Bradford Dale (Yorkshire)

Bradford Dale
Bradfordale
An image looking north eastwards across Bradford and Bradford Dale.
The dale extends across the middle foreground from left to right (where the warehouses are) and then changes direction to go back to the left around Manningham Mills (the very tall chimney in the middle). The steep sides of Airedale are the hillsides in the distance
Bradford Dale is located in England
Bradford Dale
Bradford Dale
Location within England
Floor elevation85 m (279 ft)[1]
Length8 mi (13 km) East–north [2]
Width6 mi (9.7 km) East–west[note 1][2]
Geography
LocationCity of Bradford
CountryEngland
State/ProvinceYorkshire and the Humber
Coordinates53°47′38″N 1°45′48″W / 53.7940°N 1.7632°W / 53.7940; -1.7632
RiverBradford Beck

Bradford Dale (or Bradfordale), is a side valley of Airedale that feeds water from Bradford Beck across the City of Bradford into the River Aire at Shipley in West Yorkshire, England. Whilst it is in Yorkshire and a dale, it is not part of the Yorkshire Dales and has more in common with Lower Nidderdale and Lower Airedale for its industrialisation.

Before the expansion of Bradford, the dale was a collection of settlements surrounded by woods. When the wool and worsted industries in the dale were mechanized in the Industrial Revolution, the increasing population resulted in an urban sprawl that meant these individual communities largely disappeared as Bradford grew, and in 1897, the town of Bradford became a city. Since most settlements became suburbs of the City of Bradford, the term Bradford Dale has become archaic and has fallen into disuse, though it is sometimes used to refer to the flat section of land northwards from Bradford City Centre towards Shipley.

The woollen and worsted industries had a profound effect on the dale, the later City of Bradford and the wider region. The geological conditions in the valley also allowed some coal mining to take place, but a greater emphasis was upon the noted stone found on the valley floor (Elland Flags and Gaisby Rock), which as a hard sandstone, was found to be good for buildings and in use as a harbour stone due to its natural resistance to water.

The dale is notable for the lack of a main river (Bradford Beck being only a small watercourse in comparison to the rivers Wharfe, Aire, Calder and Don) and necessitated the importation of clean water into the dale from as afar afield as Nidderdale. Most of the becks in the city centre have now been culverted and have suffered with pollution from the heavy woollen industry in the dale.

  1. ^ Cite error: The named reference OS was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ a b Firth 1997, p. 1.


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