Smelthouses Explained

Country:England
Coordinates:54.074°N -1.708°W
Official Name:Smelthouses
Static Image:File:Smelthouses - geograph.org.uk - 68173.jpg
Static Image Caption:Smelthouses Bridge
Civil Parish:Hartwith cum Winsley and High and Low Bishopside
Unitary England:North Yorkshire
Lieutenancy England:North Yorkshire
Region:Yorkshire and the Humber
Constituency Westminster:Skipton and Ripon
Post Town:HARROGATE
Postcode District:HG3
Postcode Area:HG
Dial Code:01423
Os Grid Reference:SE202642

Smelthouses is a hamlet in Nidderdale in North Yorkshire, England. It lies about 2.3miles south-east of Pateley Bridge, on either side of Fell Beck, a small tributary of the River Nidd. Fell Beck here forms the boundary between the civil parishes of Hartwith cum Winsley and High and Low Bishopside, so that the settlement is divided between the two parishes.

In the Middle Ages Fell Beck was the boundary between the lands of the Archbishop of York (which became High and Low Bishopside) and the manor of Brimham held by Fountains Abbey (which became Hartwith cum Winsley).[1] Fountains Abbey had a grange at Wyse Ing at what is now Smelthouses.[2] By the middle of the 15th century the abbey had a bellows-blown lead smelting mill there, which gave its name to the hamlet, but there is no record of its use in the 16th century or at the dissolution of the abbey.[3]

In 1795 a flax-spinning mill was started on the west side of the beck at Smelthouses. The mill flourished in the 19th century, but was burned down in 1890.[4] In the early 20th century there was a rope and twine business at Little Mill in Smelthouses.[5]

A Wesleyan chapel was opened at Smelthouses in 1841 to serve the industrial hamlet.[6] It was replaced by a chapel at Wilsill in 1897.

The road from Pateley Bridge to Knaresborough historically passed through Smelthouses. Under an Act of Parliament of 1759 a turnpike trust was formed to build a new toll road on the route. In 1761 the trust built a new bridge over Fell Beck at Smelthouses, and rebuilt it in 1802.[7] The bridge is now a Grade II listed building. However the route was abandoned as a turnpike in 1828, when the trust diverted the route to a new line from Wilsill to Burnt Yates via Summerbridge, now followed by the B6165.[8]

Notable locals

Notes and References

  1. Book: Jennings, Bernard. Bernard Jennings. A History of Nidderdale. 52. 1992. Nidderdale History . 1-85072-114-9.
  2. Jennings, p. 96
  3. Jennings, pp. 65, 153
  4. Jennings, pp. 210, 261
  5. Jennings, p. 262
  6. Jennings, p. 418
  7. Jennings, pp. 190-192
  8. Book: Wright, Geoffrey N.. Roads and Trackways of the Yorkshire Dales. 180. 1985. Moorland . 0-86190-410-9.