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| Interesting post.
The thing is if the land is Green Belt in the UDP then its green belt and that is a major stumbling block as you cannot just bend the rules to suit you have to follow the correct process and whilst it may eventually get approval it may take years to get it.
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| Quote ="Fax4Life"Interesting post.
The thing is if the land is Green Belt in the UDP then its green belt and that is a major stumbling block as you cannot just bend the rules to suit you have to follow the correct process and whilst it may eventually get approval it may take years to get it.'"
Not a major stumbling block.
No rules need to be bent.
It will be called in,because of green belt status.But where a local council is backing the development it is normally just passed back to them.
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| I hope they get it, always have a good day out in Wakefield and will be a shame if they dont get a license the next time to compete in Super League!
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| Quote ="Inflatable_Armadillo"That is not really true. Leeds is a relative recent success story and has only grown big in the last 160/170 years as the industrial revolution took hold. Prior to the 1800 it was nothing more than a village and dwarfed by all it's neighbours and in particular Wakefield which had been the administrative capital of the region since the 14th century, prior to that Pontefract held the dominant position in the region. Town's like Bradford and Leeds grew very large during the late 19th and early 20th century prior to WW11. The order of the region changed over this period and Wakefield and other towns started to be dwarfed by these two now citys.
Post war the Wakefield regions main industry was coal and (and all its off-shoot industrial processes) of course agriculture in the form of mainly the growing of veg and of course Rhubarb. Something ridiculous like 90% of the worlds Rhubarb was gown in the Rhubarb Triangle at it's peak, the majority of which fell into the Wakefield district.
When all of the West Yorkshire traditional industry started to decline Leeds made a very successful switch, during the 70 and 80's, to re-model itself as a financial centre. Wakefield on the other hand sought to exploit it's excellent location in relation to Leeds and more importantly at the cross-roads of the norths motorway system.
Leeds in now the financial capital of the North with Wakefield the distribution capital of West Yorkshire... that is why they are going to get a new ground as well!'"
i'm not as well read as some of you guy's ,but ive just been reading about the war's of the roses and there was a" battle of wakefield "that goes back to the 15th century.
i know about the big battle of towton ,but did leeds figure in the wotrs?
ive always had a soft spot for wakey and i rembember the great side of the early 60s
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| Towton is in the Leeds MDC area, so yes you could argue that Leeds did participate in the WOTR.
Stretching it a bit though.
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| Quote ="Old Feller"Towton is in the Leeds MDC area, so yes you could argue that Leeds did participate in the WOTR.
Stretching it a bit though.'"
Stetching it would be the biggest understatement of the new decade... Towton does now indeed (just) fall into Leeds MDC but no, Leeds was just a village at the time of the battle of Wakefield. Wakefield and Pontefract were in militarily stategic locations in relation to defending York and on the route from York to London. Wakefield Bridge (now better known as Chantry Bridge) was an important crossing point of the river Calder and indeed that is why a Chantry Chapel was built there.
At the time of the battle of Wakefield in 1460 the Lancastrians controlled Pontefract Castle and the Yorkists Sandal Castle (which was probably known as Wakefield Castle at the time). Richard the Duke of York lost big style and ended up with his head on a gate in York!
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| Quote ="Inflatable_Armadillo"Stetching it would be the biggest understatement of the new decade... Towton does now indeed (just) fall into Leeds MDC but no, Leeds was just a village at the time of the battle of Wakefield. Wakefield and Pontefract were in militarily stategic locations in relation to defending York and on the route from York to London. Wakefield Bridge (now better known as Chantry Bridge) was an important crossing point of the river Calder and indeed that is why a Chantry Chapel was built there.
At the time of the battle of Wakefield in 1460 the Lancastrians controlled Pontefract Castle and the Yorkists Sandal Castle (which was probably known as Wakefield Castle at the time). Richard the Duke of York lost big style and ended up with his head on a gate in York!'"
very interesting, thanks
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| Quote ="Inflatable_Armadillo"Stetching it would be the biggest understatement of the new decade... Towton does now indeed (just) fall into Leeds MDC but no, Leeds was just a village at the time of the battle of Wakefield. Wakefield and Pontefract were in militarily stategic locations in relation to defending York and on the route from York to London. Wakefield Bridge (now better known as Chantry Bridge) was an important crossing point of the river Calder and indeed that is why a Chantry Chapel was built there.
At the time of the battle of Wakefield in 1460 the Lancastrians controlled Pontefract Castle and the Yorkists Sandal Castle (which was probably known as Wakefield Castle at the time). Richard the Duke of York lost big style and ended up with his head on a gate in York!'"
hence the rhyme
"The grand old Duke of York"
whilst on the subject of rhymes, "here we go round the mullberry bush" was also about Wakefield or Wakefield prison to be more precise. The mullberry bush in question was and still is at the centre of the old excercise yard and the prisoners would chant the rhyme as they walked around it.
Also on the subject of Wakefield prison, when it was redesigned it became the model for new prisons around the world.
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| Quote ="The Clan"hence the rhyme
"The grand old Duke of York"
'"
There have been m any candidates for the owner of this rhym... the modern form, has become fixed on the Duke of York.
Candidates for the duke in question include:
Richard, Duke of York (1411–60), who was defeated at the Battle of Wakefield on 30 December 1460. Richard's army, some 8,000 strong, was awaiting reinforcements at Sandal Castle in Wakefield (the castle was built on top of a Norman motte). He was surrounded by Lancastrian forces some three times that number, but chose to sally forth to fight. Richard died in a pitched battle at Wakefield Green, together with between one third and one half of his army.
James II (1633-1701), formerly Duke of York , who in 1688 marched his troops to Salisbury Plain to resist the invasion from his son-in-law William of Orange, only to retreat and disperse them as his support began to evaporate.
The most common attribution is to Prince Frederick, Duke of York and Albany (1763-1827), the second son of King George III and Commander-in-Chief of the British Army during the Napoleonic Wars. His one field command of significance was the Flanders Campaign of 1793-4, which resulted in the heavy defeat at the Battle of Tourcoing (1794), followed by his recall to England. Flanders has something of a reputation for being flat, the specific location of the "hill" in the nursery rhyme has been attributed to be the town of Cassel which is built on a hill which rises 176 metres (about 570 feet) above the otherwise flat lands of Flanders in northern France.
An unquestionable reference is the rhyme to remember the colours of the rainbow Richard Of York Gave Battle In Vain (Red Orange Yellow Green Blue Indigo Violet)
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| Y-Town forever.
Brrapp.
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| Quote ="lionarmour87"i'm not as well read as some of you guy's ,but ive just been reading about the war's of the roses and there was a" battle of wakefield "that goes back to the 15th century.'"
All the battles of the Wars of the Roses were in the 15th century
Quote ="lionarmour87"i know about the big battle of towton ,but did leeds figure in the wotrs?'"
No, but nearly 200 years later, it did figure in the English Civil war.
Re: the so-called wars of the roses ... it has long been a puzzle to me why the battle of Towton isn't more widely known about.
It was the bloodiest battle ever fought in England and more died at Towton on that one snowy March day than died on the first day of the Somme.
Estimates range between 25,000 and 37,000 dead.
When you remember that, after the initial archery showers, it was mainly hand-to-hand killing, it is a huge number.
Maybe if Shakespeare had written a play about it, more people would know the name ... but then, he'd have probably slanted it against the Yorkists, as he did with Richard III.
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| So many interesting and entertaining facts about Wakefield – doesn’t really stop it from being a bit of a dross pot though does it?
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