive Methodist anscestors had a say in choosing the winning architectural design. :rolleyes: It used to house the Fire Station too, when the engines were horse drawn. |
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I agree, it's not the most attractive of facades but I just thought that its age and past usage might have qualified it to be listed. Don't get me wrong, I'm not trying to make a case for it, I'm glad it isn't. |
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Old isn't always good, and worth saving. I hate bland, toy town generic architecture. Think what was built on the old out door market. Naff. Personally I'd have listed the old sixties outdoor market, with it's curved concrete roof, and abstract panels The old fish market, with it's kitsch mosaic. Even the old space age loo in Union Street. At least they were unique, and very of thier time. Unlike Prince Charles's vision of new builds, that everything should be a pastoral mish-mash of quaintness. Yuk. |
Re: Listed buildings in Hyndburn.
Hi, take a look at this earlier site
http://www.accringtonweb.com/forum/f...ings-3247.html |
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Re: Listed buildings in Hyndburn.
According to English Heritage, the canal basin, and coke ovens, known locally as the Fairy Caves, at the side of the Leeds/Liverpool canal, are classed as being in a 'very bad condition', on their At Risk Register.
English Heritage | English Heritage |
Re: Listed buildings in Hyndburn.
You can download the whole list of listed buildings in Hyndburn.
http://www.hyndburnbc.gov.uk/downloa..._buildings.pdf http://www.hyndburnbc.gov.uk/site/sc...downloadID=726 |
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Had a distant relative who worked as a fireman, but think that was in the late thirties. |
Re: Listed buildings in Hyndburn.
Rather more detail, than on the offical listed building/monument site, of Ossy War Memorial and Rhyddings Mill. (Page 66.)
War Memorial, Union Road, c.1920, Grade II - 183899. Polished Cornish granite with bronze statues. Up 3 steps an oblong plinth with curved ends carrying a tapered obelisk; mounted in front of the obelisk are statues of a soldier with rifle and bayonet protecting a fallen comrade, at each side is a rostrum bearing a bronze angel crouching with a wreath, and the apex is surmounted by a large angel with wings aloft standing on a globe. Plinth is inscribed: Erected By Public Subscription To The Memory Of The Men Of This Town Who Fell In The Great War 1914 - 1918 Greater Love Hath No Man Than This, That He Lay Down His Life For His Friends / 1939 - 1945 To The Memory Of Those Who Gave Their Lives In The World War Also Those Who Died In The Korean War 1950 - 1953. (listed in UK National Inventory of War Memorials) Rhyddings Mill, Rhyddings Street, 1856, Grade II – 183911. Former cotton weaving mill. Coursed rubble, much of it rusticated, with Welsh slate roofs. The listed items consist of the principal warehouse and preparation block with weaving shed to rear, the works entrance and engine house adjacent to left, the chimney stack, and the front perimeter walls and two entrance lodges. Internally only the principal range and weaving sheds are of special interest: the warehouse was not fireproof, with timber floors and chamfered beams supported by iron cradles on piers of circular section with rudimentary moulded capitals; similar columns to weaving sheds. Rhyddings Mill is an interesting example of a mid-19th century textile mill designed with considerable architectural pretensions as part of a larger-scale urban development consisting of employees' housing, speculative housing and the parish church. This was the first independent weaving mill in Oswaldtwistle, built by Watson Brothers, later Robert Watson & Sons, who also had a mill at Stonebridge, on the other side of the river. In 1930, the mill had 280 employees and 699 looms worked by a 270 hp beam engine; manufactured fabrics were mainly printers, dhooties, jacconettes and dobby cloth. A second weaving shed was erected in 1951 and equipped with 250 electrically driven looms. Production ceased on the site in 1957. http://www.hyndburnbc.gov.uk/downloa..._CAA_Final.pdf |
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