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[5] [6] The building was later converted into a police station but also continued to be used for public meetings. [7] The building, which remained in the ownership of Huddersfield Corporation, [8] became an ice cream factory, leased to Dixon's Milk Ices, a business established in the early 1960s. [9] [10] [11] The building was grade II listed ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Huddersfield_Borough_Police&oldid=243958822"
Trafalgar House Police Station, Bradford [10] WD: Wakefield: Castleford, Normanton and Featherstone, Pontefract and Knottingley, South East, Wakefield Central, Wakefield North West, Wakefield Rural: Havertop Lane Police Station, Normanton [11] KD: Kirklees: Batley and Spen, Dewsbury and Mirfield, Huddersfield, Rural: Huddersfield Police Station ...
Longwood is a village and suburb of the town of Huddersfield in the English county of West Yorkshire.It is situated some 2.5 miles (4.0 km) west of Huddersfield town centre, in the valley of the Longwood Brook, a tributary of the River Colne.
Huddersfield Free Town Bus. A trolleybus network operated from 1933 to 1968. Huddersfield bus station was opened by the Mayor, Councillor Mernagh on 26 March 1974, although it had not been completed. [64] It is the busiest bus station in West Yorkshire with a daily footfall of almost 35,000. Most bus services pass through the bus station.
The town hall was the meeting place of Huddersfield Municipal Borough which secured county borough status in 1889. [9] In April 1889 the first annual "Mrs Sunderland Music Festival" took place at Huddersfield Town Hall with the retired soprano Susan Sunderland presenting the prizes to the winners.
Lockwood railway station is on the Penistone Line between Huddersfield and Sheffield. It is situated in Swan Lane, just before the Grade II-listed, 32-arched Lockwood Viaduct, which spans the valley and connects the line to Berry Brow. Prior to the mid-1970s it had its own extensive goods yard, coal yard, sidings and station master's house.
Sir John William Ramsden, 5th Baronet was best known for his plans to develop Huddersfield town centre. The railway had reached the town in 1847 with the construction of Huddersfield railway station, situated rather to the north of the town's established town centre, and he planned to develop the surrounding area. The rather grand St George's ...