Lawnswood | |
---|---|
The Lawnswood Arms | |
Lawnswood Lawnswood Location within West Yorkshire | |
Metropolitan borough | |
Metropolitan county | |
Region | |
Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | LEEDS |
Postcode district | LS16 |
Dialling code | 0113 |
Police | West Yorkshire |
Fire | West Yorkshire |
Ambulance | Yorkshire |
UK Parliament | |
Lawnswood is a small suburb in the north west of the city of Leeds in West Yorkshire, England. As such it is north north east of the West Yorkshire Urban Area. The suburb falls within the Adel and Wharefdale Ward of the City of Leeds Council.
Location
It is bordered by West Park, Adel, Ireland Wood and Holt Park. The A660 Leeds to Otley road runs through the area..
University influences
Bodington Hall, a former major hall of residence for the University of Leeds was in Lawnswood[1] and it was not uncommon to find some students taking accommodation in Lawnswood after their first year. Also, when considering Lawnswood School as part of Lawnswood, one must also regard Oxley Hall as if not in Lawnswood itself, then on the very border of Lawnswood and Headingley or Weetwood. Oxley, as it is affectionately known, is also a major hall of residence of the University of Leeds. The Stables Pub and the Lawnswood Arms are both occasionally, but rarely, visited by students doing the Otley Run.
Transport
Lawnswood is 4 miles (6 km) north of Leeds city centre and its nearest railway station is in Horsforth.
Lawnswood is served by regular buses on the First Leeds Overground Lines that pass through the area towards the Leeds city centre.[2]
Supertram Lawnswood and Bodington Hall were two of the planned stops on the Leeds Supertram North Line.[3] The Supertram project was cancelled by the Government in 2005 much to the disappointment of many Lawnswood residents.
Politics
The area is in the parliamentary constituency, Leeds North West, represented by Greg Mulholland MP.[4] In terms of local politics, Lawnswood constitutes a large portion of the council ward, Weetwood.
Housing
Most of the houses in Lawnswood are large private detached and semi detached suburban houses. Houses in the area fetch amongst the highest prices in the City of Leeds along with neighbouring Adel, Alwoodley, Roundhay, Scarcroft and Boston Spa. Besides these large houses there are many 1930s flats in Lawnswood, built in the style of semi-detached houses, each block contains four flats, each with a private entrance, these are a good example of architecture of their time and while there are examples of similar houses in Moortown, Lawnswood has a great number of them.
Amenities
Lawnswood has most of its amenities on the western side of Otley Road. Lawnswood School lies on the Leeds Outer Ring Road. Along Otley Road there are several shops, including a Co-op, a post office (named 'Adel Post Office'), several banks as well as hairdressers, estate agents, delicatessens and other independent retailers. Towards the top end of Lawnswood is the Lawnswood Arms, a large detached public house, whilst on the opposite side of Otley Road there is an Esso Petrol Station.
Sport
Support
Lawnswood is within walking distance of Headingley Stadium and so many of the residents are supporters of the Leeds Rhinos rugby league club, the Leeds Tykes rugby union club and the Yorkshire County Cricket Club, all based at the stadium.
In terms of football, most people in Lawnswood support the city's major football club, Leeds United.
Participation
The City of Leeds Lawnswood YMCA provides facilities for aerobics, football, rugby league, rugby union and many other competitive sports.[5]
Lawnswood Cemetery
Lawnswood has one of the city's main cemeteries and crematoria. Lawnswood Cemetery was opened in 1875, its grounds and most of its buildings designed by architect George Corson, who was himself buried here in 1910. The crematorium, first in Leeds, was opened in 1905.[6] The cemetery contains the war graves of 138 Commonwealth service personnel of the First World War and 67 of the Second World War, besides a screen wall memorial listing 105 service personnel buried in the closed Leeds General Cemetery whose graves could no longer be maintained. The crematorium has a memorial erected within the columbarium central hall by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) to 94 service personnel cremated here during the Second World War.[7] Three soldier recipients of the Victoria Cross were also cremated here:
- Colonel Richard Kirby Ridgeway (1848–1924) (earned in Naga Hills Expedition)
- Lieutenant-Colonel Harry Daniels (1884–1953) (First World War)
- Sergeant Albert Mountain (1895–1967) (First World War)[8]
Buried here is the computing pioneer and entrepreneur Dora Metcalf (1892-1982). Also buried here is Second Lieutenant Anthony Moorhouse (1935–1956), whose kidnap and murder following the ceasefire in Suez formed the diplomatic row known as the Moorhouse Affair.[9][10]
Local employment
The Department for Work and Pensions, (DWP), has a cluster of buildings in Lawnswood dealing with Disabilities and Carers.
Notable Lawnswoodians
Playwright Alan Bennett and BBC television presenter John Craven attended Leeds Modern School,[11][12] now known as Lawnswood School (slogan "a truly comprehensive school".)[13]
See also
References
- ↑ Aerial View, Bodington Hall
- 1 2 3 4 5 Leeds Overground bus route map, First Group
- ↑ "Projects Archive - Railway Technology".
- ↑ "Leeds North West". Liberal Democrats. Archived from the original on 4 May 2009. Retrieved 30 March 2009.
- ↑ "Lawnswood y M C A, Charities and Charitable Organisations in Leeds".
- ↑ "Cemeteries and Crematoria". Archived from the original on 25 July 2014. Retrieved 16 July 2014. Leeds Council website.
- ↑ CWGC Cemetery Report.
- ↑ Burial locations of VC holders in West Yorkshire.
- ↑ "Parents Mourn Suez Victim" The Spokesman-Review, 11 January 1957
- ↑ "Amateur sleuths find last resting place of soldier executed in Suez" The Yorkshire Post, 2 December 2005
- ↑ "Bennett, Alan". Archived from the original on 15 February 2002.
- ↑ "Old Mods".
- ↑ http://www.lawnswood-portal.co.uk/Pages/Default.aspx%5B%5D