Moorthorpe

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Moorthorpe
240px
Moorthorpe Cemetery Lodge
Moorthorpe is located in West Yorkshire
Moorthorpe
Moorthorpe
 Moorthorpe shown within West Yorkshire
OS grid reference SE4630611071
Civil parish South Kirkby and Moorthorpe
Metropolitan borough Wakefield
Metropolitan county West Yorkshire
Region Yorkshire and the Humber
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town PONTEFRACT
Postcode district WF9
Dialling code 01977
Police West Yorkshire
Fire West Yorkshire
Ambulance Yorkshire
EU Parliament Yorkshire and the Humber
UK Parliament Hemsworth
List of places
UK
England
Yorkshire

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Moorthorpe is a village near Pontefract, in the City of Wakefield district of West Yorkshire, England. Due to the close proximity of South Kirkby and South Elmsall, which join the village at either end, the village often suffers an identity crisis.

Whilst Moorthorpe is a village in its own right and has clearly defined and signposted boundaries many residents simply assume the identity of either South Elmsall or South Kirkby. This can cause a particular problem with addresses when making purchases online, when most services automatically select South Elmsall as the address of many Moorthorpe residents, despite the fact that Moorthorpe forms part of the historic manor of South Kirkby and is tied to South Kirkby through the joint South Kirkby and Moorthorpe Town Council.

This problem is more complex because whilst many Moorthorpe residents are forced to use South Elmsall as their postal address, even on council tax bills, many of them actually pay parish rates to South Kirkby and Moorthorpe Town Council, which has higher rates than South Elmsall Town Council.[1]

Meaning of the name 'Moorthorpe'

Moorthorpe literally means 'farm on the moor' and has its base in Old Norse.[2]

History

The earliest written account of Moorthorpe is in the Domesday Book of 1086, when Moorthorpe is mentioned as part of the manor of South Kirkby. However, there is known evidence of Iron Age[3] and Roman[4] occupation and activity in the surrounding countryside and it is known that Sweinn and Arnketill, two Anglo-Saxon noblemen held the manor prior to the Norman Conquest. After the Conquest William gave the manor to Ilbert de Lacy.[5]

Whilst there are no medieval maps of the village in known existence the earliest maps appear to show that Barnsley Road (known then as Mellwood Road) was the only or main route through what would have remained a sparsely occupied farming hamlet. Langthwaite House, situated alongside what is now known locally as the "library field" was flanked by Langthwaite Beck, where an ancient well and natural spring were found.

File:Empire Theatre, Moorthorpe.jpg
The former Empire Theatre

The industrial revolution brought the railways and coal mining to the area and along with it a need for housing and recreation. On Barnsley Road there were a number of shops and the Empire Theatre, which is now an apartment block, though it does retain some of its obvious features externally. The Moorthorpe Picture Palace was located nearby but has been demolished. Also in the village was the miners institute building, although it is now privately owned and its elaborate carved entrance featuring a miner at work has been obscured.

Today

With the closure of the collieries the village has seen a number of changes to its buildings. The former police station on Barnsley Road is now flats as is the old Post Office house.

The shops on Barnsley Road remain, although fewer in number and Asda now have a supermarket on the same road.

There are four public houses in the village, however the Moorthorpe Hotel has not been open for a while and has been threatened with demolition. The Empire WMC was a central location in the 1984/85 miners strike.[6]

There are two schools in Moorthorpe, St Joseph's Roman Catholic Primary and Moorthorpe Middle. Day care and nursery is also available at St Peter and Paul's Hall.

File:Moorthorpe Cemetery chapel.jpg
Moorthorpe Cemetery and the small chapel

St Joseph's Roman Catholic Church stands at the heart of the village. Opened in 1928 it is a beautiful example of a red brick church and it was restored in the mid- to late 1990s.

Moorthorpe Cemetery sits alongside the church, with many elaborate monuments and paved walkways. The cemetery is surrounded by high walls with decorative iron railings.

The Mallard Cafe is situated in the restored station house at Moorthorpe railway station.

Architecture

The majority of buildings in the village date from the late 19th and early 20th century and were built to accommodate the large number of employees at the local collieries. Due to this many of the buildings are grand, red brick structures with ornamental brick or stone flourishes, reflecting the new opulence of the village.

File:Barnsley Road, Moorthorpe.jpg
Faux Tudor timber framed frontage on early 20th century buildings, Barnsley Road

A large proportion of the houses are traditional workers terrace houses and whilst the trend for modern reconstruction has hidden a large part of the architectural style of the housing stock there is evidence of a continuation of the Victorian revival of older styles, albeit on a less grand scale. For example on the former main shopping street of Barnsley Road there is still some evidence of faux half-timbering, with a mock Tudor style facade still existing on the top half of a small number of buildings.

File:Miners Institute, Moorthorpe.jpg
The elaborate gable at the former miners institute building

Some of the grander buildings shared a similar appearance, for example the former Empire Theatre, former Palace Picture house and St Joseph's Church featured the use of stylised circular windows and circular flourishes to the top of the front of their facades.

Other buildings, such as the miners institute building and the Empire WMC have gables, which are far more grand than would be expected in a small village.

Governance

Town council

The village is governed locally by South Kirkby and Moorthorpe Town Council. Despite the fact that the local council has a range of powers, such as the ability to raise funds through taxes (the precept), it is currently an unelected body, with all Councillors selected internally by the local council without a contest at elections. This is unlike most of the neighbouring town and parish councils, including South Elmsall, whose Councillors are elected directly by way of a public vote.

Moorthorpe Councillors (elected without a contest)
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Harold Mills 0 0 0
Labour Jacqueline Cole 0 0 0
Labour Marjarie Burkinshaw 0 0 0
Labour Joyce Tunstall 0 0 0
Labour Diane Lancaster 0 0 0
Majority 0 0 0
Turnout 0 0 0

South Elmsall and South Kirkby Ward

Moorthorpe forms part of the South Elmsall and South Kirkby ward, a ward of the metropolitan borough of the City of Wakefield and which forms part of the governing Wakefield Metropolitan District Council. The representatives of the ward are elected by way of a public vote, the last election was held in 2014.[7]

South Elmsall and South Kirkby
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Wilf Benson 1802 51.0 +12.4
Labour Laurie Harrison 1471 41.6 -14.5
Conservative Christian I'Anson 263 7.4 +2.1
Majority 331 9.4 -8.1
Turnout 3536 26.8 -0.6
Independent gain from Labour Swing

Member of Parliament

Nationally the village is served by Jon Trickett, the Labour MP for the Hemsworth constituency, who has his offices in the village.

Transport

File:Moorthorpe Railway Station.jpg
Moorthorpe railway station

The village is served by Moorthorpe railway station, which had its station building fully restored in 2010 and which provides regular services to Leeds, Wakefield, Sheffield and York.

The main station building hosts a waiting room, the Mallard Cafe, the offices of Jon Trickett MP and a number of other office spaces.

Sport

There is a long history of junior football in the village, with Empire Colts and Moorthorpe Rangers football clubs. However, in 2013 Moorthorpe Rangers moved to South Elmsall to become part of the Frickley Athletic Academy, ending a long association with Moorthorpe.

Notable people

Arthur Wharton, the world's first black professional footballer lived in Moorthorpe.[8]

Arthur Barraclough, who played for Chelsea and Swindon Town and who played in the Football League was born in Moorthorpe and his parents ran the miners institute.

Dick Hewitt was born in Moorthorpe and played in the Football League. His former clubs include Huddersfield Town, Barnsley and York City.

References

External links