Overton, Wakefield, West Yorkshire
Overton was historically called 'Over Shitlington', and was one of four villages in the township of 'Shitlington' in the civil parish of Thornhill. In 1881 Overton was in the county court district and Poor Law Union of Wakefield. Village occupations at the time included two farmers, a shopkeeper, the manager of "Cap House pit," and the landlords of The Reindeer and The Black Swan public houses. Shitlington was officially changed to Sitlington in 1929.
St Luke's Parish Church in Overton is part of the ecclesiastical parish of Middlestown with Netherton.
Overton is significant for the National Coal Mining Museum, situated on the A642. The former Caphouse Colliery was worked from at least 1789 until the coal was exhausted in 1985 when work was started to convert it to a museum.
See also
References
- ^ "Thornhill: Shitlington", The National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland 1868. Retrieved 15 January 2015
- ^ Kelly's Directory of the West Riding of Yorkshire, 1881, p. 1382
- ^ Woodall, R.D. (1977), The Sitlington Story, Horbury School Publishing Committee, p. foreword. ISBN 0950598704
- ^ "Lesley Anne Mattacks", Diocese of Leeds. Retrieved 13 July 2016
External links
- Media related to Overton, West Yorkshire at Wikimedia Commons
- "Sitlington West Riding", A Vision of Britain Through Time. Retrieved 15 January 2015
- Coxley News - personal registrant web site for Netherton, Middlestown, Overton and Midgley
- Wakefield Council