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Lindley - Huddersfield - England - TravelLindley is a suburb of Huddersfield, West Yorkshire in the United Kingdom, situated approximately 2 miles from the town centre in a North-Westerly direction. The name for Lindley comes from the Saxon for "flax meadow" or possibly from the Germanic word lind denoting an area of linden (or lime) trees Probably established by the Angles in the 600s as a farming community, it is mentioned in the Domesday Book under the names "Lilleia". In the reign of Edward the Confessor it was owned by Godwin, and in the reign of William the Conqueror it was being cultivated by Ulchel for Ilbert de Lacy, the Sheriff of Hertfordshire and descendant of the French noble family from Lassy. At that time, Lindley consisted of two farmsteads totalling "5 quarantens by 2 quarantens". The Lindley Clock Tower is the most prominent landmark in Lindley, standing at the junction between Lidget Street and Daisy Lea Lane. This Art Nouveau clock tower was designed by the Manchester architect Edgar Wood in 1900 and erected by James Nield Sykes (a local JP) in 1902. The tower also features four buttress figures, four gargoyles and four friezes. The top of the tower is accessible via the doorway at its foot. Lindley is also the home of Huddersfield-born song writer/producer Pádraig. |
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