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was opened in 1836. In 1861 Burngreave cemetery was laid out to accommodate the overflow from local church yards as these were full. A cinema and public baths were built in the early 20th century. By this time, Burngreave was a suburb of
Sheffield, still prosperous and considered a pleasant place to live. It did, however, have an interesting mix of wealthy and working class residents. Occasional declines in the fortunes of the cutlery trade resulted in periods of unemployment and great hardship for many poorer families in the area. A cartoon from a newspaper in 1879 shows a soup kitchen operating from the Vestry Hall, turning away barefoot and hungry children.
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industries. These were often terraced or constructed around courts and changed the character of the area completely. Neighbourhoods such as
Ellesmere and Woodside became established. In the 1870s the writer Alfred Gatty described the view from Osgathorpe down into the Don Valley: “….there stands, as it were, Dante's city of Dis…masses of buildings, from the tops of which issue fire, and smoke, and steam, which cloud the whole scene, however bright the sunshine.” A drawing from 1879 of John Sorbys Spital Hill steel works captures this atmosphere completely.
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Wakefield. Industry in the area was mostly in the form of small workshops, attached to farm buildings, producing knives and tools for a local market. There were no factories as yet. Maps from the 1830s and 40s show farmsteads, fields, some woodland and a few scattered mansions that belonged to the wealthy elite of
Sheffield. At this time Burngreave was considered a highly desirable place for rich families to build new homes in. Mansions such as Osgathorpe House and Firs Hill (both now demolished) were built during this period.
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called
Pitsmoor Abbey, it first belonged to William Pass, the owner of a local colliery, then the house was bought by a solicitor, Bernard Wake, who turned it into the family home. He altered the house greatly, adding a sundial, conservatory, greenhouses, a tennis court and outhouses. The gardens were redesigned and a boating lake created around 1883. In the early 20th century Abbeyfield House was occupied by the Greenwood family and then into the possession of the Sheffield Parks Department Training Centre.
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local residents to stop the spiral of decay and bring about changes. In addition a huge government funded regeneration programme, Burngreave New Deal for
Communities, was initiated to bring prosperity back to the area, with improvements to houses and green spaces locally. New shops have opened recently to serve the needs of different ethnic communities. In late 2011, a Tesco Extra opened on Saville Street, a couple of hundred yards from Spital Hill, the traditional shopping hotspot of the area.
661:. Many found jobs in the steel industry and the hospitals in Sheffield. Later they brought their families to join them and became part of the local community. This was the beginnings of the multicultural community that is Burngreave today. We do know, however, that Asian people had lived in the area even before this period. In Burngreave cemetery there is a grave of an Indian man killed in a colliery accident in Beighton in 1923, called Sultan Mohomed.
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452:. The population of the ward taken at the 2011 census was 27,481. It started to develop in the second half of the 19th century. Prior to this, this area was mostly covered by Burnt Greave wood. Most of the area of the wood is covered by Burngreave Cemetery which was built in 1860 (consecrated 1861) and extended in the early 1900s. Grimesthorpe Lane, which runs through Burngreave, is a very old road that follows the course of the
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Despite this grim picture of development, the higher part of
Burngreave was far enough away from the noise and pollution to remain popular with Sheffield's industrialists and professional classes. Abbeyfield House was built during the late 19th century by William Pass as his own residence. Originally
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Between 1820 and 1860 the population of
Sheffield tripled from just over 65,000 to 185,000. In Burngreave many new houses including a group of cottages built by William Pass and occupied by miners called Pass-houses (now this location is called Passhouses Road), to accommodate the workforce of nearby
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During the 18th century and 19th century the area remained still largely rural but industry was beginning to have an impact. In the 1820s the town of
Sheffield stopped at the Wicker, below Spital Hill. Pitsmoor was just a hamlet through which the main turnpike road ran from Sheffield to Barnsley and
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Around the mid 9th century the north of
England fell under Danish control. Several local place names suggest Viking settlement in the area. Osgathorpe (an old Danish name) means the farm belonging to Osga and Grimesthorpe means Grims outlying farm. From this we can imagine that the area was occupied
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started in earnest and whole neighbourhoods were decanted to other parts of the city whilst the old substandard housing was demolished. In place of the back-to-backs and terraces came new estates of council housing and flats. This changed the character of the area quite dramatically and resulted in
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In the 15th century and 16th century, Burngreave was an area of open countryside with scattered farms, fields and woodland. The name
Burngreave was first recorded in 1440 as Byron Greve, meaning Bryons Wood. This is shown in early maps on the site currently occupied by Burngreave Cemetery and along
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By the late 19th century much of the former countryside of Burngreave was covered in houses. Along with these were created the Vestry Hall in 1864 to administer civic functions. Schools, churches, pubs and allotments were also created in the 19th century. The first school, Pitsmoor Village School,
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of the 1980s and 90s in South Yorkshire has taken its toll on Burngreave. High levels of unemployment resulted in poverty once again and a general decline in the appearance of the area. However Burngreave is now experiencing a change in fortune. This has partly resulted from the determination of
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from Slovakia have been settled there. The arrival of people from so many different backgrounds has made Burngreave one of the most ethnically diverse neighbourhoods in Sheffield. A number of different languages are spoken locally and a variety of food on offer in local restaurants and shops.
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In the 12th century, a local lord of the manor founded a hospital in the area, called St Leonards. Although there is no trace of it remaining, the name has been passed on to streets in the vicinity, called Spital Hill and Spital Lane (as in hospital).
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In the years immediately after the Second World War, there was a desperate need for labour in Sheffield to rebuild the city and its industries. Around this time Burngreave became home to many new immigrants, arriving from the
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causing much damage to homes and businesses in the area as well as killing and injuring people. In both wars men volunteered or were sent off as conscripts to fight and their places taken in the factories by women. During the
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Burngreave Road. During the Tudor period Sheffield began to grow but Burngreave remained on the outskirts. Looking back from the top of Pitsmoor at that time, you would have seen rolling hills and farmland leading down to
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By 1870 a dramatic transformation had taken place. The arrival of heavy steel and engineering industries, concentrated in the Don Valley, created jobs for migrant workers from all over England and as far away as
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Although there is not much physical evidence of early settlement in Burngreave, we do know that an Iron Age fort was discovered in Roe Woods. The people who built this may have been from a Celtic tribe, the
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by a farming community at a time when Sheffield was still a small, insignificant place. The name of Roe Wood may possibly be derived from the old Norse word ra meaning rowan tree.
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many people moving away, never to return. The disruption that many people experienced at this time also affected the sense of community and identity of the area.
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to the countryside and those who stayed behind went to school in peoples' homes as it was considered too risky to operate schools normally.
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Sources for the history of Burngreave, produced by Sheffield City Council's Libraries and Archives
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In 2013 and 2014 there was unrest between Slovak Roma and Yemeni residents in the Page Hall area.
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where a cluster of shops and houses had developed around the market place next to
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raids killed people and damaged homes in 1916. Again, in 1940, the area was
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The Archives of the Burngreave New Deal for Communities (2001-2011)
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View across typical Burngreave terraced housing to Pye Bank School
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The White House on Andover Street, formerly a fish and chip shop
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J. Edward Vickers, Old Sheffield Town, 1978, page 27
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607:Burngreave was badly affected by both World Wars.
892:"Two arrests over mass brawl on Sheffield street"
19:For the electoral ward including Burngreave, see
767:"BURNGREAVE CEMETERY (Grade II) (1001603)"
636:Housing on Pye Bank road, dating from the 1970s
684:, and several other countries. More recently,
16:District of Sheffield South Yorkshire, England
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872:. Friends of Burngreave Chapel & Cemetery
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118:Learn how and when to remove this message
737:"City of Sheffield ward population 2011"
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1224:Sheffield Brightside and Hillsborough
708:Bus routes 1, 2, 88 (all provided by
365:Sheffield Brightside and Hillsborough
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7:
56:adding citations to reliable sources
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794:"Retro: Home for the rich and poor"
772:National Heritage List for England
550:Urbanisation and population growth
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743:. Office for National Statistics
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558:Burngreave Cemetery chapels
187:OS grid reference
130:Human settlement in England
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1219:Penistone and Stocksbridge
1188:Stocksbridge and Upper Don
1083:Broomhill and Sharrow Vale
920:Burngreave's Local History
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838:(November). E. Stock: 406
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1098:Crookes & Crosspool
1068:Beauchief and Greenhill
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828:"Notes of the Month"
271:Sovereign state
52:improve this article
533:Early Modern period
491:Sheffield United FC
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1694:Category:Sheffield
1505:Towns and villages
800:. 15 December 2015
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1610:Oughtibridge
1575:Hackenthorpe
1545:Bolsterstone
1529:Stocksbridge
1406:Netherthorpe
1371:Malin Bridge
1346:Hillsborough
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1148:Manor Castle
1143:Hillsborough
900:. Retrieved
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67:"Burngreave"
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50:Please help
45:verification
42:
25:
1653:Other areas
1524:Ecclesfield
1461:Upperthorpe
1446:Stannington
1306:Frecheville
1266:Attercliffe
1183:Stannington
1138:Graves Park
992:City Centre
876:21 December
870:"Home page"
842:20 December
778:21 December
509:Middle Ages
450:city centre
419: /
1665:Brightside
1615:Ringinglow
1411:Osgathorpe
1396:Mosborough
1391:Millhouses
1386:Middlewood
1381:Meersbrook
1376:Manor Park
1341:High Green
1326:Handsworth
1281:Chapeltown
1276:Burngreave
1153:Mosborough
1123:Firth Park
1088:Burngreave
1002:Demography
902:28 January
724:References
710:Stagecoach
628:Since 1945
480:Prehistory
469:Mexborough
434:Burngreave
404:53°23′28″N
178:Population
160:Burngreave
136:Burngreave
108:April 2014
78:newspapers
1660:Abbeydale
1585:Holdworth
1565:Dungworth
1519:Bradfield
1496:Woodseats
1481:Westfield
1426:Park Hill
1421:Page Hall
1331:Hemsworth
1321:Grenoside
1311:Gleadless
1291:Crosspool
1203:Woodhouse
1118:Ecclesall
1052:Transport
1017:Geography
1012:Education
987:Buildings
963:Sheffield
804:9 January
704:Transport
651:Caribbean
622:evacuated
505:in 1906.
487:Brigantes
461:Brigantes
454:Roman Rig
438:Sheffield
407:1°27′11″W
393:Yorkshire
346:Yorkshire
341:Ambulance
285:SHEFFIELD
281:Post town
168:Sheffield
1722:Category
1670:Carbrook
1538:Villages
1491:Wisewood
1431:Pitsmoor
1416:Owlerton
1401:Neepsend
1361:Lowedges
1271:Beighton
1168:Richmond
1073:Beighton
1047:Timeline
896:The Star
747:10 March
655:Pakistan
609:Zeppelin
503:Pitsmoor
194:SK363884
1640:Worrall
1555:Deepcar
1486:Whirlow
1476:Walkley
1466:Wadsley
1451:Tinsley
1441:Sharrow
1436:Ranmoor
1356:Longley
1301:Fulwood
1296:Darnall
1286:Crookes
1258:estates
1254:Suburbs
1193:Walkley
1178:Southey
1128:Fulwood
1103:Darnall
1022:History
1007:Economy
997:Culture
674:Eritrea
670:Somalia
569:Ireland
475:History
446:England
388:England
263:England
257:Country
92:scholar
1625:Ughill
1620:Storrs
1456:Totley
1366:Loxley
1351:Intake
1336:Heeley
1078:Birley
1037:Rivers
1032:People
465:Wicker
458:Celtic
317:Police
296:S3, S4
239:Region
94:
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80:
73:
65:
1042:Sport
977:Areas
714:First
682:Sudan
666:Chile
659:Yemen
99:JSTOR
85:books
1560:Dore
1093:City
904:2015
878:2016
844:2008
836:XLII
806:2018
780:2016
749:2016
692:The
678:Iraq
657:and
329:Fire
307:0114
71:news
1256:and
982:Art
493:).
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