Owners and tenants have included
See
Nab End
Since members of the family were dyers, the Works were probably a dye
works
This & associated entries use material contributed by Paul Brown
On
24th July 1862,
the mill was completely destroyed by fire
Members of Shore Chapel held services here before Lineholme Baptist Church was built
Owners and tenants have included
The brick-built 4-storey mill and shed was built just after
World War I.
See
Halifax & Ovenden Junction Railway Company and
Netherton House, Holmfield
See
Halifax Bowl
See
Hebden valley mills and
Sutcliffe's Refreshment Rooms & Dance Saloon
This & associated entries use material contributed by David Clapham
In 1820, the mill was dismantled.
The steam engine was moved to Dean Clough Mill
Paper mill.
In August 1867, the mill and several parcels of land were advertised
for sale and the mill was said to be
Owners and tenants have included
One of the Cragg mills
This & associated entries use material contributed by Ian Law
This & associated entries use material contributed by Antony Shepherd
It is now occupied by Heights Design Group [2012].
It was extended and renamed later.
Owners and tenants have included
I. & I. Calvert took this and Upper Mill, Wainstalls on a 14
years' lease [1st January 1884].
Calvert's used the Mill for
winding,
drawing,
spinning,
and
twisting.
The mill had its own gas-production plant.
The Mill was powered by 2 water-wheels – both about 36 ft in
diameter – positioned one above the other.
The lower wheel was in a pit hewn out of the solid rock.
A water-turbine and steam engine were installed later
Smoke from the boiler was carried underground up the hillside to a
square stone chimney.
It is a 4-storey building.
Calvert's left when the lease expired [1897] and buyer George Tyson conveyed the Mill to Joseph Robinson.
This is the only remaining building from Calvert's mill
complex at Wainstalls.
The complex also included
Old Mill, Wainstalls and
Wainstalls Mill
The mill has been converted into apartments
Owners and tenants have included
The mill was completely destroyed by fire on
23rd June 1858
See
Heap & Noble,
Noble & Briscombe,
Noble & Sugden,
Joseph Noble and
B. Noble & Company
Owners and tenants have included
From 1798, the mill was used for paper making, cotton manufacture and
woollen manufacture.
See
David Greenwood
A garden centre stands on the site
This & associated entries use material contributed by Les Forester
The steam-powered woollen / worsted mill was designed by
Horsfall's and built in 1876-1877.
The mill was extended
in 1878 [when offices and a house were added],
in 1885 [when a warehouse was added],
and in 1919.
The mill chimney was demolished in 199?.
The mill is currently occupied by several small businesses
The factory had a short life during World War I.
Construction of the factory began in February 1917 and it was
completed in August 1917.
It immediate went into production of picric acid.
It subsequently employed 400 men and women, and was producing 80 tons
of picric accid per week.
The Government put the factory under the control of Sharp & Mallett
of Copley.
Alphonse Sharp was the managing director.
Production ceased in December 1918.
Although it was dangerous work, there had been no serious accidents
at this factory.
On 20th January 1920, the plant and equipment was sold, and the
building was dismantled.
In 1942, the site was described as
A water-treatment plant now stands on part of the site
This & associated entries use material contributed by John Needham
See
Branksholme Dye Works, Brighouse
Some of these include
See
Quarries
The mills were demolished and Norton Close was built on the
site
Recorded in 1850
There were 100 miners working there when it closed in April 1958
because there was little coal and it was of poor quality, and the
pit – a drift mine – became unsafe.
A beam engine was added in the 1850s.
The mill formed a part of the Nutclough Estate.
Nab End Mine, Boothtown Ref 15-1277 Nab End Quarry, Cragg Vale Ref 15-797 Nab End Quarry, Hove Edge Ref 15-1349
Nahum's Mills Ref 15-82 Nanholme Mill, Todmorden Ref 15-363
Owners and tenants of the mill have included
Napoleon Works, Hebden Bridge Ref 15-1091 Navey's Mill, Soyland Ref 15-545 Naylor's Mill, Lydgate, Todmorden Ref 15-396
Owners and tenants of the mill have included
Naylor Mill, Sowerby Bridge Ref 15-118
Needless Hall Quarry, Brighouse Ref 15-1346
Nehesco Mill, Walsden Ref 15-1458 Netherton Mill, Holmfield Ref 15-236
Owners and tenants of the mill have included
Netto Supermarket Ref 15-1374 New Bank Foundry, Halifax Ref 15-1324
New Bank Mills, Halifax Ref 15-187 New Bridge Mill, Hebden Bridge Ref 15-287
Owners and tenants of the mill have included
New Brunswick Mills, Holywell Green Ref 15-1327 New Edge Mill, Heptonstall Ref 15-865 New Farm Quarry, Southowram Ref 15-1054
Owners and tenants of the quarry have included
New Hall Clay Works, Elland Ref 15-558
Owners and tenants of the works have included
New Hall Mine, Southowram Ref 15-1292 New House Mill, Ovenden Ref 15-879 New Mill, Barkisland Ref 15-1258
lately in the occupation of Messrs Whiteley & Son, paper makers
New Mill, Cragg Vale Ref 15-225 New Mill, Stainland Ref 15-66
Owners and tenants of the mill have included
New Mill, Wainstalls Ref 15-1305 New Mill, Wainstalls Ref 15-150
New Road Quarry, Northowram Ref 15-786
Owners and tenants of the quarry have included
Newbridge Mill, Walsden Ref 15-311
Nicholls's Mill, Stainland Ref 15-564 Noble's Silk Mill, Brighouse Ref 15-N988 Norcliffe Mills, Soyland Ref 15-243 North Bridge Electrical Works, Halifax Ref 15-1354 North Bridge Iron Works Ref 15-928
Owners and tenants of the works have included
North Bridge Mill, Halifax Ref 15-880
Owners and tenants of the mill have included
North Cut Mill, Brighouse Ref 15-1437 North Dean Chemical Works, Salterhebble Ref 15-643
Owners and tenants of the works have included
North Dean Grease Works, West Vale Ref 15-608 North Dean Mill, West Vale Ref 15-N59
Owners and tenants of the mill have included
North Dean Munitions Factory, Greetland Ref 15-1336
On spare ground between the Calder and Greetland Station ... one of
the strangest-shaped works ever seen in this district with its miles
of earthenware pipes and curious retorts.
After the [First World] war, the factory was completely demolished
North Dean Oil Works, Greetland Ref 15-719
Owners and tenants of the works have included
North Vale Doubling Mill, Bailiff Bridge Ref 15-N157
Subsequent owners and tenants have included
Northowram Hill Quarry Ref 15-916
Owners and tenants of the quarry have included
Northowram Quarries Ref 15-1099 Norton Mills, Elland Ref 15-780
Owners and tenants of the mills have included
Norwood Green Colliery Ref 15-N143 Norwood Green Mill Ref 15-N155
Owners and tenants of the mills have included
Norwood Green Pit Ref 15-1189 Nutclough Mill, Hebden Royd Ref 15-141
Owners and tenants of the mill have included
Page Ref: M408_N
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