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Hade Edge

AC with 0 elementsGeography of HolmfirthHolme ValleyTowns and villages of the Peak DistrictUse British English from December 2020
Villages in West Yorkshire
Bare Bones Road to Victoria Tower geograph.org.uk 429069
Bare Bones Road to Victoria Tower geograph.org.uk 429069

Hade Edge is a small village to the south of Holmfirth and southeast of Hepworth in West Yorkshire, England. It is in the parish of Holme Valley and the metropolitan borough of Kirklees. Although it started as a fairly small hamlet it has grown considerably throughout the 1980s and 1990s with new housing.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Hade Edge (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Hade Edge
Dunford Road, Kirklees Holme Valley

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Hade EdgeContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.543546 ° E -1.781116 °
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Address

Dunford Road

Dunford Road
HD9 2SZ Kirklees, Holme Valley
England, United Kingdom
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Bare Bones Road to Victoria Tower geograph.org.uk 429069
Bare Bones Road to Victoria Tower geograph.org.uk 429069
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Nearby Places

Holy Trinity Church, Holmfirth
Holy Trinity Church, Holmfirth

Holy Trinity Church, Holmfirth is an Anglican church in the town of Holmfirth in West Yorkshire, England. Holmfirth's chapelry historically covered townships which lay on or near the boundary between the parishes of Kirkburton and Almondbury: Wooldate, Hepworth and Cartworth in Kirkburton, and Holme, Austonley and Upperthong in Almondbury.Like many rural parishes, these covered wide areas, but with the rise in urbanisation and the corresponding population increases, these parishes have since been subdivided and new churches have been built. A church in Holmfirth is first recorded during the 1480s; a grant was made by Edward IV to the church (and confirmed by Richard III). The first stone building being completed in 1500. The church was demolished and rebuilt in 1632, with the seating capacity increased. In 1635, the incoming curate, one John Bynns, obtained a commission from the Ecclesiastical Court to allot all the seats to the congregation, most of whom did not know their seats. The congregation, who were then required to pay ten pence per year for their seats, revolted and refused to pay. Legal proceedings were subsequently launched and lasted until 1639, when Bynns received compensation, though he remained deeply unpopular with the congregation, who tried to displace him in 1646, though appear to have been unsuccessful. Bynns died soon after this. The church was elevated to the status of a parish church in 1651 or 1652.The church was severely damaged in a flood in 1777, and was subsequently replaced by the present church, which dates from the 1780s, The tower, containing six bells, was added at a later date. The church became Grade II listed in 1967.The church installed a disabled access ramp in 2019. In 2020, the ramp was vandalised by an unknown offender who left a note explaining that their reason for doing so was a desire to see the historic steps reinstated.