Egypt, Bradford Explained

Egypt is a hamlet near Thornton, in the City of Bradford, West Yorkshire, England.

Geography

Egypt is situated about 1miles north-west of Thornton on a hairpin bend of a road between Well Heads and a junction with the B6144 road near Wilsden, and at the top (western) end of the marked valley of Bell Dean in which a stream runs roughly in an eastern direction. High walls that were erected to hold back the waste rock from the local quarries flank the road, giving rise to the nickname "The Walls of Jericho".

History

The hamlet was established in the first half of the 19th century and is named on maps surveyed in the late 1840s. Its name may be related to the commemoration of the 1798 invasion of Egypt by the troops of Napoleon Bonaparte, or the nearby Egypt Methodist Chapel which was already demolished by 1876. The names of other hamlets in the area such as Jericho, Jerusalem, and World's End are also of biblical origin.

Quarrying was the major industry in the area, with about 30 active quarries reported in the 1870s.

See also

References

[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6]

External links

53.8023°N -1.8619°W

Notes and References

  1. Yorkshire CCXVI.NW (includes: Bradford; Clayton; Thornton.). 1947. Ordnance Survey. 1:10560.
  2. Yorkshire 216 (includes: Bradford; Clayton; North Bierley; Thornton.). 1852. Ordnance Survey. 1:10560.
  3. Book: William Cudworth. Round About Bradford. 1876. 140. (Reprint: Mountain Press, 1968)
  4. Book: P. F. Kendall and H. E. Wroot. The Geology of Yorkshire. ii. 898. 1924.
  5. Web site: Thornton Village: History. www.brontecountry.com. 15 January 2019.
  6. The Walls of Jericho at Egypt, Thornton, Bradford. Alison C. Armstrong. 1985. 1. 44–49. The Bradford Antiquary . Third Series. Bradford Historical and Antiquarian Society.