4 min 33 secs of 4 mins and 33 secs
format 16mm colour Black & White sound Silent
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EASTER ON SHIPLEY GLEN 1912 (1912)


This film dates from Easter Monday 1910, when around 200,000 people visited the Glen, with around 17,000 using the Tramway.  It was filmed as an advertising short to be played at the region’s fledgling movie theatres as a way of attracting audiences. A local film maker, Eric Hall, salvaged the original film from a skip. For more on Eric Hall’s filmmaking see the Background Information on Ower Bit Bog Oil.
 
Shipley Glen, together with the Shipley Glen Pleasure Grounds and the Shipley Glen Tramway, had been a popular place of pleasure for locals since early Victorian times. The Glen got its first tourist attraction after the closure of 1887 Saltaire exhibition when a wooden switchback railway had been part of the exhibition.  Other attractions soon followed, including a giant camera obscura, and by the end of the 1880s thousands of people, particularly from working class families employed in the hundreds of textile mills in and around Bradford, spent their Saturday and Sunday afternoons on the Glen. There were countless refreshment stalls and a variety of traders plied their wares.   It was also a popular spot for 'gypsy' (Romany) traders.
 
In 1887 a wooden switchback railway, probably only the second to be built in the UK and originally erected for the 1887 Saltaire Exhibition, was re-erected on the Glen and renamed 'The Royal Yorkshire Switchback' (closed 1917).  The Glen Tramway carriages carried 42 passengers, one set on each line, and the running time was 3 minutes. In 1889 the first cable hauled ride was built on Shipley Glen and was known as the ‘Aerial Flight’ (not to be confused with the later ‘Aerial Glide’). Only one photograph is known of this ride and it shows a huge wooden tower with a twin-line ropeway hauling passengers in a gondola high above the Glen (to a matching tower). It was closed and demolished in 1920.
 
In 1894, local entrepreneur, Sam Wilson saw the opportunity to make money by building a railway alongside the steep bridleway. Built at a cost of £2500, the quarter-mile Glen Tramway opened to the public on 17 May 1895. Hauled on wire cables powered by gas engines, a coupled pair of open topped cars ran on each of twin tracks passing each other at mid way. Built between 1900 and 1910 the Ariel Glide was the oldest surviving static amusement ride in the UK, and the only surviving ride of its type. The timber version seen in the film was replaced by a metal framed one in the 1930’s.  
                   
The Ariel Glide was open until recently. The Ariel Glide was listed as a Grade II building in 2003 following an emergency application by a local campaigner, Mike Short, and an amusement park historian, Nick Laister. They had to move very fast to get it through on time.  But the following year, in July 2004, it was de-listed following a successful appeal by the owner Mr Teale.  Shipley Glen Pleasure Ground finally closed at 6 pm on 4th September 2005.  Although the Tramway has closed twice in its history, twice it has been saved and it runs today, the oldest surviving cable hauled railway (excluding cliff lifts) in the UK.
 
In the field next to the barn alongside Brackenhall Green (the barn is now a private house, and the hall is now the local authority run Countryside Centre) is the ‘Oceanwave Switchback’.   This was the first large static ride to have been built on the Glen. After the closure of the 1887 Saltaire Exhibition, the ‘Royal Yorkshire Switchback’, a wooden switchback railway that had formed part of the exhibition, was purchased by local entrepreneur and showman, Sam Wilson, and re-erected on the Glen in 1888. It was probably only the second wooden switchback railway to have been built in the UK. It is thought to have closed in 1917.
 
The steamboat that pulls in by the Boathouse in Saltaire on the River Aire is the ‘Rose’, also owned by Sam Wilson. She is a curiously constructed passenger steamboat with a bow at each end (rather than a bow and stern) and she pulls into the boathouse. Owned again by Sam Wilson, ‘Rose’ takes passengers only a short distance upstream and back to the boathouse. Downstream travel is impossible because of the weir alongside Salts Mill. A very large rowing boat is waiting to be launched. Alongside the river are many rowing boats for hire. Although ‘Rose’ disappeared a long time ago, those Edwardian rowing boats were still available for hire into the 1970s. At the time Saltaire didn’t allow pubs, as its founder Titus Salt was teetotal, but the Boathouse is now a bar and restaurant.  No boats go from there today.
 
Fairs go back to the twelve and fourteenth centuries when a twin system of chartered and prescriptive fairs come into existence. They became endangered both by the loss of town squares, and by the 1871 Fairs Act, which granted local authorities the right to petition for their abolition. During the nineteenth century they gradually become places of commerce, losing some of their purely festive spirit; and although, thankfully, some fairs have survived, this is perhaps at the cost of becoming overly commercialised.
 
References
 
Mike Short has been of immense help in compiling these notes, and much of the information here was taken from the Submission to Spot List the Aerial Ride, written by Mike Short and Nick Laister, in 2003.  This also contains a further bibliography.  The full text of this, together with much more background material, can be found at joylandbooks
Vanessa Toulmin, Pleasurelands, National Fairground Archive, University of Sheffield, 2003.
The Glen Tramway is still running, details can be found on their website: http://www.glentramway.co.uk/
 
Further Information:
 
Michael Leak, 100 years at Shipley Glen: the story of the Glen Tramway, SGT publications, Baildon, West Yorkshire, 1998.
 

activities

title description subject key stage extras view
Creative writing The film captures a English KS3,KS4,FE No