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An Historical Look Around the Villages of Barnsley...
The Village of Mapplewell

Brian Elliott explores historic Mapplewell

I arrived here just as the fog was clearing, on a very cold but soon to be sunny February afternoon. I am fond of Mapplewell. Perhaps it is because the place has such a long and distinctive history, a small but bustling former nailmaking and coalmining community which in many ways stands out from other Barnsley area settlements.

Even its ancient place-name is a little different, meaning 'Well near the maple tree'. I'm proud to say that my mother was a Mappellwellian for some of her childhood years, attending the village school on Blacker Road. A history of the school was published by headmaster David Peckett in 1990. It includes interesting extracts from the log books. The following is from an entry dated 28 November 1916: 'Only 225 children present this morning. The serious decrease is caused by many of the pupils being up in the night on account of a Zepplin raid in the district.' Modern properties now stand on the old school site.

The industrial and craft activities that once took place in Mapplewell were set within a countryside context. Some people may remember, for example, Albany Crowther at Low Carr Green Farm, Joshua Johnson (Hill End) or Mrs Cicely Janet Field (Swallow Hill); and Blackerhill farm was not far away. Many of the miners and nailmakers had smallholdings attached to or near their homes and places of work. Allotment gardens are marked on early twentieth-century large-scale maps, off Greenside and Blacker Road.

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