Friday, 14 February 2020

A Brief History of Bentley - Part One

Top left to right, Bentley Bridge at Playfair's Corner, Old Stone Bridge.
Middle, Farm House on Church Street, Bentley Bridge and Mill Stream.
Bottom, Finkle Street, High Street.  


Bentley In The Beginning


The village of Bentley grew up in the shadow of neighbouring village Arksey. The land being more favourable to farming in Arksey meant that was the preferred location for farms and small holdings etc. It also had the only church and school for miles around. However, things would change for Bentley in a big way in the coming centuries.

When industry was introduced to Bentley, the village grew beyond its rural beginnings and became a township, whereas Arksey retained much of its farming heritage and grew at a much slower rate.  

This two-part introduction to the history of Bentley will take you on a chronological journey through the centuries, from its rural beginnings to its industrial growth.

Throughout this post there are links to more in-depth articles that will expand aspects of the history even further.




Contents Of Part One

  • Before Bentley
  • Geology
  • The Origin Of The Name 'Bentley'
  • Early Bentley
  • The Domesday Book
  • Bentley In The Domesday Book
  • Medieval And Tudor Bentley
  • Moat Hills
  • Poll Tax 1379
  • Bentley Water Mill
  • Plague In Tudor Bentley
  • The Pilgrimage Of Grace
  • The Wider Area
  • Smaller Communities
  • Langthwaite
  • Amersall
  • Bodles
  • Rostholme
  • Seventeenth Century Bentley
  • The Hearth Tax
  • Eighteenth Century Bentley
  • Time Of Great Mortality
  • Introduction Of Enclosure



Before Bentley

Geology


Bentley lies in a low lying area of peat land, between an area of magnesian limestone to the west, and an area of silt and clay over Bunter sandstone to the east. Always prone to flooding, the land was also good for growing cereal crops; and evidence of Neolithic settlement has been found not that far away.


Geology map of North Doncaster


The Origin Of The Name 'Bentley'


The name 'Bentley' is derived of two elements as below:
  1. 'Beonet' from the Old English 'bent', a wiry grass.
  2. 'Leah' from the Old English 'lea', a clearing.

Put together, this is commonly meant to mean 'glade or clearing overgrown with bent'.

As with any place-name of great age, variants in spelling have occurred many times over the centuries. Depending on the ability to spell of the person recording the name in documents etc, these variants crop up with some regularity, especially in the parish records, where several variants can appear in the same year. As a general rule though, certain variants can be attributed to certain periods in time. Here are some examples of variants and roughly when they were used. 

  • 1086 - Beneslaie, Benedleia, Benelei, Beneslei (Domesday Book)
  • 1185-1243 - Benetleia -lai -ley, 
  • 1276-1453 - Benteley(e) -lay
  • 1285-1822 - Bentley -lay

Other Bentley's also appear in the counties of Hampshire, Warwick and Worcestershire, unlike Arksey, which seems to be a totally unique place-name.  



Early Bentley


Bentley probably dates from around the same time as its nearest neighbour, Arksey. Archaeological finds have been few, and while some Roman coins have been found, there is no evidence from the Anglo-Saxon period. The land seems to have been covered in thick woodland at the time of settlement - a theory suggested in the meaning of the place-name. 

Meanwhile, Arksey, which was on higher silt and clay covered sandstone, and free of woodland, was favoured for the acreage of ploughable land available, and as such, settlement followed to the extent that an early Anglo-Saxon church could have been built there. Some evidence of Anglo-Saxon stonework has been identified as being reused in the Norman phase of the present church.

For more on Arksey church go to All Saints Church History on sister site Arksey Village, A History.


The Domesday Book

In the year 1085 King William ordered a survey of all his lands in England. He sent commissioners to every shire, town and village in 1086 to record the number of households, economic resources, land owners and tax payable to the king. The resulting book is known as the Domesday Book.


Image of the Domesday Book



Bentley In The Domesday Book

Bentley was in the Hundred of Strafforth, in the county of Yorkshire. Strafforth no longer exists as a location, but at the time of Domesday a hundred and twenty four places were listed in the Hundred (a Hundred was a county division). The Domesday Book was written in Latin, which has been translated. It is a written list of the village's assets and some of the terms used are not familiar to us today.


Bentley is listed under two owners in 1086. The first entry (below) lists the Tenant-in-chief as Count Robert of Mortain, the Lord associated with this entry was Nigel Fossard.


The entry includes the names of other places apart from Bentley - Adwick [le Street], Doncaster, [Kirk] Sandall, Langthwaite and Scinestorpe (which could be an early spelling of 'Scawthorpe').



Page from the Domesday Book containing the first entry for Bentley
(highlighted in the red box) 

Cropped and enlarged image of the first entry for Bentley in the Domesday Book


The entry tells us that there were 17 households, made up of seven villagers and 10 smallholders, with one freeman. 

As for land and resources there were two ploughlands with two Lord's plough teams and five men's plough teams. There was also woodland of 7 x 7 furlongs.

The second entry (below) is listed under Roger of Bully, Lord of the Manor and Tenant-in-chief.


Page from the Domesday Book containing the second entry for Bentley
(highlighted in the red box) 

Cropped and enlarged image of the second entry for Bentley in the Domesday Book


This entry tells us that Roger of Bully had 14 households, made up of 12 villagers and two smallholders.

There were two and a half ploughlands with 6 men's plough teams. There was also eight acres of meadow and woodland of one league and four furlongs.

The value of these lands to the Lord had roughly halved in value since the Norman Conquest, a devastating result of the 'harrying of the north', from several years of hostile fighting. 


Medieval And Tudor Bentley 

Moat Hills


The Norman lords of the manors in the twelfth century were the Newmarch family. Adam de Newmarch, the grandson of Bernard Newmarch, one of William the Conqueror's companions-at-arms, inherited the manors in 1123, and it was either Adam or his father, Ralph de Newmarch who ordered the first phase of the building of Arksey church in around 1150. 

The Newmarch family is thought to have built a large residence at Moat Hills, which was between Bentley and Arksey (sited off the present Arksey Lane and Millfield Road) in the fourteenth century. 



The Moat Hills site on a map of 1903
Today the site is a scheduled monument and consists of a large double enclosure surrounded by a moat. It is divided in two by a north west - south east running ditch. The larger eastern island measures around 70m x 70m, while the smaller western island measures about 60m x 60m. The eastern island has the remains of a stone wall and a bank which suggests a revetment wall. Building foundations measuring around 30m x 25m suggest that this was the site of the 'hall'. 

The western enclosure has a depression which indicates the remains of a fishpond. A causeway crossing the central ditch links the two islands and there are remains of a stone gatehouse nearby.


The old font in Arksey church before 
it was donated to All Saints, Intake.


The site is thought to have had a chapel as a font bowl was found there in 1884. The font was kept in Arksey Church until it was gifted to All Saints Church in Intake in the 1950's by Reverend H H Naylor, where it was renovated and installed in the newly built church.


Moat Hills (site of) today


Pottery finds at Moat Hills suggest that the Cooke family resided there until the second half of the seventeenth century. Sir George Cooke had bought the Manor of Wheatley in 1658, and following his death in 1683, his brother and heir Sir Henry Cooke built the four-storey Wheatley Hall, which became the family seat of the Cooke's for the next two hundred and thirty years.


Wheatley Hall, seat of the Cooke Baronets, built in 1683

As non-residential Lords-of-the-Manor, the Cookes still worshiped at Arksey, using a boat to cross the river. They also provided the poor of Arksey with a school and almshouses, although they did relatively little for the people of Bentley. 

Despite this, there were several sizable farms in Bentley, whose income ensured their family names would be notable for over two centuries.


For more on the Cooke family go to Cooke Family History on sister site Arksey Village, A History.

For more on Wheatley Hall go to Wheatley Hallalso on the Arksey site. 


Poll Tax 1379

In 1379 a poll tax was levied and everyone over the age of sixteen was counted. An estimate of the population of Arksey and Bentley can be worked out. Going on the theory that families consisted of 3.85 persons the total population of Bentley and Arksey combined was 250 people. The tax was charged at four pennies, but for those of trade it was higher, usually six pennies. In Bentley and Arksey traders mentioned in the villages were a ‘Smyth’, ‘Chapmen’, (peddlers), and a ‘Taillour’. Not many traders were found in the manors as goods could be bought at nearby Doncaster.


Bentley Water Mill

A mill at Bentley is first mentioned in a transfer deed of 1332, when Robert de Hathelsay transferred - 
'Two messuages, one toft, one mill, nine and a half bovates of land, six acres of meadow and 11s. 5 1/2d. rent in Kirksandale and Bentlelay' to John le Botiller.'
As there is no record of a mill at Kirksandale (Kirk Sandall), it seems likely this must be the one at Millgate, Bentley, which was demolished in 1980.

The mill is mentioned again in a transfer of 1554, when Edmund Wyndam, Knight., transferred rights of the - 
'Manors of Bentley and Arksey and 100 messuages and a water-mill with lands there,'
to three other knights. In both cases the deeds do not specify what the mill was manufacturing, but is safe to say that a mill existed in Bentley for around six hundred and fifty years.


Bentley water-mill.
Photo courtesy of Pete Dumville


Plague In Tudor Bentley

Pestilence and plague were the most feared diseases of Tudor times, and although the terms 'pestilence' and 'plague' were in fact blanket terms for a number of often fatal afflictions, as well as the Black Death. These diseases ran rife in communities, and often decimated the local population. 


The Plague or Black Death

Bentley did not escape the ravages of this terrible time, in fact Bentley and Arksey were central to introducing the plague to Doncaster town itself in the year 1582. 

It is recorded in Arksey parish registers that a man named William Monkton was travelling south from Thirsk in North Yorkshire along the Great North Road when he was found collapsed at Amersall in the township of Bentley. He died shortly after being found and as Bentley was in the parish of Arksey, William was buried in the churchyard of All Saints. 

There followed ten months of disease and suffering in an area reaching as far south as Cantley, south of Doncaster. There were over fifty recorded burials at Arksey due to the pestilence in the years 1582/1583.

There were nine lethal epidemics in Doncaster, over the next one hundred years, but the plague of 1582/1583 remains the worst to hit the Doncaster district.

For more on this and other diseases, including a list of Bentley plague victims go to How We Died on sister site Arksey Village, A History.


The Pilgrimage Of Grace

Bentley found itself at the centre of this famous historical event in 1536, when the River Don at Bridge Foot was the focus of one of the most dramatic uprisings in English history.

The uprising was brought about by Henry VIII's split with the Catholic church. Robert Aske and his followers were opposed to the abandonment of the Catholic church and set about restoring Catholic observances in the north. This didn't go unnoticed by the King and a five thousand strong army, led by the Duke of Norfolk rode north to confront Aske. Their confrontation took place at the River Don, however, the swollen river prevented anyone crossing, so a solution was negotiated instead.

For more on this area of Bentley and the Pilgrimage of Grace go to At the Foot of the Bridge.   



The Wider Area

Smaller Communities


As with any village or town, smaller communities spring up around them and form satellite hamlets. Most of the surviving satellite hamlets in the Bentley area are nearer to Arksey; places such as Almholme, Shaftholme, Stockbridge and Tilts which consist of just a few houses or farms are scattered all over the land north of Arksey. Bentley had fewer satellite hamlets than Arksey, and what is interesting to note is that the older ones have disappeared off the map completely to make way for newer urban conurbations.

1860 map of the Bentley area.
1. Langthwaite, 2. Amersall, 3. Bodles, 4. Rostholme

The map above shows some of the lost hamlets and villages near Bentley. Each one is talked about in turn below:

Langthwaite  

An area lying close to Castle Hills and Radcliffe Moat, Langthwaite was once a twelfth century manor owned by the de Langthwaite family. Not much is known about this deserted village, which was later named Hangthwaite, and the nearby earthworks are all that remain of the settlement now. Later, quarrying of magnesian limestone was carried out in the area at Long Edge Quarry.

For more on the earth works and quarry go to Scawthorpe, It's Older Than You Think.


Castle Hills and Radcliffe Moat at Langthwaite in 1849

Amersall 

Little is known about Amersall. It appears as a field name from around 1830, but is mentioned as a place in Arksey parish registers when referring to William Monkton, the plague victim mentioned earlier, who was discovered 'on the King's high road of Amersall'. He had been walking down the Great North Road and was found collapsed at Amersall, whether Amersall was a community, a farm, or simply an area of land is not known now.


Amersall Field with the Great North Road to the west, 1849

Bodles  

Bodles occupied an area on the Great North Road where it forks with Barnsley Road (the modern A635). There seems to have been just one farm there, which later became the Sun Inn, and it is interesting to note that the Roman Ridge runs right through it. The Roman Ridge is part of the major Roman Road of Ermine Street, which ran from London, to Lincoln and to York. Most of it follows the Great North Road (the A638) in Doncaster, but one section lies between The Sun Inn and the Red House junction, before joining the A1 to Barnsdale. 

Also near here was the toll house for the Great North Road when it was turnpiked in 1741.

The Sun Inn was rebuilt further south of its original position in 1936, and the name 'Bodles' has also since been dropped.


Bodles in 1849

The Sun Inn abt 1905


Rostholme

Rostholme is one of those places that hasn't entirely disappeared, it has however been swallowed up by an ever growing Bentley and is indistinguishable from the rest of the village.

Lying on an area of Askern Road, just beyond the end of the park boundary, Rostholme seems to have started out as a cluster of farms, and with mentions in the Arksey parish registers going as far back as the 1580's, it has a very long history.

As with other places of antiquity, the place-name of Rostholme has gone through many variations, the most common being Rostholme and Wrostholme, with both versions appearing on old maps.


Rostholme on a map of 1888

Yew Tree Farm is probably the best remembered property in Rostholme, and was the last surviving property of old Rostholme. Eventually it was replaced by a health centre.

Yew Tree Farm

The other farming properties in Rostholme had all gone by 1915 when new streets were created in the area, and terraced housing ensured the area blended in with all the other housing along Askern Road.

For more on Rostholme go to The Hidden History of Rostholme.



Seventeenth Century Bentley

The Hearth Tax



The best way of estimating the number of households in any village is to look at data gathered at the time of censuses or when new taxes were introduced, such as the Poll Tax of 1379. In 1662 a Hearth Tax was introduced and in basic terms, this was calculated according to the number of hearths in a property, the assumption being that larger properties would have more hearths and therefore have to pay more tax. 


In Bentley and Arksey an indication of the number of houses and their sizes can be gained from the returns. In 1662 one hundred and twenty six properties are listed for the villages of Bentley, Arksey and the surrounding hamlets, where there were four in Shaftholme, seven in Stockbridge, eleven in Almholme, one at Bridge Foot and a parsonage. 

The largest was a house at Bridge Foot which had nine hearths. Bridge Hall was once home to the Wilbore family, and this house stood at the Bentley end of what is now St George's Bridge, just where Willow Bridge caravan park is.


Bridge Hall

Of the one hundred other houses in the villages there was an assortment of sizes as listed below:   

  • 1 with 8 hearths
  • 3 with 7 hearths
  • 1 with 6 hearths
  • 4 with 5 hearths
  • 9 with 4 hearths
  • 13 with 3 hearths
  • 21 with 2 hearths
  • 48 with 1 hearth 

The population for both villages totalled about four hundred and eighty five, which showed they had grown considerably since the Poll Tax of 1379.

For more on the Bridge Foot area go to At the Foot of the Bridge.



Eighteenth Century Bentley

Time Of Great Mortality


Bentley in the eighteenth century consisted of several farms built around a village green, with more farms further afield, rented from the Cooke Lords of the Manor. There were also several beer-houses in the village, including the Grey Horse public house (now the Bay Horse) but no Anglican church, with the nearest being at Arksey. However there is evidence of a rise in certain non-conformist religions.

With the population of Bentley dependent on agriculture, it was inevitable that a series of bad harvests and severe winters would affect the mortality rate of the parish. One such occasion was so severe, that special mention was given to it in the parish register for the years 1727-1729. Writing in the parish register, Charles Herring  (parish clerk) declared:
"The greatest mortality that ever can be remembered or made out to be in the Parish of Arksey."
Prior to 1727, burials averaged at about 15 to 20 per year, but in the year 1727 there were 52, in 1728 there were 51, and in 1729 there were as many as 55 before numbers fell back to the average the following year.

By the 1760's things had improved considerably, and by the 1770's births outnumbered deaths by one third.


Introduction Of Enclosure

The eighteenth century brought a change in the way land was farmed. For centuries owner-occupiers and tenants had farmed in strips of land in huge common fields. The gradual change from this practice to a more efficient method of enclosing holdings in small fenced or hedged 'closes' was first carried out by the lords of the manor, however, in the first half of the eighteenth century a huge number of acts of enclosure were passed.


Example of an Enclosure map (not Bentley)

The acts for enclosing land at Bentley and Arksey started in 1759 and concerned the lands immediately north of the river Don, in an area known as 'Bentley and Arksey Ings'. The straight roads across the common were laid out at this time and were named Arksey Common Lane, Mastall Lane and Ings Lane. This land was prone to flooding due to work carried out in the 1720's to the 1740's on the Don Navigation to make it accessible for larger cargo vessels.

At the same time as the land was being enclosed many small roads and footpaths were 'stopped up and discontinued' to allow for new field boundaries. Drains were also altered and improved.

Without a doubt Enclosure was the biggest change in agriculture in centuries and the effect on the local population would have been immense. The change would have swept away certain rights from the villagers, rights that they would have depended on for their subsidence.

Enclosure would prove to be just the first phase in a time of change for the people of Bentley. A new industrial age was dawning and the local people would have to adapt to this progress. Life in rural Bentley and Arksey was about to change and would never be the same again.




First written 2014, updated 2016, re-written and updated 2020. 
  



Thursday, 13 February 2020

A Brief History of Bentley - Part Two

Top left to right, High Street, St Peter's Church
Middle, Park and Pavilion, Bentley Colliery
Bottom, The Avenue, Bentley Road



A Time Of Change


In part one we saw how the tiny village of Bentley grew up in the shadow of its neighbour Arksey. With less land available for farming it was difficult to imagine Bentley becoming anything more than a gateway to the more fertile farm lands around Arksey.

However, with the arrival of the Industrial Revolution, Bentley would find its place in the world and become the thriving township it is today.

In this second part of a two-part introduction to the history of Bentley we look at how industry changed the village in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and how the village adapted when that industry was taken away. 

Throughout this post there are links to more in-depth articles that will expand aspects of the history even further.



Contents Of Part Two

  • Nineteenth Century Bentley
  • 1827 Enclosure
  • The Growth Of Bentley 
  • Industrial Bentley
  • Education
  • Housing And The Population
  • Religious Houses
  • Twentieth Century Bentley
  • Public Transport
  • Bentley Colliery
  • 'New' Bentley
  • New Communities
  • Scawthorpe
  • Toll Bar
  • Hardship and Disaster
  • The Pit Disaster
  • Flooding
  • War Time Bombs
  • Latter-Day Bentley





Nineteenth Century Bentley


By the beginning of the nineteenth century Bentley was established as a rural village. Agriculture was still seen as the chief occupation of the population, but change was coming and this began with the Acts of Enclosure in the late eighteenth century. By 1827, the second phase of Enclosure was under way, changing the face of agriculture and the very village itself.


1827 Enclosure

Lands in Bentley and Arksey Ings had already been enclosed in the first phase of Enclosure in 1759. In 1827 further lands at Bentley were enclosed, and these consisted of Broad Axe Field, Amersall Field, West Field, Scawthorpe Field, Havercroft, Broach, and Streetcroft. The reasons given for Enclosure being that the lands of proprietors were so intermixed and dispersed, that the management and cultivation of them was inconvenient. Improving the system by enclosing the lands would greatly benefit the land owners and the village. This change would also alter the look of Bentley, as powers were granted to re-direct, "stop-up" or alter any carriage road or bridleway passing through lands to be enclosed. Drains could also be improved, but there were no powers to alter anything which would cause injury to Bentley Mill.

As many as thirty footpaths were discontinued, along with one bridleway and one carriage road, this included a section of Millgate to its junction with Finkle Street and Arksey Lane.

The main Doncaster to Selby Road turned in a dog-leg at the Millgate junction, and ran through the village green (on Cooke Street), past Bentley's only inn, the Grey Horse.

In all there were 1,893 acres of land enclosed, and of these 1,447 acres were acquired by Sir William Bryan Cooke, which meant that almost all the farmers in the area were renting directly from him.

This shift in the methods of agriculture would have taken away certain common rights from the villagers, on which they depended for their subsistence. This must have caused a great deal of anguish to the people. 

Bentley from the Enclosure map of 1827



The Growth Of Bentley

Despite the fact that Sir W B Cooke owned and rented out almost all the land around Bentley, he remained a non-resident Lord of the Manor, and as such Bentley village was allowed to develop freely, without the dominant planning of one person. 

Bentley would grow steadily throughout the nineteenth century, providing a variety of occupations for the villagers. 

By 1837 there were wheelwrights, blacksmiths, bricklayers, farmers, boot and shoe makers, tailors, shopkeepers, butchers, a maltster, beerhouses and an inn, the Grey Horse. There was also a corn mill and a mustard manufacturer. 

The appearance of shops and butchers in Bentley came as a direct result of Enclosure. Families who were once self-sufficient had lost the common land they had used for rearing animals and growing produce; and as they were now employed, there was a demand to buy provisions locally.

As for religion in the area, there had been meetings of the Wesleyan Methodists on the village green and in private homes since about 1790. Bentley gained its first purpose built religious building in the form of a Wesleyan chapel, which was opened in 1819.

Sometime between 1827 and 1850 an extension was built to the High Street in Bentley, so instead of having to turn left towards the village green to reach areas to the north, it was possible to carry straight on up to the end of Arksey Lane. Creating this route required the building the of a new bridge over the mill stream, adjacent to Finkle Street, but it did mean a more direct route to Arksey, with the addition of providing more building space for shops and businesses.


Bentley Bridge over the mill stream pictured in 1910.
Photo courtesy of Colin Hardisty

Despite the new prosperity in Bentley, the population was actually falling. In 1821 there were 1,183 inhabitants, but by 1831 the number had dropped to 1,144. Over the next ten years the population fell again, by another 88. 

This was due in part to people moving away, but an outbreak of cholera in the early 1830's made a big impact on the population of Bentley, especially in the year 1832, when more than 40 burials took place, most of which were cholera victims.

By 1837 the population was recovering, and from this time increased at a much faster rate.

For a full list of traders in Bentley at various times go to Trade Directories.


Industrial Bentley

Industry had long been a feature in the growth of Bentley, but by the mid nineteenth century this was expanding and changing. 

The mustard factory had ceased operating entirely, and the number of malt-kilns in the area was also reduced, but the water-driven corn mill still prospered. Another corn mill on Finkle Street, which was steam driven was also in operation, this was called Marsh's Mill. Brick yards flourished in the area, Tuffield's at Arksey made thousands of bricks for use on the new railway, and then became employed in making drainage pipes etc. Another brick yard was in operation at Bentley Moor Lane, one was sited at Tilts and two more in an area that would become Toll Bar. 

There were three limestone quarries in operation throughout part of the nineteenth century, and these were situated near to the Great North Road. 


Bentley 1893

Agriculture still made up the biggest proportion of the workforce in the 1850's, with the rest made up from domestic service, road building, the railways, craftsmen, shops, inns and teaching. By 1861 there was also a post office in Bentley.

By the end of the nineteenth century agriculture had declined, while the number of railway workers had increased significantly.

The only inn in Bentley, The Bay Horse (originally, the Grey Horse), was joined in 1861 by the Railway Tavern. A beerhouse on High Street became The Druids Arms, and further afield there was The Three Horse Shoes at Bridge Foot and The Sun at Bodles.


The Bay Horse on Chapel Street

It was during the latter half of the nineteenth century that the Cooke family's long association with Bentley and Arksey began to recede. They started to sell off land in 1868, with further sales taking place up to the 1890's. The Cooke's would eventually move away from Doncaster completely, although their charitable concerns were kept up in Arksey.


Education

In 1877 the first purpose built school in Bentley was built on the village green, Cooke Street. A previous National School had been housed in the old Primitive Wesleyan chapel on High Street, but it became short on capacity and unfit for purpose.

The school taught 174 children at first, with room for 120 more with the addition of an infants' section in 1889. With education becoming free for all in 1891, the school underwent further expansion in 1894, raising the intake level to 246.

For more on Bentley's schools go to Educating Bentley.


Bentley Board School in the 1890's.
Photo courtesy of John Goodridge


Housing And The Population

By 1891 the population of Bentley was recorded at 1,863, with the biggest increase taking place since the 1870's.

It was in the 1870's that new housing was built on Bentley Road. Work began on the west side of the road first with nine of the Westfield Cottages built by 1871. Elmbank, next to Haslemere Grove was also built in 1871. Other houses were built during the 1870's, including Rose Cottages in 1876, Mount Pleasant in 1877, and Broughton's Houses and Harrison's Houses

Building continued on the west side of Bentley Road during the 1880's, consisting of mainly terraced houses and a few detached properties, such as Warwick Villas in 1889. 

Building on the east side of the road was completed during the 1890's, this included a new chapel for the Primitive Methodists, built in 1899.

The map below is from 1893 and shows the west side of Bentley Road almost complete, and large gaps on the east side yet to be built on.



Bentley Road in 1893

Religious Houses

With the growth in population came the need for more places of worship in Bentley. The church at Arksey was over two miles away, and while nonconformist religions had sprung up in Bentley, there was still no Anglican church by the end of the 1880's. 

The Wesleyans, who had started meeting under a walnut tree on the village green in about 1790, and later in a small house or chapel nearby, took up residence in a larger chapel on the corner of Cooke Street and Askern Road in 1819. 

The Primitive Methodists, who had previously occupied the small building which is next to the former Druid's Arms public house on High Street had a chapel built overlooking the village green in 1857, with a school room added nine years later. The old Primitive chapel building was used as a National School for a time, before being taken over by the Anglican Church for use as a Mission Room by those not wishing to walk to Arksey for services. It was rebuilt in 1892 to provide a room for services while St Peter's Church was under construction.


The old Mission Room on High Street

In 1891 a new Wesleyan chapel was built on the corner of Chapel Street and High Street. The land was donated by Mr William Chadwick of Arksey Hall, and the chapel was built of brick in the Victorian Gothic style at a cost of over £2,350. The chapel opened in June 1892. 


The Wesleyan chapel on High Street/Chapel Street, built in 1891

While the new chapel was being built, plans got underway for the building of the new Anglican Church for Bentley, St Peter's, as mentioned earlier. The church was built during the 1890's, the cost being met by Charles Edward Stephen Cooke Esq. brother of Sir William Ridley Charles Cooke, Baronet of Wheatley. In 1898 Bentley finally became a separate ecclesiastical parish.

For more on all the churches and chapels of Bentley go to A Place of Worship.


St Peter's Church


20th Century Bentley

Public Transport 


Bentley had continued to grow through the latter part of the nineteenth century, and by 1901 the population stood at 2,019, while neighbouring Arksey's population had stayed at a modest 384.

A growing population meant changes were happening fast. A new tram system was installed and opened in 1902. In 1928 trolley buses replaced the trams, and these were operational up until around 1960. 

For more on public transport go to Please State Your Destination.


A tram on High Street heading towards Doncaster


Bentley Colliery

Following years of steady growth in Bentley, by far the biggest jump came with the sinking of Bentley Colliery. After an unsuccessful attempt boring at a site in old Bentley, a site north of the village was chosen, and a shaft was successfully sunk there in 1905, leading to the opening of the colliery in 1908.

This once rural village was suddenly the hub of industry, and while it must have been disconcerting for the locals at first, the colliery brought about better housing, jobs, more local amenities and allowed the village to step out of the shadow of Arksey.

For more on Bentley Colliery go to Bentley Pit History Part 1 - 85 Years of Mining.


Bentley Colliery in 1911.
Photo courtesy of Jill Lowe


'New' Bentley

One inevitable consequence of sinking a colliery in Bentley was the amount of workers it would attract. Workers came from all over the north of the country and they brought their families with them. These new families would all need housing and this saw the laying out of New VillageMeanwhile in old Bentley, cottages were demolished to make way for new commercial properties.

Further housing was built to the rear of buildings on the main roads, such as Bentley Road, and extended up the old turnpike road to Askern, with further houses being built around the old Toll-House which led to the building of the village of Toll Bar in about 1912.

By 1912 three new schools had been built in Bentley, with another being built at Toll Bar two years later. 1913 saw the building of the new council offices at Bentley to house the new 'Urban District Council'.

Housing under construction on Broughton Avenue in 1911

By the second decade of the twentieth century Bentley had lost it's rural setting completely, and by 1921 the population had risen to almost 13,000. As with many other pit villages, commercial enterprises were at the centre of the colliery community.

With such a fast growing population, Bentley needed many new facilities to keep them occupied and entertained. A new Recreation Park was opened in Bentley in 1923, and this was soon joined by sports grounds and working men's clubs.


Bentley Park

A new cinema in the heart of Bentley, the Coliseum, opened on the 7th of September 1914. With four shops on the ground floor, and two billiard rooms on the first floor, this large, imposing building had seating for 1,400 patrons in the auditorium. There was also a large stage for live productions, and space for a six piece orchestra. It also boasted electric lighting and a modern ventilation system.

The Coliseum on High Street


New Communities


In Part One we looked at how some of the smaller communities near Bentley had been lost over time. Place-names such as Langthwaite, Amersall and Bodles were consigned to history and eventually, new communities sprang up in their places, or at least nearby. Most of these new places began in the twentieth century, when the mining industry brought an influx of new families to the area.

Scawthorpe

Scawthorpe began as one single farm, probably in the nineteenth century, but no actual date can be found for this at present. The farm lay on the west side of the Great North Road opposite the end of the present day Jossey Lane.

Scawthorpe Farm in 1849
Developement of the area first began in the 1930's when Sunnyfields was laid out to the south of Scawthorpe Farm. Some development also began in the Raymond Road area, which would eventually be extended as Amersall Road.

It was the 1950's which saw the biggest increase in house building, when land between Long Edge Quarry and Watch House Lane was filled with council housing. Named Scawthorpe, after the farm, this urban estate provided cheap and convenient housing for mining and other families moving to the area. 

For more on Scawthorpe go to Scawthorpe - It's Older Than You Think!

The Adam and Eve pub on Amersall Road, Scawthorpe, 1950's


Toll Bar

As with Scawthorpe, the name Toll Bar came from one single building, namely, the toll house on the Doncaster to York Road. The toll house was built in 1832 at about the same time as the Doncaster-to-Selby-to-York road was turnpiked. Built to house the toll collector and his family, the house had a succession of owners until it was eventually turned into a working men's club.



The toll house when used as a club

Toll Bar village began to be built in around 1912. Residential streets were created off the main road, which became the present day A19. Commercial properties were also built and eventually a school was added too. 

Toll Bar hit the headlines in 2007 when severe flooding submerged much of the village for weeks and caused devastation for the residents and business owners there.

For more on Toll Bar go to A History of Toll Bar.


Hardship And Disaster

The Pit Disaster


Despite all the good things happening in Bentley, it wasn't all plain-sailing, the village suffered its share of hardship and disaster too. The colliery strike of 1926 brought poverty, while a devastating explosion at the pit in 1931 left many families mourning loved ones. Forty five men and boys were killed in that disaster, something that Bentley has never forgotten.

For more on this go to Bentley Pit History Part 2 - Disasters.


Aftermath of the Bentley Pit disaster, November 1931


Flooding

Disruption and loss due to major floods occurred in 1932, 1941 and 1947. The 1932 floods are the best documented of these; taking place in May 1932. Unprecedented rainfall led to the villages of Bentley, Arksey and Toll Bar, as well as the Marsh Gate area of Doncaster flooding to incredible levels. Water as deep as eight feet inundated houses in Arksey causing devastation. Boats took to the streets in all flood hit areas, rescuing people from upstairs windows, or fetching supplies. 

The 1932 floods were the worst ever recorded in the area, and following two further floods in the 1940's, better flood defences were built which had the effect of keeping Bentley dry for 60 years. 

For more on the flooding in Bentley, Arksey and Toll Bar go to Arksey Underwater on sister site Arksey Village, A History.


Flooding on Hunt Lane in 1932

War Time Bombs

The war also brought devastation to a part of Bentley. In December 1940 the York Road and Royston Avenue areas of Bentley were bombed, with the loss of seventeen lives, and leaving many injured.

Several houses were destroyed on Royston Avenue and West End Avenue, as well as a post office on Royston Avenue. These houses were eventually rebuilt. 

Royston Avenue seen from West End Avenue after the bombs hit.

A memorial seat to the civilian war dead is in Arksey cemetery, and lists all the names of the victims.

For more on the memorial and the civilian war dead go to War Memorials.

For more on the Royston Avenue bomb go to When Hitler Came To Call. 


Latter-Day Bentley


Since the mid twentieth century Bentley has continued to grow and prosper, even with the setbacks of the 1984-85 miner's strikes, and its subsequent closure in 1993. The colliery was demolished in 1994, and a community woodland now exists in its place.

A new century in Bentley brought an old adversary back when severe flooding once again returned to the area. In 2007 Bentley and Toll Bar were badly affected, prompting a visit from the Prime Minister and Prince Charles. Then in late 2019 more flooding hit parts of Bentley, and with climate change the big issue now, Bentley looks certain to suffer more of these weather events in the future.

On a positive note though, twenty first century Bentley remains a bustling township on the northern edge of Doncaster, its rural heritage obliterated by commerce and housing estates, but none the less it remains a thriving community in an ever changing country.



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Alison Vainlo

First written 2014, re-written and updated 2020