History in Structure

Housing at the former Elsecar Ironworks, 2 and 4 Forge Lane

A Grade II* Listed Building in Hoyland, Barnsley

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Coordinates

Latitude: 53.4936 / 53°29'37"N

Longitude: -1.4203 / 1°25'13"W

OS Eastings: 438556

OS Northings: 399813

OS Grid: SK385998

Mapcode National: GBR LXJ1.9C

Mapcode Global: WHDD4.4GX2

Plus Code: 9C5WFHVH+CV

Entry Name: Housing at the former Elsecar Ironworks, 2 and 4 Forge Lane

Listing Date: 4 December 1986

Last Amended: 19 October 2020

Grade: II*

Source: Historic England

Source ID: 1151096

English Heritage Legacy ID: 333894

Also known as: Roadside building at NCB Workshops with attached range facing Forge Lane

ID on this website: 101151096

Location: Elsecar, Barnsley, South Yorkshire, S74

County: Barnsley

Electoral Ward/Division: Hoyland Milton

Parish: Non Civil Parish

Built-Up Area: Hoyland

Traditional County: Yorkshire

Lieutenancy Area (Ceremonial County): South Yorkshire

Church of England Parish: Elsecar Holy Trinity

Church of England Diocese: Sheffield

Tagged with: House

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Elsecar

Summary


A semi-detached pair of workers’ houses built in the 1850s for Elsecar Ironworks, probably for managers or supervisors. In domestic use in 2020.

Description


Pair of cottages, 1850s, for the Dawes’ Elsecar Ironworks.

MATERIALS: well-dressed, coursed sandstone to the west elevation facing Forge Lane, mainly brick to the remaining elevations. Welsh slate roofs.

PLAN: single depth, central entrance plan with central stairs.

EXTERIOR: Forge Lane (west) elevation: this is an unequal pair of double-fronted, two-storey cottages with central entrances, the northern cottage (number 2) having a wider frontage with an additional window, this being above the front door. Windows have stone lintels and projecting sills, number 4 retaining two-over-two, horned sash windows. The front doors are six-panelled with over-lights, the northern being set-back in a round-arched opening, the southern being simpler with a plain stone lintel. A square, stone-built ridge stack is shared by the cottages, the southern cottage having a further brick stack, the northern a gable-end stack, both being brick.

Rear, east elevation: this has scattered fenestration, original openings having stone lintels. The ground floor is mainly taken up with various single-storey outbuildings and projections.

INTERIOR: Not inspected (information from other sources). The ground floor front windows retain shutters and panelled reveals. Beneath the southern cottage (number 4) is a large cellar with a jack-arched brick ceiling, the arches springing from iron plates or girders.

SUBSIDIARY ITEMS: the rear yards have stone setts and are enclosed by high boundary walls, some sections stone-built, others being brick. Single-storey outbuildings are generally brick-built, the northernmost one being mainly stone, but with a tall brick chimney.

History


Elsecar Ironworks was established in 1795, but was extensively modernised and reordered by William and George Dawes who had taken over the works under a lease from Earl Fitzwilliam in 1849. Forge Lane Cottages were built in the 1850s as an early part of the redevelopment of the works, first being depicted on a plan dated 1859. Built next to the main entrance to the ironworks, it is thought that the two cottages were built for managers or supervisors at the works, although it is known that the Dawes brothers lived elsewhere. Following the closure of the ironworks, the cottages were absorbed as ancillary buildings into the Elsecar Central Workshops complex.

Ironworks, alongside collieries, were key drivers of Britain’s industrial development in the C19. Elsecar Ironworks, which is also designated as a Scheduled Monument, is one of the best surviving C19 ironworks nationally because a number of its buildings were absorbed into the Central Workshops complex and have thus survived. Most C19 ironworks in England have been either completely cleared or redeveloped. Elsecar Central Workshops was an early and pioneering industrial complex, prefiguring similar complexes built as the coal mining and other industries became more highly capitalised towards the end of the C19 and into the C20. Henry Hartop (1785-1865), the ironmaster who was employed by the fifth Earl Fitzwilliam, effectively adapted the concept of the model farm to service the industrial needs of the estate. Successive Earl Fitzwilliams, who were influential members within the first rank of society and the British Establishment, took pride in showing off their industrial concerns to visitors. Elsecar is thus thought to have been nationally, perhaps even internationally, influential.

Reasons for Listing


Former supervisors’ housing at Elsecar Ironworks, 1850s, 2 and 4 Forge Lane are listed at Grade II* for the following principal reasons:

Architectural interest:
* with its well-detailed stone-built front elevation contrasting with its more utilitarian brick-built rear which faced onto the ironworks, being part of William and George Dawes’s mid-Victorian modernisation of Elsecar Ironworks.

Group value:
* with the other surviving roofed buildings and extensive archaeological remains of the scheduled Elsecar Ironworks, one of the best surviving C19 ironworks in England;
* as part of the complex of buildings which formed Elsecar Central Workshops, this remarkable survival of an early and influential centralised workshop facility which absorbed a number of ironworks buildings after the closure of the ironworks.

External Links

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