Hawes Old Photographs
Town Head late 1800s To the editor of the Wensleydale Advertiser 1848Sir, allow a travelling bachelor to address through the medium of your publication a few thoughts that have crossed his mind as a perfect stranger to your lovely valley in passing through what I had been informed to be the capital of Wensleydale, Hawes. The first picturesque scene which presents itself to the eye of the tourist as he descends into Hawes from the Settle road, is a combination of ashes, sawdust, carpenters refuse and other disagreeables thrown together in a most heterogeneous manner, on the slope of a piece of ground on the right hand side of the road, which nature has evidently formed for purposes of beauty and utility, and little trouble might be required to make what the inhabitants have turned into a place pregnant with disease, a healthy, ornamental and profitable property.
Town Head Hawes late 1940s On the opposite side of the road my attention was arrested by huge masses of timber and broken down carts, wheelbarrows, red cradles, and almost every description of remblements not even omitting an old railway truck, of the smallest construction, encroaching considerably on the road. In the midst of all this medley of stuff might be seen (suspended in mid air) the tattered fragments of some unmentionable portions of male and female attire thrown over an old knotted cord supported from the end of the shafts of one or more fragile up reared carts. Poor man, it is a pity that he would not put his wife a decent clothes post down. After passing sundry heaps of ashes and manure thrown up in indescribable confusion on all sides, (bye the bye why is the surveyor of the highways not taught his duty) I arrived opposite a smiths forge where not content within the inner precincts of his blackened hole, to follow his volcanic operations, a large circular turf fire was in full blaze on the highway in front. The smoke was intolerable and in my anxiety to get my horse safely past it I had almost been thrown to the ground, but I need not have dreaded the fall as I should have dropped where there was accumulated a tolerable supply of mud and other congregated filth, to relieve the hardness of the original road.
Blacksmiths 1940 Outside Wards the plumbers Townhead My further description of Hawes must be rather more brief but my first impression after I got clear of the above adventure, was that I had arrived at some huge emporium or bedding mart, where quantities of new and second hand beds and bedding were promiscuously exposed for sale. Here I saw the well stuffed and downy bed of the rich and envied man, next to the humble mattress of the pauper, or yet still more humble the chaff bed. Then rose to my view numberless quantities of pillows, quilts, chair bottoms and other domestic requirements bundled out in the most approved order of sale according to the Jewish fashion in Monmouth Street. Proceeding carefully to avoid pigs and unwatched (I may say unwashed) children, I arrived in the neighbourhood of the inn, but before I could bring my horse to a perfect stand I had another difficulty to encounter, the array of beds exposed for view, was not congenial with his notions of decency, and face them he would not. After a protracted struggle with him, I succeeded, but it was only to make him bolt. Off he went and carried me with a rapidity which convinced me of the necessity of using all my energies to remain on my seat. I could not therefore stop to note further the beauties of your interesting town, but I recollect perfectly, after passing over a bridge, nearly riding over a blacksmith with two pails in his hands, but thanks to the intolerable stench which caused my horse to swerve, his life and my own in all probability were saved. Here I am at Middleham, this fifth day of May 1848 all safe and sound.
Market Day Hawes pre 1900
Market Day at Hawes early 1900s
Market Day early 1950s
Hawes market place 1956
Kettlewells Garage for motor cycles and cars
Charles and Laura Iveson outside Iveson's Ironmongers
Mason's Queens Hotel Townfoot 1912
See close up
Town End Hawes circa 1915
Town End Hawes Same shop different time.
C. Milner bridge street Hawes
Richard Grainger The Central Boot Store Hawes pre 1900
M.D.Grainger Bootmaker
New bridge at Hawes
Hawes Station 1933 bocked by snow
Hawes Station 1956
Hawes Junction Cottages
T Hiscock printers upstairs below Metcalfe grocer and fruiterer
Metcalfe's Tours 1949ish
Burn House early 1900s
The mill on the bridge in Hawes
Hawes Day School 1905
FE Platt Babies outfitters 'The Holme'
The Black Bull Inn Market Place Licensee George Fawcett
Hawes market place near Allens
The White Hart
Train Crash at Hawes Junction December 24th 1910
Beech House with proprieter Miss Mary Buck
The Wensleydale Dairy circa 1913
The mill on the bridge in Hawes
Spring Bank Hawes above the playground
Novenber 1848 |
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