Bingley Bailey Hill
Has been described as a Possible Timber Castle (Ringwork)
There are no visible remains
Name | Bingley Bailey Hill |
Alternative Names | The Hills; Castle Fields; Bayley Hill |
Historic Country | Yorkshire |
Modern Authority | Bradford |
1974 Authority | West Yorkshire |
Civil Parish | Bingley |
The Hills is a possible ringwork and bailey. (King ref. pers. corr S.A. Moorhouse)
Site of a possible Iron Age settlement. Stone walls and banks of earth and stone were recorded at Bailey Hills. The site is now occupied by a cemetery extension and a school playing field, there are no visible remains of a settlement. (PastScape)
A long mound commences on the north-west side of the church and rises towards the cemetery. This single deposit occupies all the ground between the river on the west and the railway on the east running north-west and south-east for 46 chains (about half-a-mile), and is 20 chains at its broadest part. The maximum depth above normal river level is about 70 feet. Its northern boundary is limited by the river-bend at Ravenroyd to Castlefields Mill, and the reason why the river has not followed a straight and natural course along the valley on the east side of the hill where the railway runs, is owing to the thick spreads of gravel, which rising towards Crossfiatts, have baulked the river and compelled it to cut a fresh channel by the lower level on the west side of the town. This extensive mound, called Bailey Hills, was at one time undoubtedly an island and a secure refuge of the early inhabitants. It was bounded on the west by the river and on the east by an extensive lake which continued impassably wet until the making of the railway in 1846. (Speight p. 20)
On The Hills, in a field next the cemetery (the site of the traditional "castle"), is a camp-like enclosure, occupying a flat hollow of about 1,600 square yards. It is bounded on the north and west sides by a raised fence, that on the north side falling deeply and sharply to the enclosure, and affording capital shelter on that side. In the field beyond, parallel with the wall separating the Grammar School land (now the Show Field) and Mr
Butler's estate, is a rampart-like bank, partly natural, extending from the school buildings right across the hill to the river, and is nearly complete all the way, a length of about 200 yards, in some places being 20 feet above the natural field-level. The north face has, no doubt, sloped naturally, but has been cut back into a precipitous front, while old ash and sycamore trees, with boles four or five feet in circumference, grow upon it, proving, at any rate, that the hill was scarped or cut back before any house or building was built on the Hills. It is a kind of defence, natural or artificial, that one may expect to find in such a place, being to the north, whence danger came, and appears of similar import to those extensive lines of earth and stones that are found stretching across many of the Yorkshire dales. (Speight p. 48)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
Historic England (PastScape) Defra or Monument number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SE101400 |
Latitude | 53.8562393188477 |
Longitude | -1.84757995605469 |
Eastings | 410120 |
Northings | 440010 |