| Callis to the Woodman along the valley bottom |
CALLIS
CALLIS BRIDGE The Pennine Way comes down from Stoodley Pike, crossing the Rochdale canal coming to Callis Bridge which crosses the River Calder. This crossing has greatly changed because of the construction of the sewage works at Sandbeds. The old bridge remains, but a new bridge was constructed in about 1900 to accommodate the sewage outfall. Photo taken before the re-routing of the river, the terrace in the background is Woodland View ![]() ![]() The two terraces in the background are Lower Callis and Callis Wood Bottom. The terrace in the background is Woodland View At the point where the track crosses the canal, there was a small wharf of which nothing remains, but some marks on the bridge. there was also a lock keepers cottage at Callis Lock. A leat (a small water course) ran from the River Calder, along the side of the canal to the rear of Callis Mill. Here sluice gates could direct the water directly into the mill or into the large mill dam . The leat was filled in after complaints from local dog owners about the smelly water! Over the years the dam was filled with sludge from the canal and became a marshy area. now in the sewage works museum In 2003 as part of the flood prevention works, the mill dam site has been made into a flood plain. All signs of the sluices and the dam have now gone. ![]() This photo is from the Jack Uttley collection. It shows Naze chapel on the left, Callis Mill and the mill dam, the two callis terracesand on the right is the back of Underbank Hall CALLIS MILL (Click heading for further information on Callis Mill) This was the largest mill in Charlestown, but we are unsure when it was built. A woollen mill which predates Callis Mill is recorded in 1786. Callis Mill was originally known as Rawdon Mill with the nearest lock is called Rawden mill Lock No.12. Rawden was the name of the owner, Christopher Rawdon in the 1820s. He used the mill for woollen production. The Rawdens lived at Underbank Hall nearby. In 1802 an Edmund Lord was described as a "Factory man" at Rawden's Factory, known as "Roddin's". We think that the original mill may have been (partly) demolished and rebuilt (this was perhaps after the fire in 1922). Callis Mill consisted of a four storey spinning milll and weaving sheds. It was powered by a steam engine that was fed from a large mill dam via an aqueduct into the mill. The Steam engine required high maintenance and kept breaking down so it was replaced in 1929 by a water driven turbine situated under the mill. The turbine was called mary after Ted Tattershall's wife! The water then went into a goit, travelling along under the main road, emerging somewhere near the Stubbing Wharf Hotel. The goit needed regularly clearing out and in 1849 three men drowned when they were washed away by a flash flood. Click here to see details of the collapse of the goit Before 1926 it was a cotton mill. A firm called Kays were in one part of the mill. The part of the mill on these photgraphs was proably used for spinning. ![]() The advertisment for Cords is from the 1930s. The Mills page has more detailed information about Callis Mill. WOODLAND VIEW AND THE WOODMAN ![]() This photograph is loaned by Leah Coneron. ![]() This photograph is from the Jack Uttley collection This photograph (possible an enlargment of the one above) shows Knott Hall in the background, the old Woodman on the present site of Able Fuels to the left of the railway arch and Woodland View and Callis Mill in the foreground. There were three main buildings on the Able Fuel site: The Old Woodman Inn The first dwelling to the west of the railway arch is the Old woodman Inn (in the photo you can just about make out the rather grand staircase at the front). This was built in the late 18th century for Richard Horsfall. In the early 1800s Richard and Mary Eastwood owned the building and they gave it as a wedding present to their daughter Mary when she married John Uttley in 1812. John Uttley was a schoolmaster and ran a school on the premises for a number of years. Sometime in the 1830s it became a public house (possibly still run by John Uttley - an interesting change in career!). In 1856 the landlord a Mr. Buckle was found drowned at Hawksclough. It was bought by Ramsdens Brewers in 1859 The advert for the Woodman below is from the 1890's
The last known landlord was William Lumb, who died in 1902. The Woodman closed in 1902 . The building was still in existence in 1905 and is is marked on the Horsfall map which can be seen on the Oakville page). ![]() Advert for the Woodman The Kershaw family lived there in 1913. In the 1920s the building was occupied by a fish and chip shop run by the Hancocks. It was pulled down sometime after the war (1950s?). After the buildings were pulled down they were replaced by a wooden shed from over the road (some say it was from Dawson City), which was used as a butcher (Sidney Tidswell) who got his meat from his brother at Higher underbank farm. The shed then became a tyre dealer before it was pulled down. Able Fuels the present site occupant was built in 2000. Taking in premises The second building was built in 1820 (apparently the date was on a stone relief at the back of the building). It was a two storey stable entered through a stone archway. It was described as a taking in premises for Winters Mill higher up the hillside. Raw cotton as well as finished goods were delivered and collected. In 1854 the building was extended and a kitchen added to the offices to make a house for William Gill who was a master fustian cutter employing 30 hand cutters. The property was sold by the Horsfalls when Winters Mill closed in 1881. It was probably bought by James and Mary Midgely (Callis wood Bottom) between the wars and may have been referred to as Gas Light. At some time during this period it was occupied by a truck driver who delivered goods from Todmorden. He was blind and made the journey by being given directions by his wife. In the 1940s the building was used as a house with a shop selling sweets and biscuits. This was set up by Arnhem Singh and his sister who, as the first Asian in the upper valley, caused quite a stir in the locality. The shop was taken over by the Burnells, who were local carriers. The building was pulled down in 1951. New Underbank House (Working Mens Club) This was built in about 1790 for the Horsfall family of Underbank Estate. It became known as Lower Underbank and, later, as Little Underbank. The Horsfalls Lived in this dwelling until Feb 1881 when it was sold to William Patchett a relative of the Horsfalls. At some point it became the Charlestown a CIU affiliated Working Mens Club. Its activities were drinking (Whittakers and Baxters beers), periodic concerts, day trips and late night betting on nine card Don (a local card game). The club had a famous darts team that took many competition prizes. The team had their own 'trainer' (seen in the white coat in the photo below). The club had a tap room, a snug and upstairs a snooker room and bath for members could use. The small front garden was famous for its display of red dahlias. ![]() Photo provided by Tommy Porter The club was known locally as the "Hen Peck Club". This may refer to the bizarre masonic like organisation which met at Naze Bottom Chapel and had several lodges in the Valley in the 1900s. The last secretary was Frank Sutcliffe who lived at wood Villas and the stewards included Fred Sutcliffe, Tom Butterworth and Tommy Porter. The Working Mens Club closed in about 1955. Pleasant View Back to the photograph at the top this page. East of the railway archway was a terrace called Pleasant View facing the road and Back Pleasant View facing the railway line. (This arrangement was called flying freeholds - the dwellings being on top of another - a style of building unique to the Upper Calder Valley). This was on The site of the (New) Woodman. The terrace is thought to be the original site of the co-op, but this is unclear.It included a bakehouse run by Eddie Suttle who made wonderful pies which was still going in the 1950s. Pleasant View was used as a site for the auxilary fire guard in the second world war. One of the dwellings was used by Vyna Collinge, a dressmaker for laying out people before they were buried at Naze Chapel. Nudger Inn Somewhere in Pleasant View was the site of a second Public House called The Nudger Inn . We know very little about this pub. On 4th May 1893 the Todmorden Almanac reports the death of Mr Mark Butterworth, of the Nudger Inn, Charlestown. A landlord, George Taylor Stuttard (born 1856) can be seen in the two photos below. The boy is probably his son James Hartley who was 12 when George died in 1903. From this we guess that the photos were taken about 1900. George also had a daughter, Gladys May who was born in 1895 when he was the landlord of The Nudger. From this George must have taken over the Nudger between 1891 and 1895. It probably closed when the new Woodman opened.
Photograph by kind permission of Mrs. Shepherd.
The
terrace was neglected and reputedly became rat infested, giving the
Council the excuse to pull it all down. The terrace was demolished in the late
1960s. The only remains can be seen in the foundations of the car park of the (new) Woodman. Before the Second World War the Woodman was run by Mrs Lumb. The Woodman was on spring water with a well in the cellar (story has it that a beer barrel fell down the well and is still there!). The stable block was on the Hebden Bridge side of the Woodman. The ground floor stabling was for the canal horses with eight rooms for the drovers. The loft was used for keeping poultry. By the 50s the stables were redundant. At this time the inn was divided into a dining room and kitchen, a bar, a singing room, a tap-room and a snug. It also had large concert room upstairs used for dances and weddings. Coach parties to Blackpool used to arrive for breakfast and came back again for their dinner on the way home. The Woodman was owned by Ramsdens brewery and was run by the Bassets until the early 1950s when Reg and Phoebe Skinner took over. The Skinners refurbished the ground floor and pulled down the stables to make way for a new toilet block. The Woodman had only TV in Charlestown, everyone came to see the coronation in 1953 with chicken soup and sandwiches provided. The Skinner family left in 1965 and it was taken over by someone from Bradford. In 1966 Jimmy and Jackie Kitchen became landlords and they were followed in about 1970 by a Polish man who bought it from Tetleys Brewery (who had bought out Ramsdens). From this time it was run as a free house. The Polish landlord completed the last refurbishment of the whole ground floor until it closed. Sadly, he dropped dead just as it was completed. The last Owner was Jim who ran the Woodman until it closed in 2000. The upstairs function room was used for Buffalo meetings (a cross between the rotary and a friendly society). In the 1990s there was a successful demonstration against the introduction of striptease nights. The Woodman is however most famous for bikers' nights. Mytholmroyd Motor Cycle Club had met at the Woodman intermittently for many years, but in 1988 an advert brought together a group to form Calder Valley Motor Cycling Club. In 1993 a breakaway group moved to the New Delight to form the Hebden Bridge Rats. Following the closure of the New Delight, they moved back to the woodman where the original club had withered away. The Rats organised tours in the UK and abvroad and held many events at the Woodman including bonfire parties and motorcycle shows. When the Woodman closed they moved to Hebden Bridge Trades club and now meet every Tuesday at the Stubbing Wharf Hotel. The photo below was taken in 2002.
This can be seen in the foreground of the photo at the top of this page. At the Westerly end of the terrace (where Cords later built a garage) was a wooden shed that was first a butcher and then became Dugdale the barbers. The shed was later moved over the road after it was flooded. The first dwelling in Woodland View was a grocery shop run by Fred and later Manley Roberts. The shop was popular in the locality, even being used by the Horsfall family - the local land owners. The shop closed after being flooded, a frequent occurence to this day
This photo shows the back of Woodland View with the canal tow path. |