Royston, South Yorkshire Explained

Country:England
Coordinates:53.61°N -1.45°W
Official Name:Royston
Population:10,728
Population Ref:(2011 census)
Metropolitan Borough:Barnsley
Region:Yorkshire and the Humber
Metropolitan County:South Yorkshire
Post Town:BARNSLEY
Postcode District:S71
Postcode Area:S
Dial Code:01226
Static Image Name:StJohnsRoyston.jpg
Static Image Caption:Parish Church of St John the Baptist
Os Grid Reference:SE3511
Constituency Westminster:Barnsley North

Royston is a suburban village within the Metropolitan borough of Barnsley, in South Yorkshire, England. Historically, the village formed part of the West Riding of Yorkshire, but was incorporated into the Metropolitan borough of Barnsley in 1974 and is now on the border with West Yorkshire.It is part of the Barnsley Central borough constituency, and has a population of 10,728. It is situated north-east of Barnsley, and south-east of Wakefield.[1]

History

The village is recorded in the Domesday Book as Rorestone[2] with the name deriving from Hror's or Roarr's farm /settlement (Hror/Roarr-s-tun).[3] The village was in the wapentake of Staincross.[4]

Originally a farming village, Royston joined the Industrial Revolution with the construction in the 1790s of the Barnsley Canal, and later a branch of the Midland Railway.[5] Both are now disused.

Royston had a colliery called Monckton Colliery (1878–1966).This was replaced by Royston Drift Mine. There was also, a clay works and brick works but these are all now closed, although a coke works operated until recently on the mine site processing coal brought in by road. Royston Drift Mine opened in 1975 and closed (after a relatively short period in coal mining terms) 14 years later in 1989.[6] The site is now the site of Rabbit Ings Country Park, which is now home to all five species of owls to be found in Britain.[7]

A large shirt factory with the brandname Valusta provided local employment from the 1940s through to the 1980s.Burberrys also had a factory on Midland Road

Geography

Royston lies on the Barnsley Canal,[8] and on the intersection of the B6132 and B6428 roads, due north of Monk Bretton at an elevation of around above sea level. The Trans Pennine Trail runs through Royston along the canal bank.[9] The parish is part of the diocese of Leeds.[10]

Landmarks

The churches in Royston include the Anglican parish church of St John the Baptist, Bethel Church, the Royston Methodist Church, and Our Lady and St Joseph, a Roman Catholic church.

The parish church of St John the Baptist was built about the year 1234 and has a clock, a sundial, a ring of eight bells and is now grade I listed.[11] The church is a notable location in Royston as it is one of a few churches in England with an oriel window, and was used a navigational landmark for guiding travellers.[12]

Notable people

Harry “Shake” Earnshaw was a miner turned racing cyclist who in 1938 was acclaimed the British Best All-Rounder.[13] The comedian Charlie Williams was born in Royston in 1927. He played football for Doncaster Rovers and later found fame as one of the comedians on the TV programme The Comedians.[14]

The mountaineer Andy Cave originates from Royston, and was a coal miner until the 1984–85 miners' strike, at which point he dedicated himself to mountaineering.[15] He is also notable for his research into the dialect of Yorkshire pit villages. His 2001 doctorate stated that Royston had a slightly different accent to the surrounding villages, as many of the miners who came to work at Monckton Colliery on its opening travelled from the Black Country, where several mines had closed.[16] This hypothesis was later tested by Kate Burland, who analysed certain vowel sounds in Royston, Wakefield and Barnsley. She found that Wakefield and Barnsley residents had very similar pronunciations for the sounds under consideration, whereas Royston residents had different pronunciations that were more similar to those associated with the Midlands.[17] Yorkshire cricketer Norman Yardley lived in Royston at the Grove, which is now owned by Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council.

Football player and manager Ernie Morgan was born in Royston.[18]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Genuki: ROYSTON: Geographical and Historical information from the year 1868., Yorkshire (West Riding) . www.genuki.org.uk . 12 December 2019 .
  2. Web site: Royston Domesday Book . opendomesday.org . 12 December 2019.
  3. Book: Ekwall . Eilert . The concise Oxford dictionary of English place-names . 1960 . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 0-19-869103-3 . 395. 4.
  4. Book: Smith . Albert H. . he place-names of the West Riding of Yorkshire; 1. Lower & Upper Strafforth and Staincross Wapentakes . 1961 . Cambridge University Press . Cambridge . 285. 174292315.
  5. Web site: Roydon – Rudyard British History Online . www.british-history.ac.uk . 12 December 2019.
  6. Web site: Barnsley Coalfield . nmrs.org.uk . 12 December 2019.
  7. News: Former pit home to five owl species . 12 December 2019 . BBC News . 19 March 2013.
  8. Book: Glister . Roger . The forgotten canals of Yorkshire : Wakefield to Swinton via Barnsley. The Barnsley and Dearne & Dove canals . 2004 . Wharncliffe . Barnsley . 1-903425-38-7 . 16.
  9. Web site: Trail Trips – Old Moor to Old Royston . transpenninetrail.org.uk/leaflet-downloads/ . 12 December 2019 . PDF.
  10. Web site: OVER-VIEW FOR THE UNITED BENEFICE OF ROYSTON ST THE JOHN BAPTIST AND FELKIRK ST PETER'S . leeds.anglican.org . 12 December 2019 . 3 .
  11. Book: Pevsner . Nikolaus . Yorkshire : the West Riding . 2001 . Penguin Books . London . 0-14-071017-5 . 424 . 2.
  12. Web site: St John the Baptist, Church Street . Historic England . historicengland.org.uk . 12 December 2019 .
  13. News: Historic Rose Bowl is unearthed – Barnsley News from the Barnsley Chronicle . 12 December 2019 . Barnsley Chronicle . 8 June 2018.
  14. Wray . Vamplew . Williams, Charles Adolphus [Charlie] . 97423.
  15. Book: Cave . Andy . Learning to breathe . 2006 . Arrow . London . 9780099472667 . x–xiv.
  16. Web site: Cave . Andrew . 2001 . Language variety and communicative style as local and subcultural identity in a South Yorkshire coal mining community . The University of Sheffield . 21 July 2013.
  17. Book: Burland . Kate . Montgomery . Chris . Moore . Emma . Language and a sense of place : studies in language and region . 2017 . Cambridge University Press . Cambridge . 9781107098718 . 234–257 . 11: Where the black country meets 'black Barnsley': dialect variation and identity in an ex-mining community of Barnsley.
  18. Book: Triggs, Roger. The Men Who Made Gillingham Football Club. Tempus Publishing Ltd . 2001. 0-7524-2243-X. 226.