Boldshay Hall Estate, Barkerend in 1828

10.029        BOL 1828 SMI      Boldshay Hall Estate,  1828

It is always an exciting moment when an important, two-hundred-year-old, map (which does not appear to represent a copy of one already in the publicly accessible collection) turns up among the Local Studies Library’s reserve material. So, although this map appeared in an earlier LSL blog it is well worth reviewing it here, together with evidence it contains concerning Bradford in the mid-nineteenth century. The title of this map indicates that it produced for Colonel Thomas George Fitzgerald and his wife: Fitzgerald was a large landowner in Bradford until his death. The LSL has plans of his holdings elsewhere in the city, but no other copy of this plan of Boldshay Hall as far as I can see. The West Yorkshire Archives (Bradford) also has many documents relating to the estate. Physically the map was a tinted, rolled, estate plan but was in poor condition, and needed some repair before it could be handled safely. It was found in a group of plans that seem to have come from Bradford Council.

The unnamed building you can see a little south east of Boldshay is Miry Shay (or Miryshay) an older seventeenth century house. This has long been demolished but in the early nineteenth century was the property of JH (John Henry) Smyth or Smythe MP (1780-1822) whose family had owned it, and the Bradford Soke Mill, for generations. Smythe had evidently died before the map was surveyed, and hence is referred to as ‘late’. The West Yorkshire Archives have a good deal of information about this family too.

2.38 BRA c1860 BAR   Col. Smyth’s Estate, Leeds Old Road c.1860

By the time of the 1852 Ordnance Survey map there was a large colliery just south of Miry Shay called Bunkers Hill. The land ownership in this area is made clearer by this second, later, LSL map which also illustrates that the name Bunkers Hill was in fact applied to a series of collieries along Barkerend Road.  The ‘Col. Smyth’ in this map is John George Smyth (1815-1869) MP for York and Colonel of the 2nd West Yorkshire Militia who lived at Heath Hall, Wakefield. His land holdings north of Barkerend Road are now a substantial part of Bradford Moor Golf Club. Dr Outhwaite, another estate owner, is Dr John Outhwaite who is believed to have been a friend of the Brontes.

The original Boldshay Hall Estate plan is dated 1828 and was drawn by Joseph Smith, of whom I will say more later. Boldshay Hall, Barkerend was built circa 1740 and at this early period was associated with the name of Samuel Hemingway and his son Henry Hemingway, who were both lawyers. The estate itself is presumed to be far older. Remarkably the hall still exists on Byron Street, surrounded by Victorian housing, and is Grade II listed. The gardens, fields, and coal mines which once enclosed it have long ago vanished completely.

As you would expect some previous owners of this historic building are described by William Scruton in Pen & Pencil Buildings of Old Bradford, and of course by William Cudworth. The estate passed from the Hemingway family to the Lister family of Horton Hall since Samuel Lister’s sister, Elizabeth Lister, had married Henry Hemingway. Their daughter, and Samuel Lister’s niece, Mary Hemingway married a Dr James Crowther MD of Leeds. After the death of Samuel Lister, and his second wife, Dr and Mrs Crowther inherited all the Lister estates and in due course their own daughter Elizabeth Crowther (1788-1838) who in 1819 (at St George’s Hanover Square) became the second Mrs Fitzgerald, and is the Mrs Fitzgerald of the first map’s title. ‘Colonel Fitzgerald’ is Thomas George Fitzgerald, of Turlough, Ireland (1778-1850). Fitzgerald’s first wife also had a strong Bradford connection. Ten years earlier, in 1809 at St Peter’s Church, he had married Delia (1780-1817), daughter of Joshua Field, of Heaton Hall, and sister of John Wilmer Field, later Lord of the Manors of Heaton and Shipley. Two daughters died young but they had one son who took over their Irish estates. I should really like to know how Colonel Fitzgerald kept meeting Bradford heiresses and winning their hearts.

Boldshay Hall itself is the large building in the centre of the group. I assume the rest are stables, farm buildings and coach houses; note the presence of an ice house. The agent for the estate, and other Fitzgerald properties, was Joseph Smith who must have surveyed this map. He was succeeded by his son George Belk Smith who had designed the Bradford – Eccleshill turnpike in 1826. There are pencil annotations which are hard to read but seem, at least in part, to be records of the years in which certain parcels of land were acquired for the estate.

I should very much like to know how long the Fitzgeralds lived at Boldshay Hall. After the death of Colonel Fitzgerald the estate passed to his son Major Henry Thomas George Fitzgerald (1820-1890) who had been born and baptised in Bradford but probably didn’t live in the borough; his address is usually given at Maperton House, Somerset, which the Fitzgeralds also owned. Baines directory of 1822 confirms that Colonel Fitzgerald was in residence at that date but by the time Fitzgerald died in 1850 the Leeds Mercury recorded that he was ‘formerly of Boldshay Hall’. The 1828 map itself includes a list of tenants with their holdings, but nobody is leasing the hall where presumably, six years after the directory was published, the family still lived. It would appear likely that Colonel and Mrs Fitzgerald moved to Maperton House in the late 1820s. Could the resultant need for records of their local land holdings have been the reason that the map was originally created? Interestingly around this time Boldshay Gardens became a place of public resort. The fact that they were no longer open for this purpose was formally announced in the Leeds Mercury in 1839.

As I have mentioned before I am not a family historian and I am slightly puzzled by exactly who lived at Boldshay Hall after the Fitzgeralds. One of the map’s listed tenants is James Cousen. A man of this name is a partner in Rawson, Cousen & Co who were coal masters. This company owned the various Bunkers Hill collieries by the 1830s. His son, another James, (of Cousen, Thackrey & Co, stone-merchants of the canal basin) was given the address of ‘Boldshay’ in the press announcement issued when he died in 1830.  Possibly Boldshay Hall was subdivided since a local merchant named John Mann (1808-1845) was also giving Boldshay as his address by 1834. According to the Bradford Observer the same man won a prize for his lettuce at the Bradford Grand Floral & Horticultural Society in 1841. John Mann died in 1845 at the early age of 37. Probably James Cousen and John Mann were related. One family historian gives James Cousen’s second wife the name of Elizabeth Mann.  James Cousen senior still lived at the hall when he died at the age of 83 in 1844. I have also seen James Cousen’s name linked with Miry Shay although the only contemporary resident of this house I am certain of from press announcements is a Joseph Dalby, farmer, who died there in 1834. The 1841 census makes the situation slightly clearer. At that time in Boldshay Hall live John Mann (30) and wife Anne (who was to survive him by fifty years), two children and four servants. Andrew Newell, a gardener, lives at Boldshay Gardens. Miry Shay is more complicated. James Cousen, coal merchant, and his wife Elizabeth are certainly resident, but so also are a collection of coal miners, agricultural labourers, worsted weavers. and assorted descendants of the Dalbys.

Exploring the history encompassed by this map has been a real pleasure even if I have not found all the answers.

One comment

  1. Another fascinating tour through Bradford history – and where I was walking the dog this afternoon. Now I know there was an ice house – I shall be trying to nose out where it was situated on my next walk through there.

    Can anyone tell me what a ‘Summering Field’ was/is? What was grown there?

    Also really interesting to see all the Irish connections in these posts: of how many Irish landowners there are in the 1700s (is that why Defoe visited? to stay with friends?) and how this upends the common belief that Irish came in the mid/late 1800s as navvies, mill workers etc and were all poverty-stricken tinkers.

    How/why did so many Irish (eg Rosse) own Bradford land?? Anglo-Irish families?

    Sorry – so many questions! But that’s because the posts are so thought-provoking!

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