PROSPECT FARM
HOW THINGS HAVE CHANGED ON MONKHILL LANE
by MARION TOMLIN
How things have changed on Monkhill Lane, which some years back was known as Newtown. What used to be the farm known as Prospect Farm where I was brought up is now a housing estate and the only thing that remains is the duck pond which is now a feature that is fenced off.
My granddad, William Raine, ran the farm up to his death in 1954. It was then that my dad Joe Raine took over and we moved into the farmhouse where we had lots of happy hours. My brother Dennis worked on the farm along with my dad. They both worked very hard and long hours. My Dad Joe worked for my granddad from the age of 13 years old and worked the land with horses as it was well before the days of modern farm machinery.

My father Joe Raine standing outside the gates of Prospect Farm just weeks before it was demolished
Photograph submitted by Marion Tomlin

Prospect Farm Pontefract
My Dad, Joe and my brother Dennis at work unloading with a tractor.
Photograph submitted by Marion Tomlin.
I will always remember one year being a very good year for cauliflowers and because it was a hot summer once they were ready for cutting they had to be sold while still white and we went to Airedale one Friday night. I had to go knocking on doors selling them for three for a shilling and I must say we came home with an empty cart.
At that time in the 1950s the slaughter house was straight opposite the farm and sheep were brought down the road guided by a couple of men for slaughter. My dad used to keep a few cattle and pigs. When he used to take them to Doncaster market to sell I sometimes went with him but if I didn’t go, me and my mother would be waiting for him returning to see if he had had a successful day, which he had on a lot of occasions, but he had his bad luck days too.
He worked on the land with a shire horse called Tommy who he got from an advert in the Yorkshire Post from a lady called Mrs Newton in Leeds who rescued animals from slaughter. The agreement was to let her have him back when there was no longer any use for him. Sadly that day came when tractors took over and Tommy had to go back. When the cattle wagon came to take him away my Dad couldn’t bear to watch him go but in the end he had to assist the chap who came to collect him as he wouldn’t go in the cattle wagon until my Dad led him in, which was a sad day for us all.
My dad and Dennis still worked the farm even when my dad was in his eighties, but after losing my mother in 1993 he seemed to go down hill. My brother Dennis struggled to keep it going alone and he had to retire at the age of 65 where it all ended with a farm sale in 1994. By that time my Dad was confused and didn’t realise what was happening and he unfortunately passed away in 1996 aged 92, unaware, we believe, that it was the end of Prospect Farm.
Marion Tomlin (nee Raine)