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May 9, 2008 |
BRIEF
HISTORY |
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Wortley Hall was the ancestral home
of the Earls of Wharncliffe the Lords of
the Manor of Wortley. The earliest recording being
Alnus de Wortley, mentioned in the Pipe Rolls for
1165. Sir Thomas Wortley, born in 1440 lived in
the manor Wortley, believed to be Wortley Hall.
His grandson Sir Richard Wortley rebuilt Wortley
Hall in 1586.
During the English civil war Sir Francis Wortley
commanded a loyalist garrison at nearby Tankersley,
and led the battle on Tankersley moor where he was
captured by the Roundheads and taken to the Tower
of London.
Wortley Hall fell into decay until the mid 18th
century. When Edward Wortley commissioned the rebuilding
of the hall. In 1800, James Archibold Stuart Wortley
and his wife Caroline Creighton should have taken
up residence, but were unable to do so because for
some reason the architect had omitted to include
a staircase. The planning, landscaping, ornamental
planting, and the ultimate beauty of the current
grounds are attributed to Lady Caroline. |
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Further repairs and extensions to
the Hall were made mainly during the Victorian period.
During the 1939-45 war period, parts of the Hall
were occupied by the Army and after 1945 the Hall
once again began to fall into a state of disrepair.
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Wortley Hall had been built from the
wealth of the Wharncliffe family, this wealth being
derived primarily from coal mining in the South
Yorkshire area. Generations of one family had enjoyed
privilege at the expense of the many. This era changed
in a watershed meeting convened in May 1950.
At this meeting Vin Williams, addressed other local
Labour Movement activists outlining a proposal that
Wortley Hall could have the potential of being both
owned by the workers and run for the workers benefit.
On 5th May 1951 Wortley Hall was formally opened
as an educational and holiday centre. the trade
union, Labour and Co Operative movement.
It was in a semi-derelict condition and the workers
of South Yorkshire and surrounding areas carried
out most of the repairs and restoration voluntarily.
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| Engineering workers, miners, railway
men, foundry men, builders, labourers, housewives,
people from all walks of life, trades and professions
volunteered their services due to a belief in the
ideals of creating a Home of the Labour Movement
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Wortley Hall has hosted International
delegations from all over the world, fostering peace
and solidarity between our individual labour movements.
Throughout a changing world, these links with, for
example Bulgaria, The Soviet Union, Cuba, and the
A.N.C. of South Africa, have complimented solidarity
with our domestic industrial struggles. In the 1984/5
miners strike, Wortley Hall provided meals for striking
miners and their families.
Whilst some groups using Wortley Hall have done
so for a number of decades, such as the Workers
Music Association Summer School and the Clarion
Cycling Club, there is a recognition that Britains
industrial base has changed. That change has seen
an evolution of other progressive groups, such as
the Ramblers Association, and the South Yorkshire
Festival, who now use and support Wortley Hall.
The management of Wortley Hall is now made on a
tight commercial footing, striving to provide excellence
of service, whilst maintaining a grasp of its heritage
and objectives.
Over the last 50 years, successive generations have
maintained the commitment and beliefs of those early
pioneers. Drawn from a broad base of the labour
movement, no one person or organisation can have
overall control of Wortley Hall. This is one of
its strengths, a truly co-operative venture, run
by its members for the movement as a whole. In the
words of the past President, Stuart Charnley,
This is our oasis of socialism, let us ensure
its successful continuation. |
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| © 2001 Wortley
Hall |
credits |
The Workers'
Stately Home |
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