YEARS IN FOCUS
KNOTTINGLEY IN 1963
Our Years in Focus articles were researched by Maurice Haigh and are reproduced
with the kind permission of the Pontefract & Castleford Express.

1st MARCH 1963
DAUGHTER OF BOAT FIRM FOUNDER DIES AT 85
Mrs Isabella Kipping aged 85, of West Mount,
Ferrybridge Road, Knottingley, who died in Pontefract General Infirmary
on Sunday, was the widow of Mr. James William Kipping, a former managing
director of John Harker and Co. Ltd.
Mrs Kipping was also the youngest daughter of the firms
founder, John Harker, and saw her husband gain promotion from being a
clerk for Stainsby and Lyon at their Weeland Road chemical works, (now
taken over by Yorkshire Tar Distillers) to become works manager and
later director for twenty years until his death in 1936. Her husband was
also a director of Oxley's, the Leeds engineering firm; an actuary for
the Yorkshire Penny Bank; a manager of Knottingley National School; and
a member of Knottingley Urban Council.
Mrs Kipping gave voluntary service during both World
War I and II, in the latter she served at first-aid posts, soup kitchens
and knitted for the troops. She also worked with the Women's Voluntary
Services and was a member of the governing committee when Knottingley's
clinic for children was opened. Her husband was a warden at St.
Botolph's Parish church, Knottingley, and it was there- where she was a
worshipper, that a funeral service was held on Wednesday, interment
followed at Knottingley Cemetery.
15th MARCH 1963
ACCEPTED FOR CHURCH OF ENGLAND MINISTRY
A Knottingley lay reader, Mr. Sam Doubtfire, has been accepted for the Church of England Ministry. He will begin three years study at Edinburgh Theological College.
22nd MARCH 1963
FATHER WILLIAM ARRIVES AT THE GREEN BOTTLE -
KNOTTINGLEY'S FIRST YOUNGER HOUSE
It was once a club and fish shop - 'Father William'
arrived in Knottingley yesterday, receiving a great welcome from the
powers that be, to take up residence at The Green Bottle.
For those people who have not been told, 'Father
William' is the sprightly cheerful old gentleman who serves as a
trademark for William Younger's and William McEwan's famous scotch ales.
And if you are still asking questions 'The Green Bottle' is the new
Scottish and Newcastle Breweries Ltd., public house in Spawd Bone Lane,
and the first Younger's house to be opened in the town.
At 12 noon yesterday the new house was officially
opened by the Chairman of the company, Mr. William McEwan Younger, who
took a drink with the Chairman of Knottingley Urban Council, Councillor
W.B. Piper along with Council members, the Chairman of the Licensing
Magistrates, other members of the Bench and many more representatives of
life in the town.
For exiles and lovers of all things Scottish, this
public house is a home from home. The Tartan Lounge is fitted out with a
special McPherson tartan carpet, sent from Scotland, and there are
prints depicting scenes of life north of the border, along with shields
and crossed swords.
Sassenachs in the public bar however can enjoy their
drinking, darts and dominoes in more familiar surroundings. Besides a
wide range of draught and bottled beers, McPhersons and Mackinley's
whiskies, which are part of the same firm, will also be on sale.
The Green Bottle was originally a private house and
appears on a 1900 ordinance map as The Green House. Before
becoming a public house it was a fish and chip shop and club. The
brewery however has undertaken extensive alterations and transformed the
building into a pleasant rendezvous for friends and relatives. The name
has been retained though and hanging in the entrance hall is a two foot
six inches high green glass bottle made in Knottingley in 1899. The
landlord and landlady are Mr and Mrs Norman Acton who before moving to
Knottingley, were at the Great Bull Hotel, Wakefield, for three years.
The house represents yet another step in the right
direction of that brand new cosmopolitan look the town will soon be
wearing and, judging from the welcome the old man has received, he and
the Edinburgh brewed ales they represent, look like being a great
success. They should prove very popular not only with the Scots living
in the town, but also with people who have been born and bred in
Knottingley - and indeed large numbers of other Yorkshire people.
26th MARCH 1963
AIRE STREET PLAN ACCEPTED
Knottingley Urban Council's plan for the re-development
of Aire Street was accepted, with certain conditions, when members of
the Council and the Aire Street Traders Association met last Thursday.
The Association's reasons for acceptance were explained to the 'Express'
this week by the Chairman (Mr. W.G. Watt) He said the Association
believed some plan had to be accepted for a working basis. Planning
authorities would not accept an amended plan put forward by the
Association, so the Council's plan was approved.
An assurance had been given that the plan would be put
into operation with minimum delay and priority would be given to
business people already in Aire Street to either build their own shops
or occupy Council property. The Association now believed it could make
Aire Street the central shopping area for Knottingley.
5th JULY 1963
JACKSONVILLE DEMOLITION
Closing orders for 12 houses at Jacksonville, Hill Top, Knottingley, were converted into demolition orders by K.U.D.C., on Wednesday. Owners will be asked to demolish them immediately, but negotiations are still in progress for a shop at the end of the terrace.
12th JULY 1963
JOBLESS HARRY FINDS WORK AT KNOTTINGLEY
(Abridged Version)
Harry Hewitt may be out of work on televisions
Coronation Street but in real life actor Ivan Beavis had a
big enough job at Knottingley on Saturday. For he and actress Doreen
Keogh, his wife Concepta in the programme, came to open the towns fifth
annual carnival and sports day at the Playing Fields.
Arriving twenty minutes late the stars were welcomed by
the President of Knottingley and Ferrybridge Carnival and Charities
Committee and his wife, Councillor and Mrs C Tate. Surrounded by a large
crowd they walked to the dais where the Carnival Queen and her
attendants and the guests were waiting.
After introductions and handshakes, Harry held the
crowd spellbound while he told them of his difficulty in getting a job
and talked of the Hewitt family's problems. His 'better half' Concepta
also added a few words. Harry was then kept busy for a good ten minutes
kissing the Queen, 17 year-old Linda Blakestone, of Eastfield Avenue,
and her attendants.
Last years queen, 18-year old Pamela Brown, took off
her crown and handed it to Concepta who crowned the new queen.
Chairman of Knottingley Urban Council, Councillor H.
Ross, presented, on behalf of the Committee, a gold watch to Linda - her
prize for winning the title.
12th JULY 1963
NO BONES BROKEN WHEN SUSAN FELL FROM FLAT
Two-year-old Susan Barker took a 12-ft tumble out of a
window at her home at Devonshire Court, Englands Lane, Knottingley, on
Monday, and escaped with nothing worse than grazed knuckles and bruises.
Susan, the youngest of Mr. and Mrs G.T. Barker's family
of six, was taken to Pontefract Infirmary by ambulance but allowed home
on Wednesday.
Janet, Susan's 17-year-old sister told an 'Express'
reporter that her parents were busy wallpapering a passage in their
first floor flat when the accident occurred. Susan had pulled a chair up
to the window, climbed onto the sill and opened the window. She was
sitting with her back to the window when she leaned back and fell.
Mrs Joan Barker rushed into the room just too late to
save her daughter, who fortunately landed on grass on her knees, She
grazed the knuckles of her left hand and was bruised, but did not break
any bones.
13th SEPTEMBER 1963
HAIR STYLIST WILL BE SEEN ON SPIN-A-DISC PANEL
Miss Mavis Scholes, aged 15, of Tenters Close,
Ferrybridge, will be seen on television tomorrow evening when she
appears in the A.T.V. record programme, 'Thank Your Lucky Stars' as a
member of the spin-a-disc panel.
Mavis, who has worked as a hair-stylist for Mr. George
Box, of Sagar Street, Castleford, for the past five weeks, was
successfully auditioned for the programme, which was recorded in
Birmingham on Sunday. She attended Ropewalk Girls Secondary School.
13th SEPTEMBER 1963
ISABELLA KIPPING WILL
Mrs Isabella Kipping aged 85, of Westmount, Ferrybridge Road, Knottingley, who died on February 24th, left £87,983 in her will. Mrs Kipping was the youngest daughter of Mr. J.H. Harker, founder of J.H. Harker & Co. Ltd, of Knottingley, and the widow of the late Mr W. Kipping, a former managing director of the firm.
7th NOVEMBER 1963
CARNIVAL QUEEN
Linda Blakestone lit a huge bonfire on Tuesday at Fieldhead, Hilltop, Knottingley to mark Guy Fawkes Night. The fire was prepared by the members & helpers of Knottingley & Ferrybridge Gala Charities Committee. Gross receipts from admissions and sale of Minerals, Parkin, and Toffee Apples were more than £50. A firework display was a feature of the event.
21st NOVEMBER 1963
MASSIVE BLAZE
In a spectacular blaze at Kings Mills, Knottingley, on
Friday night, a four-storey warehouse was gutted. Damage is estimated at
thousands of pounds, including the loss of 200-300 tons of flour and
many tons of wheat. Firemen remained on duty at the scene for three
days.
The fire, believed to have been caused by an electrical
fault, broke out just after 9pm, and appliances from Pontefract,
Castleford, Featherstone and Knottingley were soon on the scene and were
subsequently joined by a 100ft turntable ladder team from Wakefield.
Firemen found the warehouse full of dense smoke and then the fire
erupted into leaping flames, which could be seen for miles around.
As the various appliances arrived together with Police
and YEB officials, large crowds of onlookers gathered on the canal
bridge at the bottom of Forge Hill Lane. From this 'Grandstand' view the
crowd felt the heat of the flames, about 50 yards away as the wheat
became affected, and sent up huge columns of sparks into the clear
evening sky and with everything startlingly reflected in the waters of
the canal, the scene became awe-inspiring.
As the flames finally broke through the roof of the
warehouse, efforts were concentrated on saving the mill proper, which
adjoins the warehouse on the riverside. After the roof had gone, two
firemen took up precarious perches on top of the 70ft high main building
and directed their hoses into the inferno below. Slates and beams
crashed down, but there were no personal injuries.
The turntable worked on the East Side of the mill,
where another new building was saved, though several bulk flour
containers were destroyed. In the mill proper was a large quantity of
new machinery installed since the internationally known firm of
Garfield-Weston acquired the mill 18 months ago.
Years in Focus was researched by
Maurice Haigh and is reproduced here
with the permission of the Pontefract & Castleford Express.