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Showing posts from March, 2026

1911 Silkstone Common Land and Property Sales

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  1911 Land and Properties sold at Silkstone Common John Haynes was born in Silkstone on 20 th Nov 1830. Son of John Haynes, blacksmith, he was initially taken on in the blacksmith’s shop working for his father on Blacksmith Row in Silkstone. During this time as a boy he would take work his father had done over the moors to the contractors building the Woodhead Tunnels, which were completed in 1853. In the early 1860s he joined up with his brother in law, Abraham Lawton, in opening up collieries on Silkstone Common. The venture was a success and in the great coal boom of the 1870s, having a good offer made for it, they sold the business. After a short retirement Mr Haynes bought Stanhope Silkstone Colliery in 1886, turning around its’ fortunes, and also opened up Hallroyd Colliery in Silkstone Common and owned New Sovereign Colliery, Dodworth. According to GH Teasdale writing in 1901, John Haynes had built Beacon Villa in 1867. It was probably around this time of great prosp...

The Early Co-Operative Society in Silkstone - Updated

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The Early Co-Operative Movement in Silkstone Until recently there was a Co-Op in Silkstone at the garage and the closest one to Silkstone now is in Dodworth which many will be familiar with. However, the roots of the Co-Operative movement in Silkstone go back 165 years to a single shop and a few pioneering individuals. There is reference to a co-operative society in the village going back to the early 1860s. In June 1863 the Silkstone Pioneers Industrial Society (also referred to as the Silkstone Industrial Co-Operative Society and the Silkstone Pioneers Co-Operative Society) held its' 5th half-yearly meeting at The Fox and Hounds Inn. This would mean that the Co-operative movement began in Silkstone in 1861 which is the same year as it was established in Barnsley and would possibly have been one of the earliest in the district. Notes added by AH 26/3/26 - a newspaper article recently discovered and dated 1st Aug 1902 gives a history of early friendship societies etc in Silkstone i...

Sparrow Barracks, Silkstone Common

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  WHY ARE SOUTH YORKSHIRE BUILDINGS KNOWN AS THE BARRACKS OR SPARROW BARRACKS South Yorkshire Buildings in Silkstone Common have been known as Sparrow Barracks or simply The Barracks by generations of locals going back to when they were built in the 1870s. I had always thought that the name was peculiar to the cottages in Silkstone Common but there were also “Sparrow Barracks” in other areas – notably Mexborough and Deepcar in South Yorkshire and Newark, Notts and Hampton-In Arden in the West Midlands. The name Sparrow Barracks is not a recent nickname, and was used for the South Yorkshire Buildings way back in time. In a speech by the Chairman of The Penistone and District Education Sub Committee, Dr ACJ Wilson, in 1913 at the official opening of the new school at Silkstone Common, he recalled his first visit to the village 35 years previously. He had been asked to visit a poor patient who lived in the South Yorkshire Buildings. He had remarked that that was rather a “high s...