Wednesday, 6 September 2017

backyard penrith

At the beginning of the nineteenth century, the population of my home town, Penrith, was around 3,800, and at that time, many residents lived in named yards in what is now considered the town centre. Many of these were accessible only through a single narrow passageway, which served a defensive function—Penrith is 30 miles from the Scottish border, and in earlier times it was a regular target of cross-border raiders (the sandstone hill that marks the town’s eastern perimeter is still called ‘the Beacon’, a reference to the practice of lighting fires on its summit to warn the townspeople that yet another raiding party was on its way).

Not many of these old yards still survive. In the 1950s, the local council embarked on a program of what it probably thought of as ‘slum clearance’. Several yards were flattened to build car parks. Some were rebuilt in a more modern style, while several others have had doors or gates placed across the entrance by their residents, so they are effectively off-limits to someone like me, who merely wants to record their existence. Nevertheless, I have been able to put together a collection of photos that I hope readers will find interesting.

Some yards are more like alleyways connecting two streets—there were once four such alleys between Middlegate and Bluebell Lane, but only Three Crowns Yard survives in anything close to its original state (the paving is relatively new, and I suspect that the building on the right in the first photo is new too):


This photo was taken from the end of Bluebell Lane looking down the yard, while the next photo shows the narrow passageway leading into Middlegate:


Notice the external staircase, which was a common feature in such yards.

Starting from the same place as Three Crowns Yard but leading to Cornmarket is White Hart Yard, which is wide enough to drive down, although nobody does nowadays:



The next photo was taken from the same point as the previous one looking back up the yard:


Griffin Yard leads off to the right close to the external staircase in the previous photo. The following photo shows the end of the yard, while the next image was taken looking back towards White Hart Yard:



The next photo was taken in what I originally identified as Sutton Yard, but thanks to diligent research by a friend, I can confirm that it is Ramsey Yard—it no longer has a nameplate over the entrance on Middlegate. It now has little of architectural interest apart from the passage leading to Middlegate, with its two date stones, neither of which, I suspect, belonged originally to the building of which they are now part (the buildings on both sides are modern):


In the same general area, there is an unnamed alleyway connecting Elm Terrace with the bottom of Castlegate. The external staircase in the following photograph is no longer in use, because the door to which it once led has been bricked up:


Across the road from the exit shown in the previous photo is Gloucester Yard. There is no name sign here, and the yard takes its name from the Gloucester Arms, one of four Grade I listed buildings in Penrith. Even though the present owners of this public house have reverted to the name it bore before it became a pub—Dockray Hall—the yard has kept the older name. The first photo is a view looking up the yard, while the second, taken from the same place, shows the entrance to the yard. The third photo was taken further up the hill looking down:




The final photo was taken in the now unnamed alleyway connecting Friargate with King Street and shows the passage leading to the latter:


All the photos here except those of Griffin Yard are of through routes. A few courtyard-style yards still survive, but they are now inaccessible.

11 comments:

  1. Wonderful read and incredible photographs- I look forward to your posts

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    1. Thank you Julie. This year, I’ve been trying to record as much as I can of Penrith’s history.

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  2. Thanks for the photos. I never really explored these places until long after I'd left Penrith.

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    1. I always knew about (and used) them when I was growing up. Pity there are so few left.

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  3. A fascinating and well-illustrated read, leading me to ask whether you might know anything about “Hodgson’s Yard” in Penrith.

    My third great grandfather, William Hodgson (1807-1873), was a joiner in the town.
    Census information between 1841 and 1861 shows him to be living - and presumably working - in Burrowgate and Sandgate. At the height of his career he was employing three men and four boys, mostly family members.

    The 1871 census gives his address as 35 De Whelpdale Lane. I take this to be the right hand portion of the block which includes Sandgate House, immediately to the left of Mansion House Car Park. A hand-written note on the door of the property - presumably to assist mail delivery - makes tantalising reference to “1 Joiner’s Loft Sandgate House and 2 Joiner’s Loft Sandgate House”. It is in this same census where reference is made to two properties in Hodgson’s Yard, which I imagine to be within what is now the Mansion House Car Park and logically to have some connection with William Hodgson. But I haven’t been able to uncover anything else.

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    1. Unfortunately, I’m unable to help you with your query. Although Hodgson is one of the most common surnames in Penrith, I’m not related to any of them, apart from my brother. Our grandfather, John Hodgson, was born in Cockermouth and only came to Penrith as a young man.

      However, I’d like to thank you for your fascinating contribution, which has given me something to follow up myself.

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  4. Thanks for these lovely photographs, so interesting ..... there is a book of watercolour pictures called the "Yards of Penrith" DO you have a copy? Also the U3A Architecture Group here have been exploring some buildings there.
    Wonder which Country you are in at the moment?
    Carol Mitchell, Penrith.

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    1. Thank you for your comment. I hadn’t heard of the book you refer to, so I’ll be looking out for it when I’m back in Penrith (I’m currently in Hong Kong).

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  5. Dear Dennis, In 2023 I published a small leaflet of self-guided walks around the yards of Penrith ( some of them). I had not seen your page before then, but there are some helpful photos on there. Now, my friend Carol Mitchell , is producing a larger book, incorporating recent paintings of some yards.( 2024) If you have a facebook account there are images in" Penrith in Old Photos"

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  6. Hello Dennis, are you visiting again? Some of us would like to meet up with you.
    Carol Mitchell ... my email is wollaton@gmail.com

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