Doncaster Plan Abercrombie
Doncaster Plan Abercrombie
Doncaster Plan Abercrombie
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HENRY W. SAGE
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Cornell University Library
NA9030.A14
The Doncaster regional planning scheme.
http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924004995480
THE
DONGASTER
REGIONAL PLANNING
SCHEME
1922
The DONCASTER
REGIONAL "PLANNING SCHEME
THE
DONCASTER
REGIONAL PLANNING SCHEME
The Report
'Preparedfor the
JOINT COMMITTEE
"By
Patrick Abercrombie
University of Li'verpool
&
T. H. "Johnson
Doncaster
COAL SUBSIDENCE
'By
Joseph Humble
Doncaster
FOREWORD
JOINT TOWN-PLANNING COMMITTEE FOR THE
DONCASTER REGION
A Conference of Local Authorities in the area of the Coalfield surrounding Doncaster,
convened by the Ministry of Health on the subject of industrial development in the
South Yorkshire Coalfields, was held in the Mansion House, Doncaster, on the i6th
January, 1 920, at which it was resolved that it was desirable that a Regional Planning
Scheme should be prepared for the whole of the area comprising the Coalfields
surrounding Doncaster, and the following Authorities decided to join in the scheme :
Doncaster Corporation.
Doncaster Rural District Council.
Blyth and Cuckney Rural District Council.
Adwick-le-Street Urban District Council.
Bentley with Arksey Urban District Council.
Mexborough Urban District Council.
Tickhill Urban District Council.
The Conisbrough Urban District was formed out of the Doncaster Rural District
on the I St became a constituent Authority.
April, 1921, and thereupon
The first meeting of the Joint
Town-Planning Committee was held on the
31st May, 1920, when Professor Patrick Abercrombie, M.A., A.R.I. B. A., of the
Liverpool University and Mr. T. H. Johnson, architect and surveyor, Doncaster,
were instructed to prepare an outline Plan and Report for the area.
The following are the representatives on the Joint Committee :
Authority.
DONCASTER
Alderman F. Cocking was appointed Chairman, and the Rev. Canon T.
W.
Forster-Rolfe, Vice-Chairman of the Joint Committee.
Hon. Secretary to the Joint Committee.
Reginald Jones, on behalf of the Clerk of
the County Council of the West Riding of Yorkshire, County Hall, Wakefield.
The Report was approved by the Joint Committee at a meeting held on the
14th July, 1922.
desirable that they should remain in being as a means of continuing and making
effective the cordial co-operation which has hitherto been so manifest in their
deliberations.
(3) The Committee draw attention to the fact that provisions inserted in a town-
planning scheme which prescribe the space about buildings or limit the number of
buildings to be erected, or prescribe the height or character (zoning) of buildings, and
which the Minister of Health considers reasonable, are not matters for compensation ;
and therefore, in approving recommendations dealing with such provisions, they have
taken care that the proposals should be such that they may be expected to be to the
general advantage of all parties concerned.
(4) The Committee consider that all the recommendations, except numbers 5,
12, 13, 15, and 16, can be put into effect by means of town-planning schemes and the ;
method suggested for meeting the possible exceptions is dealt with in the particular
recommendations.
Subsidence. (Pages i o- 1 1
.)
vi
FOREWORD
(6) Each Local Authority should not deal separately with sewage disposal, but
joint schemes should be devised when the undue multiplication of outfall works can
thereby be avoided.
Zoning. (Pages 23-29.)
(7) The general aim should be the development of a series of some twelve or
more self-contained and well-defined towns within the orbit of Doncaster, which
should develop as the capital town of the Region (see pages 85-86). Broadly speaking,
the intervals should be filled by agricultural land, small holdings, allotments and playing
fields (see page 5).
The Region should in general be divided into the following zones (see
Maps 1-4) :
{a) The low-lying land coloured yellow on the Maps should be allocated to
industry.
[b) The low-lying land below the 25-30 feet contour should be reserved for
agriculture or industry, and no new dwelling-houses should be built on it except what
are absolutely essential for local agricultural purposes particular villages are referred
:
(9) At Sprotbrough, the park, village and gorge of the Don should be preserved
in their present condition as a Regional asset. Conisbrough Castle and surroundings
should also be preserved, and as far as possible the villages of Hooton Pagnell,
Campsall, Burgh wallis, Hickleton, High Melton, and Marr.
Also when any road widenings take place, great care should be exercised to
preserve any fine avenue or row of trees. In planting fresh avenues, care should be
taken to select the type of tree best suited to local conditions.
Roads.
(10) A of important road proposals and building lines, required for the
series
efficient development of the area, are set out on pages 34 to 48. It is not suggested
that these should be put in hand all at once, nor that when commenced the complete
cross section should be constructed in the first instance but it is;most important that
the routes should at once be ear-marked, so that the way may be open whenever a
favourable opportunity arises for any part of the work to be put in hand.
vii
DONCASTER
Railways. (Pages 49-52.)
Waterways.
(16) The waterways require urgent attention three courses are outlined
: (p. 54),
1 ncluding a possible Ship Canal from Goole to Doncaster.
Civic Centres.
(18) Pit heaps should not be created or allowed to remain. All spoil should be
spread to fill up areas of low-lying ground suitable for ultimate industrial use., e.g.
(see page 67), the small area, liable to flood, adjoining Mexboro' on the Melton side,
and also that near the river between Conisbrough and Doncaster.
(19) Suggestions as to the right method of development for the various villages
in the area are set out on pages 71 to 81.
(20) Open spaces should be provided on a systematic basis, due regard being had
to their distribution throughout the Region in relation to centres of population and
to where suitable land is available, page 28.
vni
1
CONTENTS
PART I
General Consideration
{a)
Introductory
Historical
......
of the
.......
Nature of the Region to be dealt with
PAGE
3
6
{b)
{c)
Local Authorities and their Areas included
Level above Ordnance Datum .... in the Scheme
lO
9
(d)
......
((?)
13
(/) Industrial Prospects : Power Supply 14
{.S)
Water Supply 19
PART II
Zoning or Regulations for the Specific Use of Areas :
Introductory 23
{a) Manufacturing Areas 24
{b) Housing Areas 25
{c) Agricultural Areas 27
[d) Recreational Areas 28
PART
Communications :
Introductory ........
.........
III
() Roads
......
I. National Trunk Roads
.....
.
37
4. The Worksop, Old Nottingham Road. The North to
the Midlands
5. The New
Midlands ......
Nottingham Road. The North to the
37
38
IX
DONCASTER
(a) KoAUs (^continued).
I. National Trunk Roads [continued).
PAGE
Road No. The Thorne (Coast) Road. Main Road to the East 38
......
6. .
......
39
8. The Sheffield (Derbyshire) Road. Main Road to the
West 39
9. The Lincoln Road. Main Road, South-Eastern Counties 40
10. The Bawtry and Selby Main Road. London to York
IL Regional Arteries
Road [a)
....
(avoiding Doncaster) and eventually to Hull
.
.
40
41
41
,, [b) Barnby Dun Road. Doncaster, Kirk Sandall, Barnby Dun
and Stainforth . . . . . .42
[c) Blaxton and Finningley Road. From Great North Road
to the Trent . . . . . .42
,, {d) Rossington Bridge to Finningley Road. Alternation to the
above .42
.......
. . . . . .
Road 43
IV.
New
A Ring Road .......
Routes and Connections
..........
. . . .
.44
46
(b)
(c)
i^d)
Railways
Waterways .........
Passenger Transportation within the Region . . . .56
49
53
PART V
West Don Valley Development : Mexboro', Conisbro', and Denaby 65
CONTENTS
PART VI
JiS UPON EXISTING
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
Plate
PART I
GENERAL CONSIDERATION of the NATURE
of the REGION
tobe DEALT WITH
PI..-ilE 1.
The To-j-ii of Doncaster is Jirrr seen placed on ein isl/iinus between two patches of hn.v-l)ing land
wJiic/i are below llie 25' o" contour.
INTRODUCTORY
This is the first Planning Scheme to be prepared, and the authors
Regional
naturally feel some diffidence in submitting it. The South Wales Regional Survey
was different it was the work of a large Committee containing technical and
:
principle that the proposals should be of regional rather than local significance.
Thus, Road Traffic, being of a fluid description, not static to one locality, causes
quite small improvements to have wide-reaching effects for example, a bye-pass
:
to escape a narrow village street may open up a new long distance route. Local
Open Spaces, however, which superficially might appear to be on the same scale
as local road improvements, are static and quite outside the scope of regional
recommendation.
With regard to preliminary survey work, the fact that it is a new area, awaiting
industrial development, has rendered an elaborate analysis of its present state a
less imperative need than would be the case in many other regions. The one
fundamental aspect upon which a Report and Survey was necessary, as a preliminary
to any development proposals, was the probable rate of Coal-getting and consequent
Subsidence. The Committee were fortunately able to secure the
of services
Mr. Joseph Humble, whose unrivalled experience of thiswas placed
coalfield
DONCASTER
by Colonel Hellard for Greater London, But the abnormal state of road traffic,
owing to coal strikes and trade depression, would have made any counts taken
during the past year or so practically valueless. Fortunately the authors possessed
first-hand knowledge, based upon many years of constant usage, of all the roads
in the district the Road section is the most detailed part of the Report submitted ;
:
Humble for opening the rich stores of his mining knowledge to Mr. G. L. Pepler
:
of the Ministry of Health for his continued help, advice and criticism, the value of
which it is impossible to overestimate and to many other gentlemen, land-owners,
:
The Doncaster Region, equipped by man, without any forethought to its indus-
trial future, with unrivalled roads and railways, possesses in its most difficult feature,
the low-lying tracts, the opportunity of grouping new industries in a manner at once
fortunate for themselves and fortunate for those who will work in them. Coal, the
primum mobile of this growth and the cause of its attendant difficulties, is found at such
a depth that the worst infirmity of a mining district is absent
surface cracks and
frequent pit-heads.
But it is in the grouping of the population that the chief attractiveness of the
picture is found. It is no longer, one hopes, possible for a single city of the numbers
and density of Leeds or Sheffield to come into existence and one contemplates with
;
only less horror a town, equal in population, but with its people spread out at the rate
of fifty to the acre.
;
REGIONAL
Instead, there should spring up in this Region ten or more communities
new, or
sochanged as to rank as new, towns complete in every respect, but of moderate size,
manageable in their loose texture. Central to these, but in no sense dominating their
individual existence, is to be a city, neither swollen nor tentacular, but in the truest
meaning of the word, metropolitan. For major pleasures, for higher studies, for
contact with great Art, dramatic, musical, and visual (which includes architecture,
painting, and sculpture), the inhabitants of the surrounding communities would have,
within easy reach, this focus of civilisation.
Agricultural land, small holdings, allotments, and ample space for playing-fields
would form the natural matrix to these human and industrial aggregates, cementing
them together and at the same time keeping them apart.
Social life in such a region should be rich and varied :there need be no tame
villatic existence in the smaller communities, nor loss of touch with nature in the
central city. And the industries would benefit incalculably not only from the reaction
upon the mental and physical qualities of the inhabitants, but also because the re-
quirements of industry can be met, where there is a plan, in a way that is impossible
where the old haphazard methods of growth are allowed to continue. To a practical
mind there appears no difficulty in carrying out this scheme of rational development
rather does it seem to offisr unrivalled opportunities to the Inhabitants, the Local
Authorities, Industry and the Estate Developer by enlightened co-operation to secure
great mutual benefit.
[A). HISTORICAL
Up till quite recent times the country comprised within this Regional Planning
Scheme was but remotely connected with any Development.^ The
ideas of Industrial
exposed Coalfield of Yorkshire, Derbyshire, and Nottinghamshire, bearing on its
surface such typical industrial towns as Leeds, Wakefield, Barnsley, and Sheffield,
appeared to come to an abrupt conclusion on a line parallel with these towns and
almost due north and south, some three or four miles west of Doncaster. Here, the
Coal measures were overlaid by what has been described as a discordant sheet of '
peacefully on this intervening layer and on the Triassic Sandstones and Marls, which,
also superimposed and all tilted to an easterly fall, still further concealed the coalfield
and appeared to promise a permanent rural seclusion. Although the Royal Coal
Commission of 1871 had suggested as an eastern Hmit of this concealed coalfield,
a line east of the Trent, nevertheless a popular notion still existed that Don-
caster was just beyond the limit where coal could be worked profitably. The late
date to which this general misconception of the eastern extension of the Yorkshire
Coalfield persisted was probably owing to a misreading of the Geological Ordnance
Survey, which, quite rightly, showed the manifest coal measures as ceasing at the
point where they dipped under the Permian sheet already alluded to. The boring
made at Haxey in 1893, ^^ miles west of the Trent (and just beyond the eastern
boundary of our Region) proved not only that the coal measures existed underneath,
but that there were valuable seams at a workable depth at a point several miles
beyond the previous most easterly successful boring ^ and it was also observed that
:
whereas the general trend of the surface of the coal measures followed the eastern
dip of the Permian sheet and other strata, the actual Barnsley bed of coal, instead of
dipping too, lay absolutely flat.
In spite of these forecasts, which inevitably portended a different future, this
Region continued on the surface and in the popular mind a smiling agricultural plain,
containing many noble parks and mansions its principal town, Doncaster, famed
:
for its racecourse amid beautiful surroundings, and for one of those small local
products which carry the name of a place to the ends of the earth, its Butterscotch ;
and its villages, with their red pantile roofs, reminiscent of the Dutchmen who
drained the marshes between the Don, the Trent, and the Ouse. If one crossed
the Region by the Great North Road it was hardly possible to detect the presence
of the working Yorkshire Coalfield at all, though passing quite close to it at
Pontefract. If approached from Sheffield, on the S.W., one remarked how the grimy
1 The Towns of Mexboro' and Conisbro' as described in Part V. are an exception to the statement.
2 See 1905 Royal Coal Commission, Vol. ix. p. 21.
REGIONAL
Derbyshire Millstone-grit gave way to the clean grey
Limestone as one approached
t^onisbrough, and this appeared an outward symbol of
radical change from the
industrial West Riding to the rural plains that
extended to the Lincolnshire Wolds.
But these appearances are frequently deceptive ^ beneath this farm land
:
leading townsman of that date, the late Sir Edmund Beckett, to whom the thanks
of the town are due, was the direct cause of this and to him the first birth of its
;
new prosperity may be attributed. Doncaster, which previously had been the centre
and junction for the Mail Coaches and traffic using the broad highway of the
Great North Road, changed from this time onward and grew to the great Railway
Junction that it is to-day. With its seven main lines of Railways giving access
North, South, East and West, by probably the finest service of trunk lines to be
found anywhere in the country, the Region is connected with every part of England,
and has access to the whole of the manufacturing centres of Yorkshire and
Lancashire.
The centre and metropolis of this Region indeed no upstart town like
is
Middlesbrough. Its past importance is visibly proved by the size and splendour of
itsparish church (though the present structure was a re-building by Sir Gilbert Scott
after the disastrous fire of 1853).
Doncaster, of course, dates from the time of the Romans, and is of great
historical interest. It has played its part in the evolution of the North of England,
and was chiefly famous in the old days for the sagacity and foresight of its burgesses
and the strength of their own right arm. The town from time immemorial has
governed itself by ancient charters^ on broad democratic principles, and has not,
1Millstone-grit takes on a grimy hue in its weathering on the open mountain side ; and the magnesian
limestone retains its silver grey amid the smoke of Tinsley, Rotherham and Mexboro'.
* The charter of
11 94 is the earliest known to be in existence ; it makes reference to earlier charters.
DONCASTER
like somany of our old cities, been under the sway of an overlord. The Corporation,
being the Lords of the Manor of Doncaster and surrounding manors, were wealthy
landowners controlling and administrating large revenues. The result of this can be
seen in the streets of Doncaster, which are, for a town of its great age, amply laid
out, with the survival of the Roman Cross in its midst. The one thing, however,
to be regretted is the absence of old buildings its Castle, town walls, and historic
;
monuments were swept away by the unreasoning progressive spirit of its townsmen,
before a true appreciation of these links with the past existed.
Doncaster, which was growing gradually as a market town and railway centre,
naturally reacted to the Colliery workings ; and since the starting of the Bentley Pit
itswhole character has been subtly but surely changed from a large old-fashioned
and prosperous market town, which in 1865 had a population of 18,000, to the
avowed metropolis of a new industrial district.
The following are the dates of the successive opening of Coal Pits in this area.
Taken conjunction with the establishment of the Railway Engineering Works
in
in 1849 and Messrs. Pilkington's Glass Works, they give a sort of chart of progress
towards industrialisation.
PLATE II.
point where it passes under the Great North Road at Rossington Bridge. The
northern low-lying area is in the form of a gradually widening wedge which merges
into the plain stretching to Goole.
The larger portion of this low land is excellent for farming, if kept free from
water, which there appears to be no difficulty to do except on the grounds of cost (a
solution of which is suggested in the Section dealing with subsidence). This valuable
agricultural land to the east and north-east of Doncaster can then be made to
produce the whole or a greater portion of the vegetable and dairy produce necessary
for the large industrial populationwhich will be located in this area. The provision
of means to keep the land clear of water is a national necessity ; and the opinion
expressed by some Mining Engineers that it might be advisable to discontinue
pumping, and thus allow the land to become sterile, cannot be acquiesced in on the
narrow grounds of industrial cheeseparing.
One of the principal features of this Report consists in the recommendation that
these two low-lying tracts, north and south of Doncaster, should (i) be prohibited for
housing purposes, (ii) be prevented from becoming flooded, in order that they may
be used for agricultural and industrial purposes.
1 See Plate I.
ID
1
place in the Doncaster area. Already in certain places it has become necessary to
raise the banks of several of the dykes and streams so that the lagoons that have
formed could be pumped into them thus, by these artificial means, keeping the
;
surface of the land clear of water, except at times of heavy rainfall. So far as is
ascertainable, the lowest point dealt with in this way at present is at Shaftholme, the
Ordnance datum here being about i6' o". There is, however, reason to believe this
level being lowered, although very slowly. Here an electrically-driven automatic
is still
each ton of coal raised, so that a fund could be formed to provide for the upkeep
for all time of the various pumping plants necessary to prevent the land from
becoming waterlogged and the formation of huge lakes where the subsidence had
taken place. It is important to note that there are large areas liable to flood which
1
DONCASTER
in comparison to the value of the minerals. The coal, however, is a wasting asset to
the landowner.
From Mr. Humble's Report it will be seen that it is anticipated, except in the
few places where faults in the coal seams may be met with, that the subsidence due to
colliery workings will be gradual and even, and may result in the next hundred years
in a total lowering of the datum of the district some six feet. This estimate, however,
can only be assumed on a basis of the probable rate of working of the various seams
of coal underlying the area ; and it may be that causes will arise either to increase
or decrease this estimate. At the same time it seems certain that the best method of
coal working will be to take all the coal out without leaving any pillars for support,
previous experience of leaving pillars having proved that serious fracture to the surface
must result from this practice. Assuming, therefore, that no pillars are left, the only
fracture likely to arise is where faults exist; and it is anticipated that within a few
years it will be possible to locate the same and make any provision necessary for
dealing with this part of the surface.
On the other hand it may happen that it will be found more economical in some
cases to bring Steel Works near to the Coal Pits rather than take the coal to the
ironstone mines ; in which case a system of mechanical stowage of the waste product
from the Steel furnaces could be devised by which the underground workings of the
collieries could be filled up after the coal was extracted. Many of the collieries in
the Doncaster Area are plentifully supplied with water which is necessary for this
process. In other cases the absence of a plentiful supply of water would make such a
system of mechanical stowage too costly.
It is probable that owing to the low level of this Region there must always
remain large tracts of land impossible of drainage in any way other than by artificial
means, and for this reason the suggestion of preparing a sinking fund, referred to
previously, appears to be the only safe solution of the difficulty.
The alternative of leaving support for the Town
of Doncaster or of working the
coal under the same, must be left for the final consideration of future generations. At
the present it seems that either the Town should have support in some manner or the
minerals should not be worked. Agrave risk to Doncaster if the minerals were
worked and no support left would be entailed in times of flood, when huge volumes of
water pour down the river from its higher reaches. The chance of failure, from
some unforeseen cause, of artificial methods to prevent flooding of the Town, cannot
be taken.
12
{^. HEALTH AND POPULATION
The totals of population in the areas of the Local Authorities comprised in the
Scheme are given in (B). It is possible to find their average densities by dividing
the acreage into the numbers of inhabitants ; but this average density, in which the
overcrowding of built-up portions is watered down by agricultural areas, is of little
significance. Similarly mean death-rates and the incidence of disease are not explana-
tory when taken for large areas such as the Doncaster R.D., which contain villages on
the unhealthy low lands and others on the breezy uplands, A Civic or Regional Survey
shown on a series of graphic diagrams should be prepared for the whole district, in
order that the correspondence between the bad conditions of high density or low-
lying sites and the high death-rate and the prevalence of certain diseases may be
demonstrated. From this Survey it would probably appear that in certain villages in
the flood lands such terrible diseases as Diphtheria may be said to be endemic.
To show how possible it is for any of the villages to change from a hamlet to a
small town in a few years in this district, a list is appended of parishes in the Don-
caster R.D. in which abnormal growth of the population has occurred.
{V). INDUSTRIAL PROSPECTS : POWER SUPPLY
The attention of Manufacturers, Merchants and Industrial Corporations seeking
the location of New Sites for the construction of Works and Factories is directed to
the many advantages possessed by the Region and the Town of Doncaster for this
purpose, Avery slight consideration of this Report and the accompanying Plans
must point the conclusion that the district comprising the Regional Committee's
Area, of which Doncaster is the centre, will within the next few decades become
one of the chief manufacturing centres of the North of England, connected, as it
probably will be, to the sea by a deep-water Ship Canal. Geographically its position is
remarkable, being the centre of a virgin coalfield, with every facility for development,
and only awaiting the necessary enterprise and capital ; furthermore there is the
advantage that it stands on the fringe of the large manufacturing areas of the West
Riding of Yorkshire and Lancashire.
Owing to the natural formation of the Regional Area, which is exceedingly flat,
it is the centre of a network of the finest main lines of railways and main roads in
England the waterways give direct access to the sea, to ironstone and steelworks on
;
the east, and to the busy manufacturing towns of Sheffield and Leeds on the west ; it
is indeed impossible to conceive a district better adapted for the establishment of new
industrial undertakings.
The nine main and branch lines of railways converging on Doncaster connect
the district with every part of the kingdom, making the town, as a railway centre for
the distribution of merchandise, one of the largest railway junctions in England.
The facilities for the handling of goods traffic at the Decoy comprise a transhipping
station and several miles of yards, in addition to which large engine sheds adjoin
where the goods and passenger engines of the several Railway Companies are cleaned
and provisioned. The whole of this network of sidings covers an area of over
200 acres. Previous to the War all tranship traffic reaching the Decoy each
morning from the South was dealt with during the day and delivered in Edinburgh
and Glasgow the day following traffic from the North, being similarly dealt with,
;
reached London the next morning ; and it is fair to assume that this excellent
service will be resumed again as soon as normal conditions are reached in railway
working.
The huge marshalling station, dealing with the traffic for the West Riding and
Lancashire, being situate near the passenger station, is a busy hive throughout the
whole of the day and night.
The Hexthorpe and Marshgate mineral traffic and marshalling yards, comprising
many miles of lines, deal each day with a large amount of additional mineral and goods
14
;
REGIONAL
traffic. It may safely be said that nowhere in England
can traffic be so quickly
despatched and dealt with.
The railway Goods Rates to and from Doncaster are most favourable to manu-
facturers owing to its central position and its other advantages as a competitive
station.
On referring to the table of distances given below, it will be seen how centrally
situated Doncaster is for the despatch and receiving of goods.
Town. Miles. Town. Miles.
London 156 Edinburgh 241
Leeds Glasgow 285
29i .
Goods transport by road is easy, the main roads of the north, south, east, and west
of England converging on Doncaster and leading in every direction. In so flat a
district the cost of fuel, and of wear and tear, is reduced to the lowest minimum, and the
saving of time reckoned in pounds, shillings, and pence is a further factor of economy
which should not be lost sight of.
The Waterways of the district have not recently had the attention they deserve,
but great use could be made of the fine system already existing, capable of taking
barges up to 100 tons and with direct access to the sea by the Trent and Humber.
The South Yorkshire Canal connects up with the Aire and Calder Navigation,
about five miles from Doncaster, and by this means Boats can reach Wakefield,
Leeds, and Liverpool, forming a direct through route from the East to West of
England.
For the business man the Passenger Train service will be found to be excellent.
The presence of so many main Trunk Lines of Railways, passing through Doncaster
and its central position, provides a direct train service to every part of England.
Express trains leave Doncaster every hour of the day, reaching London in three hours,
and Edinburgh in 6f hours. The East Coast Main Line (G.N., N.E,, and N.B.
Railway) pass through Doncaster. Leeds, Bradford, and the West Riding Towns and
Hull are within one hour's journey Liverpool and Manchester, three hours.
;
For the rapid transit of parcel and fast traffic this system of Railways specially
lends itself, and for commercial purposes a train service of this character is equally
valuable.
As a centre for theestablishment of Iron, Steel, or Engineering Works, the
district presents many and varied advantages a number of New Collieries, now fully
;
equipped, several of which are drawing 4000 tons of coal daily, and are assured of a
life of one hundred years (in working one
seam only), produce abundance of cheap
fuel ; in addition, large beds of Limestone, Moulding
Sand, and Clay are to be found,
the district thus providing a large part of the raw materials
necessary for successful
and economical working. Large areas of land have been reserved for New
Industries
15
DONCASTER
many entirely suitable sites are available at once, and could be acquired on reason-
able terms. Several tracts of low-lying land suitable for tipping purposes for works'
refuse would, after tipping, form suitable Works Sites for many trades. Water for
Works and condenser purposes can be had in unlimited quantities, and the presence of
the old channel of the River Don further assists industrial development.
Since the year 1 849 Doncaster has been the centre for the design and construc-
tion of the Rolling Stock of the Great Northern Railway Company, whose Engines
and Carriages are so justly famous throughout the engineering world. The Company's
Works give employment for about 5000 hands, and provide an excellent class of
mechanic of a very high standard of efficiency. A Royal train has been built in
Doncaster. In addition to the Engineering Works of the Great Northern Railway
Company at Doncaster, a large number of private Firms and Companies are engaged
in the manufacture of Rolling Stock of all descriptions.
Large Engineering Works and Brass and Iron Foundries are also located here,
employing several thousands of hands, so that there is no difficulty in obtaining
supplies of parts of all kinds of machinery promptly and economically.
For Textile Factories it is probably the most suitable district remaining available
in England. It may be mentioned here in passing that through a great lack of fore-
sight on the part of its townsmen, Doncaster a century ago just missed its opportunity
of becoming one of the centres of this great industry Cartwright first tried to
;
establish his works at Doncaster, but owing to opposition and other troubles was
compelled to go elsewhere. It may, however, be said that this could not happen at
the present day. The Corporation, realising the mistake of the last generation, is
now giving its entire support and best energies to rectify this mistake, and a short
time ago sold land for the purpose of erecting a large woollen mill in the town, which
is working satisfactorily and was recently extended to double its capacity.
Power for New Works is available at a very low cost an excellent system of high
;
tension alternating current is to be had in the town from the Corporation Power
Station, which has recently doubled its capacity. Outside the town a high tension
power line, supplied from the several power stations of the Associated Collieries
encircles the district at a three-mile radius of Doncaster, from which electric energy
could be obtained for any purpose and transmitted throughout the district.
It is to be noted that a large field of intelligent female labour exists provided
by the families of the colliers working in the district, and for whom little, if any,
work has up to now been found.
The cost of living is low the markets of Doncaster, which have been held here
;
from time immemorial, are the property of the Corporation and are probably the
finest in the North of England. Doncaster, being the market town of a rich agricul-
tural district, the supplies of food are assured and good, provided this agricultural land
is not allowed to become submerged.
The rates. of the district compare favourably with any other part of England, and
are probably the lowest in the country for any town the size of Doncaster. The Cor-
poration are exceedingly wealthy, being the owners of an extensive corporate estate
granted to the Corporation about the time of Richard i. Underlying the Corpora-
16
.
REGIONAL
tion's estate are valuableseams of coal on which the nearest (Armthorpe) Colliery is
now being sunk, and from which within a few years very
considerable sums of money
will be received for coal royalties. The Corporate Estate, which includes the famous
Doncaster Racecourse, is well managed by the civic authorities and is
the source of
considerable revenue, which judiciously applied
is for the benefit of the Town
generally.
It will be seen therefore that the advantages which this Region
has to offer are
very considerable, and they may be summarised briefly as follows :
Electricity Supply.
The importance of a supply of cheap Electric energy for Power and Lighting
is an essential factor of the utmost importance in the development of a large industrial
district. In readiness for the industrial expansion which must take place within
a few years in the Doncaster Regional Area, steps have already been taken to ensure
a cheap supply of electricity for any purpose for all time.
In addition to the Power Station of the Doncaster Corporation, which stands in
the centre of this area, and the large power stations of the various colliery companies,
which are already linked up, it is proposed to establish a chain of gigantic power
stations along the entire length of the Don Valley, forming a portion of the proposed
North-East Midlands Electricity District Supply Area, which extends from Maccles-
c 17
DONCASTER
field tothe River Humber, and includes the Don Valley and the steel-making and
iron-smelting district of Frodingham. This scheme is now being dealt with by a
Parliamentary Committee, which has already taken evidence, and decided on the
necessity for the construction of super-power stations in this area.
Adequate supplies of cheap fuel are available throughout the whole of this
district. The coal from most of the collieries in the Don Valley is specially suitable
for steam-raising purposes, and the presence of the River Don provides an efficient
supply of water for condensing ;the whole thus forms an ideal condition for the
establishment of power stations.
Additional power stations are proposed at Frodingham, where the waste heat
and gas from the steel furnaces would supply the necessary heat for steam-raising
purposes. By connecting the various proposed power stations electricity could be
easily and cheaply supplied to any part of this district.
j8
;
[G),JFATER SUPPLY
An adequate supply of drinking water is probably the first essential to life
this isalways a difficult matter, and has become within recent years acute in many
of the industrial areas of England.
Since the year 1903, when the water scheme was completed for the combined
towns of Sheffield, Rotherham, and Doncaster, which absorbed all the remaining
gathering-grounds available, leaving practically no stream untapped, the population of
the Doncaster Regional Area has increased more rapidly than any other comparable
industrial district in England. The question of a supply of water has therefore been
of the first importance, emphasised by the position in 1921 which showed the grave
character of the problem.
Underlying the east and south-east sides of the Region huge beds of Triassic
Sandstone exist in the form of saucers and act as sponges, collecting and filtering
the water over an immense area, from which it is anticipated that there will be
no difficulty in the future of obtaining all the supplies of water which may be required
for the population likely to be located hereabouts.
The two larger diameter Water Bores which have recently been put down are
about 250 and 320 feet deep, and the water is 10 to 12 degrees of hardness.
Although a copious supply can be obtained at 70 to 90 feet, the water is in many
places harder the nearer the surface is approached.
Continuous pumping for 48 and 56 hours at the larger bores has been unable to
make any impression on the supply of water. From actual experience it appears
evident that bores within about a mile of each other at about 300 feet deep may
be safely put down, in districts where the Sandstone exists, without mutual effect on
the supply.
It is to be noted that the reduced rest level of the water in the bores in the
Sandstone coincides over a wide area in bores five and six miles apart.
Professor Kendall of Leeds gives it as his opinion that there is sufficient drinking
water of a good quality and little hardness in the Sandstone to supply the needs
of a much larger population than is ever likely to be found in the Doncaster
Regional Area.
The supply of water should be dealt with regionally. At the present time
applications are being considered from Askern and Rossington
parishes for supplies
from the Doncaster Corporation both parishes being outside the authorised area of
supply which includes, in addition to the Borough, the
U.D.C. of Bentley and the
of Armthorpe, Cantley, Loversall, Barnby Dun, with Kirk Sandall, Warms-
parishes
worth, and Sprotbrough.
19
PART II
ZONING REGULATIONS for
or the
planning schemes which are prepared by the Local Authorities themselves. But, as
a result of the general consideration which has been given to the district, certain
broad ideas emerge, which are needful to form the basis of its satisfactory
development.
It is clear that the low-lying land is not so healthy for residential purposes as
the higher ground ; and, where the former has been lowered so as to make even land
drainage a difficulty, its unsuitability for an increased population becomes manifest.
At the same time the pitheads of several collieries are situated on this low ground,
and more might be opened on it. Again the proximity of waterways and railways
suggest that the example of Messrs Pilkington at Kirk Sandall will be followed and;
while at the same time by means of carefully considered local transport to provide
facilities to render sites on the higher ground readily accessible from existing or new
collieries or factories upon the lower. A road or railway system, suitable for an
agricultural community centring upon Doncaster as its market town, is no longer
sufficient for a growing manufacturing district containing this special
problem of areas
barred for housing.
Having therefore roughly allocated the areas for their most suitable use, in the
next part of the Report will be shown how the necessary transport
facilities can be
obtained.
23
[K).MANUFACTURING AREAS
In the case of Factory land it is necessary to divide it into two different classes ; not
however following the usual practice, according as it is smoke-producing or smoke-
less, or, as at Sheffield, into Heavy or Light Trades.
The existing positions of the Pitheads dotted about the whole area, in some
cases amidst the most beautiful surroundings and on high and low ground make it
extremely difficult to prohibit factories anywhere in this Region except where land
^
has been earmarked for definite housing or recreational purposes. large area of un- A
developed land will therefore be left of a neutral character, which local town-planning
schemes may determine to be used for factories or not, devising their detailed plans so
that houses and restricted factories are not mutually harmful. Anyhow, this Neutral
Zone should carry the restriction that, except for collieries, it is to be used for smoke-
less factories. For the purpose of this restriction, however, it would be necessary to
include in the term Colliery,' power and bye-piroduct plants which were situated in
'
about among villages. And, generally speaking, the Transport facilities which they at
present possess, and which are to be augmented under the recommendations of this
Report, will decide a manufacturer in selecting a site upon them.
For the purpose, therefore, of industrial development this Region is divided into
two types of area :
(i) a Neutral Zone where collieries will be allowed, but where
other factories must comply with certain restrictions as to height and as to smoke and
other nuisances (ii) Manufacturing areas proper, unrestricted for industrial use, but
;
24
{B).--HOUSIJVG AREAS
The housing development of the Region is to be encouraged and indeed restricted
to what has been called the Neutral Zone, situated above the 25 feet Ordnance
datum. It would be impossible, and indeed invidious, to single out areas in this
higher land as more suited than others for residential purposes. The natural inference,
however, would be that the land that fringes the manufacturing area proper will
develop at an early date. One
can foresee a succession of residential communities from
Barnby Dun through Armthorpe to Doncaster on one side of the northern low-lying
area, and from Askern through Carcroft, Adwick-le-Street, Bentley and Cusworth to
Doncaster on the other.
The southern manufacturing area is more difficult to forecast. The village of
Rossington and its adjacent area should grow rapidly, and there would seem room for
two comparatively new centres of population one south-west of Cantley and the
:
the object of this forecast being merely to emphasise the need of focussing this growth
round well-marked centres
either existing or to be created
in order to avoid
straggling riband development along all the main roads, or formless masses of houses
without vertebrate structure.
It is, nevertheless, difficult to see of general Regional zoning
how by means
restrictions this satisfactory grouping of new houses can be enforced on the Neutral
Zone, for, with the exception of the immediate neighbourhood of the collieries, the
land is all suitable for housing. Rather must it be left to the constructive skill with
which the local town-planning schemes are prepared and administered. Every effiDrt
should be made when building proposals are put forward to secure that they form part
of a coherent scheme, and that eventually an adequate civic centre will be produced.
Fortunately some of the new villages show by their lay out that this aspect of com-
munity growth has been grasped e.g. Woodlands, Kirk Sandall, and Rossington (the
:
D 25
;
DONCASTER
land, but including roads, local playgrounds and open spaces, churches, shops, and
civic centres.^
Such a restriction should cause no hardship to landowners, as it has been proved
conclusively that the old method of crowding houses in closely packed parallel rows is
not even good business and in addition, estates laid out on sound lines, in accordance
:
the villages situated on this low land, except such as are absolutely essential for the local
cultivation of the soil. This contour line will vary under the administration of local
town-planning schemes to suit the varying cases E.g. :
(iii) where drainage is especially difficult for example at a point furthest from
the sea.
HEIGHT OF BUILDINGS
In order that light and air may not be unduly obstructed, and in order to
discourage the erection of Tenement dwellings, it is desirable that there should be
control as to the heights of Dwelling-houses and of Industrial Buildings in areas other
than those set apart primarily for Industry.
A
simple general standard would be the requirement that no building should in
any part exceed 70 feet in height, nor project above a line drawn from the centre of
the street opposite at an angle of 56 with the horizontal.
Local conditions such as subsidence may vary this.
1 See also Part VII.
26
[C].AGRICULTURAL AREAS
When a countryside is for the greater part given up to farming, it appears somewhat
unnecessary to make recommendations for Agricultural Zoning. But in a growing
manufacturing the farming becomes gradually restricted in area and less
district
productive, owing to smoke, etc. Though it is of the utmost value for purposes of
food production and general health to leave agricultural belts between manufacturing
towns and large continuous residential areas, it has not so far been found easy to do
this when the land to be left was suitable for factories or houses the difference
:
between the value of the land for either of these developments and that realisable
from farming, with the consequent possible claims for compensation from owners, has
so far deterred local authorities from zoning for agricultural use only. At Letch-
worth, it will be remembered, the land is in public ownership, in which case the
community finds it profitable to forgo the development increment for its own good.
But in this district there is a case for a large agricultural area on the northern
low-lying land, west of the Don, which is scheduled as unsuitable for housing. The
total extent of this low-lying land is greater than will be required for factory develop-
ment, and it forms a valuable wedge of farm land approaching to within one and a
half miles of Doncaster.
While therefore in the Neutral Zone one may expect to see the agricultural
land gradually dwindling as other development increases, there remains the purely
Agricultural Zone which should at all costs be kept intact and free from flooding.
(See Part I., C and D.)
It will be noticed that in the southern low-lying area, between Doncaster and
Rossington, no agricultural land is left the whole being scheduled for factories.
But it may be pointed out that it seems likely that the southern portion of this
Region, of which perhaps Tickhill might be called the capital, will always remain
predominantly agricultural. The low-lying land to the east of Cantley and Awkley
is scheduled as a definite agricultural area.
27
i^), RECREATIONAL AREAS: PRESERVATION of
The
FEATURES of BEAUTY and of HISTORIC INTEREST
earmark them for parks and playgrounds. Unlike many industrial districts, such as
South Lancashire, South Wales, and South Teeside, there are, with one exception, no
natural features such as steep hillside slopes, river gorges, upland moors or sandy
wastes suitable either for farming, housing, or manufacturing. There are, indeed,
the low-lying areas, but these, provided they can be kept from flooding, are first-rate
agricultural land (or zoned for manufacturing), and furthermore, being divorced from
housing, will not be sufficiently accessible for playgrounds, and are not attractive
enough for a nature reserve.^
The only areas in the Neutral Zone which are marked out from agricultural land
are the tracts of woodland and the private parks. There are fine woods in the
neighbourhoods of Brodsworth, Edlington, and Armthorpe, but none of these is
perhaps remarkable enough to be preserved for its own intrinsic beauty. Private
parks have already in certain cases been absorbed for the purpose of village sites
rather than for open spaces, as may be seen at Woodlands and there are others that
:
shows some of these open spaces so articulated. It is very necessary that this
systematic provision of open spaces should be borne in mind so that the large tracts
already possessed by the Doncaster Corporation and the local spaces to be acquired
by the new communities may be knit into a logical Regional Park System. The
advantages of co-operation between Local Authorities are perhaps nowhere more
obvious than in the joint preparation of a scheme for open spaces and the joint
administration of them.
1 Compare the large nature reserve of floodland on the Danube south of Vienna, which, on the contrary
is an attractive piece of wild country.
28
PLATE 111.
CONISBROUGH CASTLE
The Canal,
SPROTBROUGH
REGIONAL
The exception, mentioned above, to the absence of remarkable natural features
which, by reason of their beauty on the one hand, and unsuitability to other forms of
use on the other, renders them manifestly suitable for preservation, is found at
Sprotbrough, Here the outcrop of magnesian limestone has been cut through by
the Don, forming a gorge of extreme beauty. This, combined with the park and
village, with its remarkable church, should be preserved as they are the only change :
allowed should be the bridge, which will ultimately be required for carrying the Ring
Road across the valley.The greatest care should be taken that this bridge does not
destroy the beauty of this scene, and it is only necessary to point to Telford's
Suspension Bridge across the Menai Straits in North Wales to show how artistically
such an engineering feat can be accomplished. This feature of natural beauty is to be
preserved of course in the interests of the Region as a whole.
The principal object of historical interest in the region is to be found close to
Sprotbrough, namely, Conisbrough Castle. This magnificent limestone ruin is
already thoroughly looked after, and its setting, so far as the immediately situated
town and quarries will allow, is satisfactory.
The other historic features of the district most worthy of preservation are certain
of the old villages ; Campsall, Burghwallis, Hickleton, High Melton, Marr, Hooton
Pagnell and others still preserve their original character. Wherever possible, when
these places are found on important traffic routes, the main stream of traffic should
be carried beside them by means of a bye-pass the old method of widening the
:
village street was both costly and destructive of its charm. Hooton Pagnell is perhaps
the most beautiful village in this area and, although quite close to Frickley Colliery,
it remain as it is.
will probably
For a growing district such as this, it is impossible to overestimate the value of
the preservation of its beautiful relics of the past.
Mention should also be made of some of the fine tree-planted avenues in the
Region the Great North Road, where it enters Doncaster, Sheep Bridge Lane, near
:
Rossington, and others no road widening should be allowed to interfere with those
:
trees, which could be worked into the new widths where required. It is to be
regretted that the most durable type of tree has not always been planted in the past,
some of those of an age of about 80 years being badly decayed. Provision should
be made at once for replacing these with varieties which experience has shown will
have a longer life in the district.
The tree-planting on all wide new roads should be most carefully studied.
29
PART III
COMMUNICATIONS
ROAD: RAIL: and WATER
PLATE r.
tion with the rest of the country and secondly, because it is a comparatively simple
;
fully supplied, a single road (made up largely of existing portions) with a loop on the
west is sufficient to provide circumferential connection. For the rest, the widening of
existing roads (still easy of accomplishment), and the bye-passing of narrow village
streets and the establishment of mechanical methods of transportation, will complete
without much outlay a most efficient local road system.
It is perhaps hardly necessary to say that it is not suggested that all the new
Roads or improvements of old ones should be put in hand at once but it is essential :
to keep the routes open so that the district can develop economically and efficiently.
1 Beyond, of course, sidings for opening up new areas for works sites.
33
{A). ROADS
The Doncaster Region, as already mentioned, possesses an unusual system of radiating
roads :but though their widths are in most parts adequate for through traffic
passing in the midst of open country and along remote or rural village streets, a
careful study of every yard of them is necessary to ensure that they will take the same
amount of through traffic, augmented by the local traffic of a manufacturing district,
and the marginal obstructions of a built-up area. Owing to the almost universal use
of the main roads by all classes, it is felt that some better system should be devised to
provide for their maintenance and upkeep. A large amount of heavy through traffic
makes use of the main roads in this area, and an adequate method of construction,
strengthening and maintenance has become too costly to be borne locally. The
time has come for the Imperial Authority to assume responsibility for all main roads.
When one considers how heavy are the axle loads carried by the roads in this area, it
must be confessed that in nearly every instance they bear favourable comparison with
the roads of any part of England.
The ideal road surface suitable for all kinds of traffic does not appear to have yet
been found, a surface suitable for horse traction being entirely unsuitable to stand the
wear and tear of mechanically propelled vehicles. Again, many of the roads will not
stand the fast-moving heavy lorry traffic, which appears to tear up the road surfaces
entirely through the speed at which these vehicles travel, for heavier vehicles with
smooth tyres, travelling slower, do not show as much damage.
The width of 120 feet, with building lines set back a further 40 feet from the
fences on either side of the road, which is put forward as a standard for the National
Trunk Roads and the Ring Road, has been arrived at as a result of a study of roads for
similar purposes elsewhere and of the latest traffic width-units adopted by the Ministry
of Transport.
At Liverpool the original width of 80 feet for the great circumferential Boule-
vard, Queen's Drive, has now been increased to 120 feet as a normal size, and the same
standard is used in Birmingham and other towns this has also been adopted for the
:
new Tees-side Road now in course of construction between Thornaby and Middles-
brough, Redcar and Saltburn.
The same arrangement of carriageway, tram track, paths, grass strips, etc.,
would not be used in every case. But, generally speaking, a carriageway of 40 feet
(four traffic units) should be regarded as a minimum. Alternative arrangements are
given, see Plate VI.
The whole cross-section would rarely be completed at once, but it is important
to reserve the land so that when increasing traffic necessitates greater width of paving
the land required is at the disposal of the Local Authority.
In many parts of the Regional Area there is a considerable want of warning
signs on the roads : this can no doubt be accounted for by the abnormal develop-
ments that have taken place within the last few years, where villages with popula-
34
PLATE n.
"-'
'^p t ^ '
'
\t
f ^
v^^
Bam
I J^ JL^
ALTER-MATlVE-AlLi^AIM&EMEMT FOl, MAIN li,ADIAL J_OADS
C'^i
"t '^'i
converge on Doncaster. These are not all of equal importance nationally, the Great
North Road outweighing the others in fame and grandeur.
(ii) Secondly, there are those roads which apparently carry a traffic almost as
heavy as the trunk roads, but which have their origin and are self-contained within
the Region these have been called Regional Arteries.
:
(iii) Thirdly, it was thought useful to group together the new routes recom-
mended and the bye-passes, when these are large and long enough to become prac-
tically alternative new roads.
(iv) Finally, there is the Ring Road the only really big innovation which is
required. And even this new feature is largely made up of existing sections linked
up and amplified.
The numerous improvements which are suggested in the villages situated on
these roads are grouped on to two detail sheets. Immediate steps should be taken to
prevent any building which would render these improvements impossible of realisa-
tion.
out of the area at Barnsdale Bar in the county of York about eight miles north of
Doncaster. It has a fine surface throughout with practically no gradients, and being
of great width is especially adapted for transport purposes of all kinds. There are,
however, two obstructions which should be removed: the old Double Bridges Bar
and the old Toll Bar House, about two miles south of Doncaster. Shortly before
reaching the Town of Doncaster the road runs alongside the Racecourse, where it
widens out and is flanked by avenues of trees forming a most impressive entrance
into the town. After reaching the top of Hall Gate, where the junction roads
to Thorne, Goole, etc., leave on the east and the Sheffield Road on the west, the
road considerably narrowed and is again further narrowed at the
is
High Street, which
also forms the principal street of the Town of Doncaster.
35
DONCASTER
At the present time the High Street is considerably overloaded, particularly
with heavy traffic, and urgently requires relief. During many hours of the day it is
taxed to its utmost capacity. Areturn of a census of traffic recently made showed that
some 2000 vehicles used this road for through traffic during twelve hours of the day.
After passing the centre of the town the road is again narrowed by the River Don
Bridge (the widening of which is now being considered). A little distance farther on
it is carried by flood arches built of stone, and, although of reasonable width, these
must require replacement within a few years as the present heavy traffic is more than
the arches were designed to carry. After this point the road again assumes the same
high-class character, being practically straight and free from corners and turns. The
grass verge on one side of the road carries the tram track to Brodsworth. It is
suggested that the grass verge on the other side of the road should be taken into the
carriageway to widen the same between Doncaster and Brodsworth, and that the bends
in the road at Robin Hood's Well be removed. An adequate building line (say 40 feet)
should be prescribed along the entire length in open country of the Great North
Road, as, owing to its national character, every precaution should be taken to provide
for any future invention which may revolutionise the means of transport, and make
the widening of this route a national necessity. For this purpose the width of the
road between fences is suggested to be 120 feet, with building lines set back 40 feet
from the fences.
No. 2
be made for it being widened as required. At Owston a narrow bridge, over a stream
at the foot of the bridge approach over the West Riding and Grimsby Railway,
requires immediate widening and straightening.
Several road intersections urgently require corners opening out, to allow traffic
entering this road to do so with safety.
36
PLATE. I'll.
// f^ffS 1
'^fo!
Cooke Street, siii^gestcJ to lead by ll'ateh House Lane to Great North Road
Shoixjing Tram Line through narrow Main Road to York and Selhy.
BE NT LEY
REGIONAL
Farther on the road is altogether too narrow where it passes through Askern ;
and as the buildings abutting on it here are for the most part exceedingly old and of
little value, a favourable opportunity presents itself to prescribe a new building line,
including the widening of the junction of Moss Road with the Selby Road which
forms the centre of Askern.
North of Askern the road passes through agricultural land, and provision should
be made, together with a prescribed building line, for widening the entire length of
it. At about one mile north of Askern the road passes out of the Regional Area.
The total length in the area is about nine miles, the whole of which is practically
flat, with no gradients whatever.
No. 3
Doncaster), this section of road carries probably the heaviest loads into the West
Riding manufacturing area. At the ' Red House a slight easing of the road is
'
required, as present traffic coming from Wakefield is concealed at the junction. The
length of road from the Red House to where
' ' it passes out of the Regional Area
is two miles, and practically the whole of this requires widening to a width of
1 20 feet between fences, with a building line set back 40 feet. At the junction with
the road to South Elmsall and Hooton Pagnell the corners should be considerably
widened out, this work being urgent.
No. 4
THE WORKSOP, OLD NOmNGHAM ROAD
{The NORTH to the MIDLANDS)
Originally an old Roman road, it requires widening throughout the Doncaster
Regional Area. A
large amount of heavy through traffic is carried by it, and must
always be so, owing to its being the nearest way to Mansfield and the North
Derbyshire industrial area. Where it leaves the Sheffield Road it immediately
passes into the narrow street of Balby Low Road ; a suggested bye-pass for this is
referred to on page 46.
From Balby forward Loversall several corners occur, all of which could
to
be removed in the suggested widening. At Loversall a narrow village street with a
dangerous turn could be avoided entirely by the construction of a short length of
new road. The hill at Wadworth requires regrading and two bad corners taken out ;
this necessitate the demolition of some very old property.
would Beyond the village
of Wadworth to the entrance to Tickhill village the road is straight.
It is suggested that the present back road at Tickhill
should be opened out,
widened and straightened, so as to form a bye-pass for through traffic ; the village
37
^
DONCASTER
streetof Tickhill, which contains several ugly right-angle corners and danger spots,
would by this means be relieved of the heavy through traffic.
At the south end of Tickhill back road, a small piece of new road would be
necessary to complete the bye-pass.
This road after leaving Tickhill is somewhat wider, but should an opportunity
occur it should be made the width (80 ft.)shown for main roads with the requisite
building lines.
No. 5
38
REGIONAL
At Hatfield, seven miles from Doncaster, the road passes forward through Thorne,
where the Canal Bridge requires strengthening. From Thorne to Goole it is somewhat
narrow several small bridges require regrading and the wooden bridge over the Dutch
;
river replacing, as it is totally unfitted for the heavy through traffic using it, forming
as it does the principal means of access to Goole. The road approach to the bridge
requires considerable alteration at the present time this approach from either side is
;
No. 7
is in abad state owing to the fact of its being the main road to Manchester and
Liverpool and too narrow to carry the large amount of very heavy traffic using it,
including a motor bus service from Barnsley to Doncaster.
The road at two miles from Doncaster passes through Scawsby, where it is
narrow, and about two miles farther on runs through the village of Marr at both ;
No. 8
at Conisbro' (referred to on page 45), where a dangerous hill and cross-roads exist
which the bye-pass road would largely eliminate. The traffic carried by this road is
of an extremely heavy axle load which must in the near future further greatly
increase. It is almost certain that within a few years car lines will be constructed on
it to link up the Rotherham and Sheffield trams with Doncaster.
The road should
be widened to a width of 120 feet, with building lines of 40 feet.
Considerable widening is urgently required to Balby High Road (in the borough
of Doncaster); also where the road runs through the village of Warmsworth a
very dangerous bend of the road exists, which should receive immediate attention.^
The length of the road from the town of Doncaster to the boundary of the
Regional Area is six and a half miles.
1
For alternative route from Sheffield to Doncaster, avoiding Rotherham, see Addendum on page 41.
2 See Plate X. No. 17.
39
DONCASTER
No. 9
THE LINCOLN ROAD
{THE NORTH AND DONCASTER to THE EASTERN COUNTIES)
The entrance to this road is an exceedingly dangerous one, leaving the Great
North Road (No. i) at Bawtry by a right-angle turn from a wide road into a very
narrow street, with two other similar right-angle turns following within a few yards.
It has been the scene of many serious accidents.
A
short length of new road about 80 yards long and 100 feet wide, which, if
provided (now the site of an old garden), will remove this danger, should be con-
structed at once as the cost would be only slight. This is the main road to the Trent
Bridge at Gainsboro', giving access to the Eastern Counties and the towns of Lincoln
and Louth and to the sea. There are dangerous corners at Grinley-on-the-Hill and
Beckingham, both outside the Regional Area.
No. 10
THE BAWTRT AND SELBT MAIN ROAD
{LONDON to YORK {avoiding DONCASTER) and eventually to HULL)
At Bawtry, nine miles south of Doncaster, an important main road leaves the
Great North Road (No. i) and, running through Austerfield and Finningley, passes
out of the Doncaster Area three miles beyond Blaxton. This road, called the Bawtry
and Selby Main Road, was constructed about 1760, at which time, and until the advent
of the railways, it formed an important route in the district. In the old days, when
Thorne was a busy riverside port and the Don a much used waterway, this road
carried an enormous amount of road traffic, taking goods to and from Thorne. With
the coming of the railways the river traffic gradually ceased, and the road for some years
has formed little more than the means of communication between adjoining villages.
Now that road transport has again come to the front the importance of this
road will be readily seen. It is of considerable width and only requires corners easing
in a few places and widening where it passes through the small village of Austerfield,
with a short bye-pass through Finningley. At little cost it could be made into a
useful route connecting up the Great North Road with the towns of Thorne, Goolc
and Hull, and the important new bridge over the Trent at Keadby, which gives direct
access to Grimsby and Cleethorpes and a large portion of Lincolnshire. Heavy
char-a-banc traffic to Cleethorpes during the summer season makes use of this road
more and more each year.
The road also forms an exceedingly useful bye-pass for through traffic going north
of Doncaster, as it connects at Selby with the main road from Doncaster to York.
It would thus relieve the streets of Doncaster of a large amount of heavy motor lorry
traffic passing through it and north-east. It would further form a useful
to the north
road from London to Hull whenever the proposed bridge at Boothferry is constructed,
as it would shorten the distance from London to Hull by about twenty miles.
40
PI.Al E I'Hi.
The entrance into High Street from Lincoln to Great North RoaJ.
BAIVTRT
REGIONAL
ADDENDUM Sheffield to Doncaster {see No. 8].
Recent road proposals now being considered by the Sheffield Corporation seem to
open the way, in co-operation with the Rotherham Region Joint Town-Planning Com-
mittee, for an additional route from Sheffield to Doncaster, avoiding Rotherham on
the one hand and passing Maltby on the other, and joining the main road at Edlington.
In the first instance, the route followed between Wickersley and Old EdHngton might
be via Maltby, leaving the short cut to be developed later, provided that the site for
it is reserved now. This would fit in very well with the proposals for the Doncaster
Region, and the Local Authorities concerned are recommended to preserve the line of
route which chiefly comprises the improvement in width, level and direction of existing
country roads, and in view of this it is recommended that the Old Edlington Road
(G) should be widened to main road width, viz. 120 feet between hedges with build-
ing lines set back 40 feet at either side from the road.
(A)
This road leaves the Great North Road just beyond the outskirts of the Borough
of Doncaster, is already a good width, and can easily be widened as required
to a width of 80 ft. with a building line of 40 ft. It is being used more and
more every day as an alternative to the Barnsley (No. 7) Road for traffic going to
Goldthorpe, Bolton-on-Dearne and adjoining district.
After leaving Doncaster the road for a short distance is low and has been
covered with water in heavy flood times. It is, however, only a matter of small cost
to prevent this from recurring. After passing Sprotbro' (where the proposed Ring
Road would intersect) it is somewhat narrowed, and requires widening and corners
straightening out as far as Melton, where the road to Mexboro' intersects. If the road
corners here were properly widened out a very good alternative route to Mexboro',
avoiding Denaby and Conisbro', would be made. After leaving Melton, the road
passes through Barnborough on to Goldthorpe, the whole requiring strengthening.
The length of the road in the Doncaster Regional Area is about 6| miles.
F 41
DONCASTER
(B)
shortly carry a very much heavier axle load it should be as soon as possible widened to
80 ft., with 40 ft. building lines. At the junction of the road to Long Sandall,
where a very bad blind corner exists with a Railway Bridge over, the road should
be widened out at once. At Kirk Sandall at the intersection of Brecks Lane (which
forms the main road to the New Village) a bad corner exists which should be
widened out immediately. Near Barnby Dun Station it connects to the proposed
Ring Road, and turns through the village of Barnby Dun to Stainforth.
(C)
further there is a bad bridge over the River Torne, and a further dangerous turn at
Awkley, after which the road is again wider to Finningley and Blaxton.
The whole length of this road requires widening, and in some places old property
must be demolished to do this.
(D)
The distance from Doncaster to Finningley by this road is exactly the same as
by Cantley and Awkley, and it would be much safer for traffic than the direct road
by Cantley (C), which in spite of improvements would remain an indifferent
through route,
42
PLATE IX.
'
tfca/e ^soo
PUT X.
CONISBRO' TO MEXBORO'
(From the SHEFFIELD ROAD to MEXBORO')
(F)
(G)
1 The suggested road from Sheffield to Doncaster (see Addendum, p. 41), avoiding Rotherham, would
require this road from Edlington to Doncaster to be 120 feet wide.
44
REGIONAL
as far as possible, the only newof road necessary (excluding the bye-
sections
pass road at Conisbro', Road No.
being about one mile between Mexboro' and
ii.)
Road No. I, and about one mile of new road between Mexboro' and Road No. 8.
Generally the width of all proposed new routes should be 80 feet between fences,
with building lines set back 40 feet from the fences.
Leaving Mexboro' (on the site of an old Roman Road now used as a footway)
running due north, and utilising Harlington Lane for a short distance, the proposed
road would intersect Mill Lane at Harlington Mill a new section of road about
;
three-quarters of a mile long would be necessary after leaving Harlington Mill the ;
road would follow Mill Lane to Harlington Village. At this point the Sprotbro'
Road intersects and would require corners widening out. After leaving Harlington the
road would pass over the Dearne Valley Railway by an existing bridge and continue
forward to Barnborough, where a short length of road would be required to bye-pass
part of Barnborough Village. On leaving Hickleton it would cross the Barnsley
Road (No. 7) and proceed by Bilham Grange to Brodsworth through Pigburn to the
Red House, where it would intersect the Leeds and Bradford Road (No. 3), and
connect up with the Great North Road (No. i).
Leaving Mexboro' the road would proceed along Ferry Boat Lane and cross the
canal by the existing bridge. A new bridge would be necessary to carry the road over
the River Don (on the site of the Ferry there), afterwards passing over the G.C.R.
by the existing level-crossing. The road would be carried through Old Denaby by a
short section of new road, and be curved slightly to rise up the hill, following an old
route, through Denaby Wood to Denaby Thick (wood), where a short length of new
road would connect to the Sheffield Road (No. 8) at a point between Hill Top and
Mount Pleasant, where the proposed Conisbro' bye-pass road intersects Road No. 8.
From here the proposed road would run on the Conisbro' bye-pass road to the Clifton
Hill and Carr Lane, continuing forward to Old Edlington, where it intersects the road
from Doncaster to Maltby, and forward to the Ring Road to the east of Wadworth.
At Maltby a connection would be obtained to the Worksop Road (No. 4).
No. ii.
CONISBRO' (BTE-PJSS)
The Sheffield Road (No. leaving Doncaster, keeps to the high ground.
8), after
At Conisbro' a very dangerous hill, with cross-roads entering at a very steep grade,
exists. Both sides of the road are built up, and any widening would be costly, and at
the same time would not do away with the dangerous character of the hill.
It is construct a Bye-pass Road two miles long.
proposed to The proposed road
would leave the Road just beyond the bridge which crosses the Dearne
Sheffield
the road from
Valley Railway, and would hold to the high ground intersecting
45
DONCASTER
Edlington to Conisbro' on the level. Proceeding forward it would pass at the rear
of the brickyard and cemetery and would again connect with the Main Road No. 8
at a point halfway between Mount Pleasant and Hill Top.
No. iii.
No. iv.
BALBT (BTE-PASS)
The congested state of the Balby Road at the junction of Roads No. 4 and 8,^
coupled with the very narrow part of Road No. 4, where it forms the village street of
Balby, make the provision of a New Road an immediate necessity so that the dangerous
corners in Balby may be avoided.
The proposed road, a little over half-a-mile long, would leave Road No. 8 near
the White Swan Inn, going forward on the site of Balby Back Lane to Woodfield
Lane, afterwards proceeding direct to Road No. 4, which it would intersect at the
corner of Common Lane the portion of entirely new road being slightly under a
:
2 See Plate X. No. 21. ^ For details of the improvements required at various intersections
46
PLATE M.
This diagram shonvs that if Trams or Buses ran on eniery important Road, there ivould still be large inaccessible areas.
PLATE XII.
cottages, passing the new Housing Scheme, and turning down Madam Lane in
a straight line to Barnby Dun Bridge foot this involves the demolition of the old
:
cottages in MadamLane.^
After crossing the Don the road cuts straight over the low-lying land, passing the
village of Almholme, and then on a curve past Arksey, across the Great Northern
Railway by a new bridge, and enters the village of Bentley just south of the Bentley
Colliery. From this point to the Great North Road is one of the most debatable
sections of the Ring clearly the simple course would appear to be to cut straight across
;
the Great Central and Hull and Barnsley Railway, and the Great Northern Railway
lines, to Green Lane which enters the Great
North Road south of Woodlands, where
This route would necessitate two new railway bridges.
the old quarries are situated.
Another would bring the Ring out north with a sweep wide enough to include
line
Adwick-le-Street, and using Bentley Moor Lane and Doncaster Lane with the :
the Great North Road both for radial and circumferential traffic. This route only
requires one bridge. Probably the second route best meets present requirements.
The western part of the Ring beyond the Great North Road turns almost due
south, utilising Scawsby Lane up to the
point where the latter crosses the South York-
1 Plate IX. Nos. 5 and 6.
47
DONCASTER
shire Junction Railway. Instead of widening the lane beyond the railway, the Ring
Road iskept on the eastern side of it, thereby avoiding two narrow railway bridges and
eventually crossing the Sprotbrough Road. The lane on the west of the railway and
the two narrow railway bridges could of course be used until the new route was con-
structed, but it would be inadvisable to spend money on their widening. The same
applies to Sprotbro' ; the valley of the Don here is the only serious natural obstacle
which the Ring Road has to deal with in the whole course of its route. For the time
being the existing road through the village, the bridge and hairpin bends on the south
side could be used, until a bye-pass and new high-level bridge or viaduct were con-
structed on the line shown.
Both routes combine at Mill Lane, crossing the G.C.R. by the existing bridge and
the Sheffield Road (No. 8) at Warmsworth. Lords Head Lane to the east of Yorkshire
Main Colliery is then utilised as far as the Edlington Road (G), at which point a new
connection joins up with Wood Lane and V/hitecross Lane, skirting Edlington and Wad-
worth Woods. The village of Wadworth itself is bye-passed and, from this point, the
Ring goes nearly due east, utilising portions of old lanes and crossing the South York-
shire Joint Railway (existing narrow bridge) to the south of Rossington New Village;
thence, by the level-crossing over the G.N. Railway, it enters Rossington Old Village.
It has been found impossible entirely to bye-pass the latter, but a fairly good route,
cutting off a big corner opposite St. Michael's Church, is possible, eventually connecting
up to the Great North Road (No. i) at Rossington Bridge by Sheep Bridge Lane.
It is perhaps needless to say that all existing routes utilised by the Ring would
require widening, but if this route is carefully studied on the map it will be seen that,
with comparatively short connecting links and local improvements, the Ring could be
brought into existence. The subsequent widenings and rebuilding of railway bridges
would proceed at later dates as occasion permitted. The road is proposed to be
eventually 1 20 feet wide between the hedges, and 40 feet building lines are also recom-
mended. This width would of course be modified where the road passed actually
through villages such as Rossington, but in all cases a carriage-way of at least 40 feet
should be aimed at.
A shorter route for this Ring Road might possibly have been devised on the
north, crossing the Don on a line somewhere between Armthorpe and Arksey. How-
ever, the wider sweep suggested appears in every way preferable.
An outer Ring on the north and west could be planned, utilising, on the west, the
new route (No. i.) from the Ring at Wadworth through Mexboro' to the Great North
Road at Red House. From here a new route to Barnby Dun can be obtained with
a small amount of new road construction. For about half a mile the Great North
Road is used, leaving it at the five cross-roads beyond Humber Head Bridge thence by
:
Burghwallis, bye-passing Sutton, crossing Trunk Road (No. 2) south of Askern, and so
to Rushy Moor House. The route then goes through Haywood and Trumfleet, passing
near Thorpe-in-Balne, and continuing by the side of the Don to Barnby Dun, From
Askern Road to Barnby Dun one short length of new road, and improvements at Hay-
wood and Trumfleet, are all that is necessary to make the route through the Agricultural
belt at once available. The width through the Agricultural belt should be 60 feet.
48
Pi..rrE xiii.
The object of this plan is to shoiv, by means of circles round the Railnvay Stations, hoiu inadequately the Region is ser-vedfor
purposes of local passenger traffic.
{^.RAILfFATS
\.MAIN LINES
The Railways serving the Doncaster Regional Area are as below :
The Great Northern Railway.
The Great Central Railway.
The Great Eastern Railway.
The North-Eastern Railway.
The Midland Railway.
The London and North- Western Railway.
The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway.
The Hull and Barnsley Railway.
The Great Northern Railway is the chief main line of the district both as re-
gards goods and passenger traffic. It forms one of the main links of the East Coast
Railway Service of England and Scotland and provides an unequalled service of main
lines running through the Doncaster Regional Area, giving direct access to Leeds,
Bradford, Wakefield, and the West Riding towns, in addition to being the main
line to London and Scotland.
The Railway Station at Doncaster, the hub of this system of Main Lines, from
which all passenger trains arrive and depart (about 240 trains making use of the one
station daily), is totally inadequate for the amount of traffic handled, and a very much
larger station is required, together with the widening out of Balby Railway Bridge
which forms a bottle-neck entrance to the station.
Just south of Doncaster, on the Carr,^ there is a huge network of junctions and
sidings belonging to this railway, and on both sides of the line there is an area
of several hundreds of acres of Carr land adjoining, which being perfectly flat is
eminently adapted for works sites, although unsuitable for any other purpose owing
to its being low-lying.
The Great Central Railway forms the main line between the East and West
Coast, Hull and Liverpool. In addition to giving access to Sheffield and Manchester
and to Lancashire generally, it probably carries the largest amount of the mineral
traffic of any railway in the district, to cope with which it has recently constructed
an avoiding line between Warmsworth, west of Doncaster, and joining the main
line again just east of Doncaster. This line practically forms a railway bye-pass
through Doncaster Station for mineral traffic coming from the West and proceeding
to the East Coast ports of Hull, Grimsby and Goole. Adjoining this company's line
are large areas of land most suitable for works sites requiring both rail and water
^ As the low-lying land is called.
G 49
DONCASTER
connection. Suitable provision should be made on the Wheatley
for tapping the land
side, and any provision of new^ bridges crossing the river or canal should be
wherever possible designed to carry both road and rail traffic. A suggestion of bring-
ing coal direct from the collieries to a depot close to the town of Doncaster has
many advantages both as regards reduction of cost and facility of handling the
Town's supplies.
The Great Eastern Railway (the Great Northern and Great Eastern Joint Line
to March) connects the Eastern Counties and also Harwich. The Great Eastern Rail-
way has running powers to York on the North-Eastern Railway and forms an excellent
connection to the Continent in addition to its great use as a passenger-carrying line.
A large mineral traffic is carried by this railway from the South Yorkshire Coalfield.
The North-Eastern Railway (the East Coast Line), commencing at Shaftholme
Junction about 3^ miles north of Doncaster, forms the connecting link for all
passenger and goods traffic going north and north-east of Doncaster which
must be handled by this company's system. The service for passenger and goods
traffic is good.
The Midland Railway, by whose system the West of England is reached, has
not a good service of trains to or from Doncaster either as regards passenger or goods
traffic. Although somewhat improved recently, the service still leaves a good deal to
be desired before it can be said to meet, in anything like a satisfactory manner, the
needs of this area, which appear to have been largely ignored by this company in
the past.
The London and North- Western Railway Company have in the past used the
Doncaster Area very little for passenger traffic, except for a few through trains
occasionally. It may be said this company has been of little use except for goods
traffic. However, now that the fusion has taken place between this company and the
Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Company, a good train service may be expected.
The Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway recently merged with the London and
North-Western Railway Company, whose line connects at Shaftholme and runs
through Askern to Knottingley, etc., has not in the past given as good a passenger
train service to this area as the district warranted ; a more frequent train service
is required urgently for Askern, the present service for a population of about 4000
being totally inadequate. It, however, forms another means of access to Lancashire,
Leeds and the West Riding towns, and carries a large quantity of goods and
mineral traffic.
The Hull and Barnsley Railway Company, which connects the Regional Area to
the Port of Hull, forms a direct means of exporting coal.
although splendidly served with fast passenger trains from Doncaster itself, the
surrounding Region in many parts is difficult of access. Small railway stations
REGIONAL
appear to have been put down with a view of making one station serve a number
of villages, and while this method might have been satisfactory in the past when the
Region was purely an agricultural one, now that it has changed into a thriving
industrial area a broader policy is necessary, and additional stations are required
particularly at the following places :
Bentley, Sprotbro', Bessacarr, Harworth.
Many of the large industrial communities of the district are without adequate
train services, and a better service is necessary, among others
To Askern.
To Conisbro', Mexboro', etc.
To Barnby Dun, and Stainforth and Hatfield.
To Adwick-le-Street and South Elmsall.
To Rossington.
To Adwick-on-Dearne, Barnborough and Hickleton.
To Wadworth, Tickhill and Maltby.
The districts of Wadworth and Tickhill are to-day extremely badly served by
railway ; the latter has three trains a day. The new railway which runs through
this district (constructed only a short time ago) appears to have been almost designed
to avoid being of any local service, as the railway station is about two miles from
each place.
Shortly before the war a line was projected by the Great Northern Railway
running from Bawtry to Tickhill, the land for which has already been purchased.
However, owing to the war the work was not proceeded with, but it is felt that this
railway should be constructed with as little delay as possible, as it would then give
Tickhill a convenient access both north and south, which should be of inestimable
benefit to it. There is no doubt that Tickhill owes its present unfortunate position
largely to its lack of foresight in the past, in objecting to the construction of the Great
Northern Railway main line through this district, the results of which are apparent.
III.MINERAL LINES
The mineral lines which in many cases connect the collieries with the main lines
of railways have not been in the past made use of for ordinary passenger service.
This opportunity, although primarily for the decision of the various railway
companies concerned, appears not to have been fully realised.
The mineral line to Brodsworth Colliery, forming a spur off the Great Northern
main line at Castle Hills Junction, might with advantage be made to serve as a
passenger line to Brodsworth. At present the only means of access to Doncaster
from Brodsworth is by electric trams, which cannot be considered as adequate for this
portion of the township with a surrounding population of about 7000.
51
DONCASTER
in dangerous positions, and should be removed and bridges substituted as soon as
circumstances permit of this:
The Askern crossing, severing the Doncaster and Selby Main Road.
The Askern Station crossing, intersecting the tov^n of Askern
; a footbridge is
52
{P). WATERWAYS
the western to empty into the River Aire before its junction with the Ouse the
;
other following a devious course past Crowle to enter the Trent near its mouth at
Adlingfleet.
The move, then, towards an artificial treatment of the Don came from a
first
project to curb this flooding and divert the final stage of its course it was drainage
:
rather than navigation that actuated Cornelius Vermuyden, the Dutch engineer-
merchant, who undertook to reclaim land as a speculation in the reign of Charles i.
His first project was to cut off the Trent arm by building a bank south and west of
Thorne, thereby inducing the Don to concentrate upon its channel to the Aire. This
was not successful for, while freeing the levels east of Thorne, he flooded the other
side of the Don towards Fenwick and Sykehouse, the Aire being unable to cope with
the concentrated waters of the Don. Nor did his local drainage of the levels appear
satisfactory the little river Torne which drains the cup south of Doncaster, issuing at
:
Rossington Bridge, and the Idle River were carried at right angles towards the Trent
at Althorpe and Keadby. It would seem that a more satisfactory solution would
have been to gather the Don, Torne, Idle, and other drains into one channel flowing
diagonally across, along the line of the eastern arm of the Don, to Adlingfleet near the
mouth of the Trent. This was not done but after endless litigation and riots, the
:
famous Dutch River was projected a straight cut, about one mile before the Don
joined the Aire, to the Ouse at Goole. Vermuyden had retired disgusted before this
final solution was completed, which was done by his 'participants.' It is a really
great work and after all to Cornelius Vermuyden remains the credit for boldly
tackling this gigantic business of providing the Don with a proper outlet.
The moving force for the canaHsation of the Don for the purposes of inland
transport came from the opposite end, at Sheffield. As early as 1721 the need of a
which goods could be carried to Hull, had
better water connection, by means of
become evident. But apparently the Corporations of Sheffield and Doncaster could
53
:
DONCASTER
not agree upon a joint scheme, and in 1739 a company took over the undertaking
which is known as the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation. At subsequent
dates continual alterations and improvements were made in the course of the river
tortuous bends were first short-circuited, locks added, and then lengths of canal
parallel with the river introduced. The finest length of artificial cut was that made
from Doncaster to Barnby Dun and Kirk Bramwith, now known as the River Dun
Navigation, which is really on the scale of a modern canal.
The most important departure from the channel of the Don as laid down by
Vermuyden was the Stainforth and Keadby Canal, which once more opened the direct
water connection with the Trent not on the old diagonal line towards Adling-
:
fleet, but almost due east and entering the Trent at right angles, near where Vermuyden
had brought in his River Torne. For many years this remained the main Sheffield
and Doncaster waterway, the total distance from Sheffield to Keadby being about
forty-two miles, of which two-thirds was canal and the remaining one-third river.
In 1905 a most important addition was made to the Lower Don Navigation by
the opening of the new Junction Canal, connecting up from near where the Keadby
Canal branches, to the Knottingley Canal and so to Goole, running side by side with
the Dutch River. Thus the orientation is again towards the Ouse.
This last addition is on an altogether larger scale than anything before
attempted. Whereas by the Keadby route to Sheffield the boats are limited in length
to about 62 feet, and capable of carrying about 100 tons, the new Junction Canal
will take boats up to 130 feet length (being limited to this by the ship lock at Goole),^
and capable of carrying 300 tons (some improvements would be necessary if these
large boats became the regular traffic).^
Without dealing with the improvement of the waterway above Mexboro'
and the difficult question of the locks at Tinsley, it would seem that the possible
improvements might be grouped under three headings :
(i) To carry the standard of the New Junction Canal up to Doncaster and there
form extensive canal dockyards, warehouses, etc. this would not be a very costly affair,
:
as already up to Sandall Lock boats with a beam of 21 feet with a draft up to 8| feet
are possible.
(2) To
carry this standard up to Mexboro', which would be a much more costly
undertaking, as the locks above Doncaster are only capable of taking boats about
62 feet long, and the river parts in this section would be particularly difficult of
construction.
(3) To create a greatly enlarged ship canal on the Manchester Ship
scale of the
Canal, utilising probably the Dutch River (now tidal) and carrying it up to
Doncaster.
It might be added that anyhow it would appear that the Keadby Canal is
doomed, except for small boats requiring to pass up the Trent. To bring the section
from Kirk Bramwith to Keadby up to the present standard of the New Junction
Canal would require about a quarter of a million pounds.
1 The only lock on the New Junction Canal at Sykehouse is 215 feet long.
2 The 300-ton boat recommended by Royal Commission is 115 ft. long, 21 ft. beam, and 6J ft. draft.
54
REGIONAL
The Don Navigation has also valuable connections with other inland waterways
both outside the Region dealt with on the west with the Dearne Canal, and on the
:
east the Knottingley (already alluded to) connects with the Aire and Calder to Leeds
and thence to Liverpool, thus linking the East Coast with the West.
It will thus be seen that while this district contains one good waterway with
connections to other parts of the county, it is capable of being improved and enlarged
up to the extent of a ship canal. It is well worth the expenditure of the sum
required to bring transport by water on to the same level of capacity and efficiency
already possessed by road and rail.
55
(D). PASSENGER TRANSTORTATION WITHIN
THE REGION
It must have been obvious that one of the chief considerations in deciding upon the
scattering of large residential units over the Region (instead of recommending a heavy
concentration on Doncaster) w^as ease of movement from home to work. A com-
parison with London is always misleading except to show the drawback of unwieldi-
ness, and the consequent amount of time wasted in trams, tubes, and buses. But
Sheffield affords a much closer parallel : the heavy trades situated in the lower Don
Valley form a long narrow factory area, projecting wedge-like from the centre of the
town its steep banks, particularly on the north-west side, prevented a normal resi-
:
dential development round the factory area, with the result that enormous numbers of
workers in this district have to traverse the centre of the city to get to their work, the
bulk of the town radiating from a core situated at one extremity of the valley. This
defect is now being remedied, but it would be foolish to perpetuate a similar anomaly
in the Doncaster Region. Given the factories located on the low-lying lands, the
development of the fringes presents no physical difficulties and quite large communities
can thus grow up near to their work-places. The formation of new villages attached
growth for the district. Wasteful
to the collieries has already inaugurated this type of
travelling to and fro thus reduced to a minimum.
is
Doncaster enjoyed by two typical villages Barnby Dun and Rossington. The former
has a service each way of fifteen motor buses to nine trains and the latter no fewer
than twenty motor buses to eight trains.
56
PLATE XIF.
DbNG^STER REGIONAL. PLANNING PLAN SHOWING CAR & BUS SERVICES IN 1920.
SCHEME
H S7
PART IV
DONCASTER: EFFECT UPON IT of the GENERAL
The
PROPOSALS of this REPORT
.
I'l.ArE XI
EjitrdfUL to tlie To^^vn J rom t/ie soai/i i'j the Great Sorth Roeid.
DONCASTER
DONCASTER
As the metropolis of this Region market, shopping, and recreational centre it
its
is necessary to forecast, so far as is possible, the future of Doncaster. Will its present
dominating position be maintained, augmented, or diminished ?
It would of course have been possible to suggest that the most economical plan
for the Region comprised in this Report would be to concentrate the whole of the new
residential development in Doncaster, and to provide a series of swift radiating routes
in every direction to collieries and factories wherever situated throughout the district.
Doncaster, with its ring of suburbs all satisfactorily planned would have absorbed
the whole housing growth, and the scattered villages would merely shelter caretakers
and the few hands who had to be always on the spot. A single large pillar of coal
would be left under this huge town, whose superficial extent would be far greater than
that of any existing town (of similar size) owing to the looseness of its suburban
density, dictated by modern standards of twelve houses per acre.
A careful study of the zoning recommendations in Part II., however, will show
that this is not the view of this Regional development scheme it is intended to
:
surround Doncaster with a ring of satellite towns or urban communities, taking for the
most part existing villages^ for their nuclei, but in several places establishing new
centres.^ This method of growth, provided the small communities are accessible to
each other and to Doncaster, should prove far more healthy and pleasant than a single
gigantic town : provided, also, that the small communities are not formless amoebse,
but vertebrate in structure, containing their local centres zn6. foyers of social life.
But it must not be thought that Doncaster itself will suffer in consequence. She
will, on the contrary, react to every increase in the surrounding communities an :
exchange bearing a similar relation to them that the Manchester Exchange does to
the surrounding county boroughs will probably come into existence her shops will :
become great central stores and emporiums ; in a word, she will become the financial
heart of the Region.
In actual size her growth will be considerable at present containing about
:
61
DONCASTER
the probable extent of the growth of the communities and to suggest the degree of
boldness required in their proposals. The difference, for example, between the scheme
necessary for a town which is likely to remain stationary or to grow gradually, and
that for a town which in a few years is destined to change from a country market
town into a modern metropolis, is radical.
Doncaster has the makings of a fine city of the first magnitude the approach to
:
perhaps as fine as the entrance to any town, great or small, in the United Kingdom.
The ownership of a great corporate estate, both in the town and around it, gives it
opportunities for carrying out projects and reaping the financial benefits of prosperity
rare in this country. Its architectural character, not only in the Parish Church and
famous Mansion House, but in many dignified houses dating from the eighteenth
century, has nothing provincial about it though, as already remarked, one deplores
;
the destruction of many fine old buildings which would have added historic interest
to its streets. Its road plan, again, is no muddle, like that of many larger towns, but,
thanks to a level site and a Roman origin, is simple and easily grasped : and, one
might add, easily capable of expansion.
ROAD PLAN
The diagramof radial roads converging on Doncaster shows clearly the need for
relieving the four main cross-roads at an early date. Internal bye-passes, at least as
wide and direct as these roads, must be provided whether these internal bye-passes
:
would be linked up to form an inner ring or two half rings is not to be determined
here.
CIVIC CENTRE
The Mansion House admirably placed in the centre of High Street as the
is
Mayor's residence, and perhaps at present the Council Chamber but unless it were
:
possible to purchase the whole depth of the plot back to Printing Office Street there
would not be room for adequate municipal offices here, and a real civic centre would
be impossible.
A site should be soon as possible for new municipal offices and other
laid out as
public buildings : an
Cardiff example
is where this has been done in a quickly growing
modern town. As each subsequent building is added, increased dignity is lent to the
group in contradistinction to the common practice of buying up isolated sites and
dotting public buildings here and there.
The separation of the Mansion House from this group, though on some grounds
regrettable, is not vital the so-called Town Hall at Liverpool, for example, is some
:
considerable distance away from the Municipal, Education, and Tramway Offices, and
is entirely used by the Lord Mayor as his Town House and for the Council Chamber.
62
REGIONAL
STATION APPROACH
Doncaster is fortunate in having its seven main lines combined into a single
Railway Station. It is to be hoped that at some time a worthy fa9ade should be given
to it, so that it may appear as the great modern portal of the city. The space in front
is large but shapeless, and there should be a straighter connection with the main
streets of the town.
SHOPPING STREETS
Without doubt more streets should be designed to become shopping streets, for
which purpose continuity of shops with existing shopping streets is desirable.
ZONING
Just as the Region is zoned in large tracts, so is it desirable to lay down a
zoning scheme for the city of Doncaster, in order that factories and houses may not
be jumbled together and that business areas may be encouraged where appropriate.
The extent to which these three types of area should be segregated or combined
requires careful study and definition.
PARK SrSTEM
Openspaces should be provided on a systematic basis, from the small children's
playground, at frequent intervals, to the large local parks, so that every part of the
town may be adequately served. Access to these should, so far as possible, partake of
the nature of tree-planted avenues or parkways in contrast to hot or arid streets and
dusty motor routes.
63
PART V
WEST DON VALLEY DEVELOPMENT
The
Don (the Sheffield and South Yorkshire Navigation) and takes up a large area of
land which is admirably suited for industrial purposes and works, the close proximity
of the river and railway making this obvious.
The roads themselves in the immediate vicinity are narrow, as are the old
connections between villages which have been allowed to be built up without being
widened. The traffic, however, is large, Mexboro' being a market and shopping town
for a large area, and, although they are hardly of sufficient width for pedestrian traffic,
these roads carry tramways and buses, and a state of dangerous congestion prevails.
The housing conditions here are also worse than anywhere else in this region :
the village of Denaby Main is an example of what is to be avoided for the homes
of industrial workers. Nowhere else is the population of the Doncaster region so
dense as in this West Don Area.
It must not be thought that these remarks cast any reflection upon the present
inhabitants or Councils of this portion of the Region the conditions are merely those
:
found throughout industrial England where immediate trade prosperity was the only
aim. But a warning is here held out to the new industrial area with which this Report
largely deals.
Very careful consideration and much time has been spent in studying how best
Firstly, the higher ground
to remedy these mistakes of the past round Mexboro'.
housing purposes, for which it is admirably
above the town should be developed for
suited. Thenthe whole of the Don Valley between Mexboro' and Conisbrough should
be reserved for works.
Asmall area adjoining Mexboro' on the Melton side and also near the river
between Conisbrough and Doncaster is subject to flood. The presence close by of
large pit heaps could be used to lift the level of this land which would create
additional works sites. Unlimited power is available from both collieries, which,
67
DONCASTER
coupled with the advantages of the river and railway, provide the requisite
conditions for future engineering or any manufacturing purposes. This district is
well served with railways, tram and bus service, giving easy, rapid and cheap means
of transport for the industrial population, which would find employment in any new
industrial undertakings.
Besides the
two coal pits the Denaby and the Cadeby Mexboro' has been the
seat for many years of the Glass Bottle Industry. This trade, as is well known, is
subject to great vicissitudes, and in the past has had many ups and downs. It is felt
that every effort should be used to help the district to obtain additional and varied
industries. At one time an excellent boat-building trade was carried on here and,
while this industry appears to have entirely disappeared, it is possible that with the
revival of trade and the establishment of Works, demanding, as they will, the lowest
possible transport charges, water carriage may again become an economic feature and
boat-building be again revived.
Between Mexboro' and Doncaster the valley of the river is flanked on either side
by cliffs of magnificent limestone, where the Permian bed outcrops ; these are only
worked in parts. It is impossible to believe that so very valuable a bed of limestone
situated in close proximity to the industrial towns of Yorkshire and Lancashire can
remain much longer with so little working of the stone taking place.
In addition to the presence of limestone in almost unlimited quantities there are
many other valuable mineral substances present in the cliffs, the importance of which
appears to have been almost overlooked, and large fields of mineral wealth are
practically lying dormant and hardly known here. After the river reaches Sprotbro'
the cliffs close in very much, and are precipitous, and the valley becomes very narrow,
practically little wider than the width of the two channels which run parallel to each
other at this point. The country changes the scenery, though on a small scale,
;
becomes some of the very best to be found in this part of England. It is felt that
this portion of the valley and the adjoining land should be protected against the
possibility of its ever being damaged or spoilt in any way.
Midway between these two extremes the grime of Mexboro' and the loveliness
of Sprotbro' lies Conisbrough, the newly formed U.D., which appears to partake of
something of the nature of each. Its Castle and the immediate surroundings are a
romantic spot of great beauty which should be preserved, as indeed it is to-day, with
the greatest care.
Exactly where industry should end and the reserved valley commence is difficult
to say without minute study ; but the sharp bends of the river should give the
opportunity for a definite break. Again this Report does not seek to trespass upon
these detailed considerations, but to point out how needful it is to combine detailed
requirements with general principles.
68
PART VI
NOTES EXISTING FILL AGES in the REGION
upon
industrial uses.
The Council Housing Site here is situated on the land lying between the
Brodsworth Model Village (Woodlands) and Adwick-le-Street it forms a compact, ;
well-considered scheme of 278 houses, and acts as a connecting link between the
old and new portions on the west of the U.D. There is plenty of high land
available for future residential growth.
Adwick-on-Dearne.
2.
A pleasant village, lying on the extreme north-west edge
of the Regional Area, which does not appear likely to change its present rural
character.
Theroads all round the village have acute corners, which should have attention
as soon as circumstances permit.
3. Arksey. This on the low ground, just between the area we have
village lies
indicated as suitable for manufacture and the farming belt.
Indications of settlements with fracture of the surface show themselves on the
north-east end of the village.
No new houses should be allowed in this village.
Armthorpe.
4.
Situated about three miles from Doncaster, and on rising ground.
Until recently a small rural village, with the advent of the new colliery and the
housing developments in connection with the same, its character has entirely changed
and is changing. The original straggling village street of a mile in length is bound
to develop as an offshoot of the colliery village, which lies at the opposite end nearer
Doncaster. The village will form the terminus of a very important short radial road
71
DONCASTER
from Doncaster (see page 43). Considerable improvement's required to the road
corner where this radial road enters the proposed Ring Road, which touches the old
village at the extreme east end and will form the means of access to Armthorpe for
traffic to and from the Great North Road, and also for traffic proceeding from
Armthorpe to Thorne and the East. A considerable future is predicted for this
village. A Centre should be provided situated in the vicinity of the Church, which
would form a means of connecting the old village with the new.
The new village erected on some of the highest ground available is designed on
sound lines, and is sufficiently far away from the colliery to avoid the smoke from
the pithead. Full advantage has been taken of the wooded surroundings of the new
village site.
5. Askern.
Originally a Spa noted for its mineral waters and baths, has in recent
years entirely changed in character. A
new colliery has been sunk on the top of the
hill on the Campsall side. A
large colliery village has been erected on the west side
of Askern, and is being enlarged. The old town of Askern stands at the foot of the
hill on very low ground, a large portion of which is waterlogged, the subsoil being of
a boggy nature with a bed of peat. It is exceedingly undesirable that any building,
other than in connection with agriculture, should be permitted in the direction of
Moss Road, and all building operations should be confined to the high ground,
towards the west, which rises swiftly to about 70 feet above Ordnance datum.
The plan of the new village is too much of the gridiron type, and might with
advantage be somewhat revised in future extensions.
The Trunk Road No. 2 (Doncaster to Selby) passes through the village, forming
its principal street this should be widened as soon as is practicable, for a bye-pass is
:
impossible, the high ground closing it in on one side and the railway and pools of
water on the other.
6. Austerfield.
Of historical interest owing to the fact that it was the home of
the Pilgrim Fathers a large number of American visitors congregate at the church
;
7. Awkley.
An old village very scattered and straggling it is on the road from
;
Doncaster to Finningley. There are several sharp turns in the village street which
require widening sufficiently for village purposes and to avoid danger. The bridge
over the River Torne should be widened and made much safer than at present. The
1 See Plate IX. Nos. 9 and 10.
72
I'l.ATE MIL
Jill point al -iv/iiJi I /it Ri/n; RouJ lurns to tlic rig/it past the IVIiitc llait Hold.
Where the luw Br'ulgi' for the Ring Rr.aJ -jsi/l he plaeeJ.
BdRSBY DUN
REGIONAL
suggested road improvement mentioned elsewhere will relieve Awkley of a large
amount of the traffic now passing through it.
Barnborough.
9. Apretty village standing on high ground ; its church has a
beautiful old tower, forming a landmark for many miles round.
The approach by road from Doncaster is bad, and provision has been made for
remedying the same.
The new Barnborough Colliery is within a short distance, and, when fully
developed, is bound to have an effect on the village.
The Barnborough Company's Housing Scheme might have been with
Colliery
advantage placed on higher ground, somewhat to the East, which would have linked
up the old and new villages, thus forming a community of interests rather than two
isolated villages, each with its own centre.
10. Bawtry. An market town on the Great North Road, nine miles south
old
It is the
of Doncaster, which has a wide village street forming the market-place.
point where several of the main roads converge, including the main road into Lin-
colnshire by Gainsboro' Bridge, the nearest bridge over the River Trent. The two
streets giving access to the Gainsboro' and Lincoln Road are
narrow, with right-angle
It is suggested to
turns and very bad corners of an exceedingly dangerous character.
garden for this purpose, this
construct a short length of new road, utilising an existing
would form a wide straight approach. The work is of an urgent character and
should be carried out as soon as possible. This road passes out of the Doncaster
Regional Area almost at once. .
K 73
.
DONCASTER
now does a large amount of motor traffic, together with the fact that it contains good
hostelry accommodation is bound to make this charming roadside town a prosperous
place in the future.
12. Bentley. Near Doncaster, on the Doncaster to Selby Road (No. 2),
situated
has entirely changed its character within the last ten years from an old agricultural
;
village, having a very small population, it has grown into a large mining centre, with
a population of 13,000, and was in 191 1 formed into an Urban District. Bentley
Road, its approach, is no longer a country road, but carries tram lines the traffic is
;
altogether too much for it and an alternative road is suggested to provide for this
traffic from Doncaster and London to Selby and York, etc.
The greater portion of Bentley is located on low-lying land unsuitable for
housing.
The Bentley Colliery, a short distance off the main road, has the distinction of
being the first colliery to be sunk in the New South Yorkshire Coal Area.
The High Street of Bentley should be widened, also Cook Street, from which
the suggested relief road, by Watch House Lane, joins the Great North Road, near
the Sun Inn.
13. Blaxton. A
very small place, practically a hamlet, situated close to the
junction of the road to Haxey and the road to Hatfield, Woodhouse, and Thorne.
Widening is required to the road at this point. Again, it is undesirable that this
village should grow other than for agricultural purposes.
16. Brodsworth.
This is the old village, which, instead of being changed into a
new one of colliery development, has been left in its original state, with the
as a result
addition of a few new houses. Not being situated on a road of any great importance,
it may be expected to grow gradually, reflecting indirectly the prosperity of the
74
.
REGIONAL
17. Bilham.
A small hamlet some little distance off any main road ; is quite
rural, and seems never likely to change its present character.
ground on the north and west. The new village of Carcroft and the Council's
housing scheme at Skellow, the latter on high ground, are good examples of modern
ideas well carried out.
The
old village of Carcroft forms the centre for shops and amusements of this
part of the area, and will continue to do so.
20. GampsalL Standing on high ground and forming a little picturesque village,
with a Every endeavour should be made to retain the existing
fine parish church.
rural character. Owing to the fact that a short arterial road from Askern to Barns-
dale Bar, Skellow and Carcroft passes through Campsall, it is found necessary to bye-
pass the village street.
not contemplated that this village will grow very much in size it might,
It is ;
however, in course of time be used somewhat as a suburb of Askern, but this would
probably only be for a limited number of larger houses.
21 Gadeby. A
small picturesque rural village near Sprotbrough ; it stands off any
main or is not ever likely to change its present agricultural character,,
radial roads, and
and should be preserved as far as possible in its present state.
22. Gantley. A small picturesque village, situated just over three miles from
Doncaster, which will abut on the proposed Ring Road. Owing to its proximity to
Armthorpe, where a new colliery has been sunk and a new village built, it is sure to
share in the new prosperity. The Ring Road where it passes through Cantley is
carried by a bye-pass which removes the traffic from the dangerous corners and out of
the village street.^
An important community centre should be planned somewhere in the neighbour-
hood of this village.
23. Glifton. A
picturesque agricultural village standing on high ground, with
an old manor-house and church ; the surrounding country and Clifton Beacon
making an exceedingly pretty background.
1 See Plate IX. No. 11.
75
DONCASTER
This village is never likely to be affected by industrial developments or to
change its present rural character.
worth, and, although perhaps somewhat with regret at the idea of so handsome a
demesne with its beautiful park and woodlands being ever disturbed, this appears to
be the natural direction which the future growth, of a residential type, of Doncaster
must inevitably take.
25. Clayton. An old agricultural village situate on high ground between Frickley
and Hickleton Collieries, but sufficiently distant from either to ever be affiscted by
colliery development,
remain so but may react to some extent to the sinking of the Maltby and Edlington
and other collieries in the area.
Various minor improvements are suggested in these villages. At Braithwell two
very bad corners exist, and it is proposed to construct a short bye-pass road here to
remove the danger, which is of a serious character.
29. Finningley.
An old agricultural village, grouped round an attractive village
green, is just outside the Doncaster Regional Area it is situated on low land, the sub-
;
soil of which is all gravel and sand. The saturation point, owing to its low level, is
76
REGIONAL
very near the surface, and the whole of this district is suitable only for agricultural
purposes. However, recently Engineering Works have been constructed near the
railway station
a clear example of the way in which isolated works may spring up
anywhere in the Doncaster Regional Area. It is undesirable that the Finningley
district should develop to a large extent as a housing village as the people employed
can be housed on the higher land near Cantley. The Road to Thorne is shown in
a bye-pass in order to avoid the twisting street of the village.
30. Hampole. A
small hamlet about 7 miles from Doncaster on the main road
to Leeds it is purely agricultural, and is never likely to change its present character.
;
31. Harworth. This small picturesque village, situated z\ miles from Bawtry, is
entirely changing in character from an agricultural to a mining village as fast as
mining engineers can do this.
A good wide grass lane, to be made into paved road, on the site of an old road,
a
connects Harworth to the small town of Bawtry, where the railway station and shop-
ping facilities for this district are at the moment to be found. A better means of
connecting Harworth to Bawtry by rail should be provided.
The new Harworth Colliery Village, which is being erected by the Harworth
Colliery Company, will provide housing for the workmen employed at the Harworth
Pit ;
provision is made in the lay-out of the new village for the shopping, social and
amusement needs of the large community which it is anticipated will congregate there
within the next three or four years.
Proposals are made for widening the existing road from Doncaster to Harworth
and Blyth, as this road should form one of the principal arterial roads of the district
(see page 44).
32. Hickleton.
An old village with ideal surroundings, standing on the main road
from Manchester to Doncaster.
This old village is one of the very few remaining unaltered in the Regional Area,
and seems never likely to change its present charming character.
High Melton. A small pretty rural village on the Radial Road to Barn-
33.
borough. There is, however, the possibility of the road becoming in time an important
relief road, and provision for widening the same is proposed. No likelihood exists
of the village ever being affected by industrial expansion, and, in a region about to
be largely industrialised and thus inevitably to lose much of its old-world charm, it is
far from the Ring Road, is not on a Doncaster Radial, and has no railway station.
Though not far from the Frickley ColHery, it is not likely to be used as a housing
11
"
DONCASTER
village for the workers, and it is hoped that it will remain as it is with its beautiful
prospect to the west.
That delightful old Manor House (Hooton Pagnell Hall) standing on the high
ground is a landmark for many miles, and, together with the well-proportioned Church
Tower, forms a group of old buildings difficult to surpass in the county.
Thorpe-in-Balne.
Fenivick. The above applies to these villages, none of which are on the
Moss. Main Roads.
Braithwaite.
south-east of the G.C. Railway and will eventually stretch from the Barnby Dun to
Doncaster Road to Armthorpe Lane. It is therefore connected to Doncaster by
Radial B, and with the rest of the district by the future Ring Road.
There probably a big future before this new village, which is supplied with
is
electric lightand water from Messrs. Pilkington's works, and it will be seen from the
plan included, that a large Village Centre is being provided, with sites for the church,
village hall, cinema, etc.
This portion of the Doncaster Area, although intersected by two main lines, Don-
caster to Hull and Doncaster to Grimsby, suffers badly from the want of a good local train
service. The new villages at Stainforth and Kirk Sandall, which are grouped around
the railway stations of Stainforth and Barnby Dun, would in themselves be sufficient
to justify the railway company concerned in putting down an improved train service,
and it is hoped that before long this will be done.
38. Marr. A pretty village about four miles from Doncaster situated on the
Barnsley Main Road, No. 7. The village is supported by prosperous agricultural
78
PLATE Arm.
PLAN of Neiv Village of n.vhkh the Ring Road forms the base : the Village Centre is set hack at the head of
KIRK SANDALL
One of the new communities already springing up along the Ring Road.
REGIONAL
surroundings, and, although the coming of the coal pits has had
a somewhat retarding
influence, it is likely to always retain its present character.
Proposals are made for widening the road where necessary.
41. Norton. A
very small village, lying about one and three-quarter miles
to the
north-west of the town of Askern. The present village is occupied entirely by an
agricultural population. The buildings and cottages generally are of great age and in
a very bad state of repair. Efforts should be made to remedy this as soon as possible.
A start was made towards housing on modern lines, and a
new road has been
made. This is, however, now lying derelict, the scheme for forty-six houses being one
of those suspended by the Ministry during the recent restriction of housing schemes.
There is a level-crossing at the L. and Y. Station.
42. Oldcoates. An
old village adjoining the Main Road from Nottingham to
Doncaster on one side and the Main Road from Sheffield to Bawtry on the other. At
present the village is of a purely rural character. It is, however, quite likely that
the colliery developments foreshadowed in the neighbourhood may, if carried out,
entirely change its aspect.
43. Owston.
A picturesque hamlet surrounded by park lands, with the hall and
church standing in the background. Its present charming rural character should be
maintained.
44. Rossington.^
The new colliery village is situated towards the verge of the
25 feet contourand might well have been on slightly higher ground. Its future
growth should be to the east and south, and not to the north and west. Its access
to Doncaster is by the Great North Road. It has a station on the Great Northern
Railway main line. It is also situated on the Ring Road.
The future of the village is at present bound up with the colliery but if the ;
neighbouring low land, Potteric Carr, developed as a manufacturing area there should
be a great future before it.
Its present method of planning leaves much to be desired, but the circular lay-out,
if carefully treated, will provide a village centre for a considerable population.
The existing train service is meagre, and should be augmented by a motor rail
service. Already a motor bus service exists, but it is very necessary for the growth
and needs of this new community that steps should be taken at once to improve the
facilities for communication between Rossington and Doncaster.
79
DONCASTER
46. Sprotbrough. A place of interest, famous for its ancient
great historic
church, containing many monuments dating back beyond the time of the Crusaders.
The village, clustered on the hillside overlooking the River Don, has always been
prosperous, and is one of the most charming to be found in England.
The Valley of the Don at Sprotbrough entirely loses its industrial character, and
is widely known for its great beauty. The river here passes through limestone cliffs
of great height, and a glorious view is obtained from either side of the river of a scene
remarkable even in such a county as Yorkshire. Sprotbrough Hall, the seat of the
Copley family for many generations, is situated on the cliff side, the gardens having
the appearance of overhanging the river.
It is recommended that the greater part of the parish of Sprotbrough should
receive special and adequate protection by reason of its beauty, and the village church
should be considered an ancient monument of national interest.
as The name of Sir
Walter Scott is closely connected with Sprotbrough, from the fact that he resided in
this village when writing Ivanhoe.'
'
48. Styrrup. A small agricultural village, lying about one and a quarter miles on
the south-west side of Harworth. The village has always been a small prosperous
place, and may slightly enlarge itself through its proximity to the new mining
centre at Harworth, but is hardly likely ever to become much larger than at
present.
49. Sutton. A very small agricultural village never likely to develop beyond its
50. Tickhill.
An old market town, now shorn of its ancient importance, on the
site of the old Great North Road (London to the North via Worksop). The main
street contains an old coffee-house of great beauty, and in the centre of the market-
place, at the intersection of the road to Bawtry, stands the fine Market Cross. Tick-
hill Castle (largely demolished, the part left being now used as a house) stands at the
south end of the village.
The High Street of the town forms the main road from Doncaster to Worksop,
and, although of wide proportions, there are corners to be opened out and a wider road
;
is suggested on the site of the already existing back street. This road would act as a
bye-pass for the through traffic, which is considerable, and would do away with a very
dangerous turn in the main road.
The town is largely agricultural and residential, and there appears to be little
probability of its changing its present character. The fact of its being so badly served
by railways has caused the town to decay since the days of the mail coach, when it
had an era of greater prosperity than it is ever likely to have again.
80
PLATE XIX.
SPROTBROUGH
PLATE XX.
TIC KH I LI.
F/.//r AAV.
.--^
I
PLAN of the ^'village of li'oodlands situated on the n.vest side of the Great North Road, on the site of a Park.
WOODLANDS
The first co?n?nunitx in the district to be laid out on modern lines.
REGIONAL
The parish church of Tickhill has a most beautiful tower,
which forms a land-
mark for many miles round.
53. Warmsworth. A
small pleasant village lying on the main road from Sheffield
to Doncaster (No. 8) near its intersection by the Ring Road. It is rapidly
changing its character owing to the Edlington Colliery Village practically joining up
to it. A dangerous bend in the road at. the entrance to the village from Doncaster
requires immediate attention.^
Warmsworth has the distinction of having its Church Belfry situated in the
village, about one mile from the Church.
54. Woodlands. This one of the new villages of the district entirely planned
is
on a new site to meet the changed character of occupation produced by the
Brodsworth Colliery. It is situated nearly a mile to the east of the old village of
Brodsworth (^."y.).
The chosen for the village was Woodlands Park a beautiful stretch of
site
park land lying along the Great North Road. A large green, on which are growing
magnificent forest trees, has been preserved, and the houses grouped round it in this :
part of the village, it is to be noted, the houses do not face on to the Great North
Road, but an existing plantation has been preserved as a screen. A Village Centre has
been laid out on admirable lines, and, generally speaking, this may be looked upon, as
regards site-planning, as a model of what the new communities should be like. Begun
in 1907, the whole scheme was prepared at top speed, as houses were immediately
required for the onrush of labour to work in the pit. Great credit is due to the
designer, Mr. Percy Houfton of Chesterfield, for this, the first of the new communities
to be planned on sound lines.
A later portion of the village, farther south, is a melancholy example of falling
off in standard.
1 The road originally passed straight through the village, in front of the Hall.
81
PART VII
The DEVELOPMENT of NEW RESIDENTIAL CENTRES
AND THEIR RELATION TO DON CASTER
/'/, / Ti: XXII
The red patches are the residential areas of Doncaster and the surrounding communities, containing a population
of about 400,000 at the rate of 50 per acre : the green open spaces are at the rate of 2^0 persons per acre. The
roads are white, the railways yellow. Low-lying land, prohibited for housing, is coloured purple (Jactories),
and buff (agriculture).
NEW RESIDENTIAL CENTRES
By new meant both those growing places already in existence,
residential centres are
such as Adwick-le-Street and Bentley (absorbing old villages), and Woodlands and
Kirk Sandall (colonising new sites), also those entirely new communities which may
come into existence as a result of this Regional Scheme.
It is desirable to make it clear that all of these types of new communities
are not
to be treated as isolated suburbs of Doncaster : fragments, as it were, of her suburban
growth that have got separated from the parent mass, as moons have been formed
from a planet. On the contrary, they are complete entities whose existence is in no
sense the result of an overflow from Doncaster but is owing to one or other of the
fundamental causes of urban birth.
They should therefore be equipped with the organic formation needful for full
corporate growth. While each community forms part of the Doncaster Industrial
;
the form of children's playgrounds, playing-fields and local parks, allotment gardens
and additional space for those who wish to keep poultry and pigs, etc.
The size of house plot or general density of houses in residential quarters per
acre, and the number of persons per gross acre of the whole area of the developed
community, require determining. There is no reason why each community should
not be based on what is commonly called the Garden City Standard using the term
in this case in its true sense and not as a misnomer for the Garden Suburb. With
any amount of land available, the maximum density of twelve houses per acre of
residential quarters should not be exceeded. There is no reason why the houses
should not be grouped considerably closer together, for economy of estate development,
provided the average is preserved. It will be noted that in many of the old villages
and towns of the district the houses are continuous on to the street front, but possess
deep garden plots behind. Something of this sort might be attempted, as a departure
from the practice of the recent Government Housing Scheme, in order to economise
in road construction and the length per house of sewer, water, gas mains, etc. But
this suggestion does not for one moment countenance the lowering of the general
standard to an average of twenty or tMrenty-five houses per acre.
The average number of persons per acre of the whole community, including all
8S
DONCASTER
local open spaces, civic centres, shops, allotments, etc. (but excluding agricultural
land and the low-lying factory zones), should not exceed fifty.
There is one other exceedingly important consideration which a mention of
Garden City principles at once raises whether these new communities should be
:
of limited size. There are very great advantages in this, and it appears that
15,000 to 20,000 would be an adequate size to obtain the benefits of communal
existence on a local scale, while the total population of the region would permit
Doncaster to afford first-rate theatres, a concert hall, and the other self-supporting
amenities of a great city. The provision of the essential free cultural institutions
would be more difficult to arrange, unless some Regional rating scheme were established ;
for indeed it would be manifestly folly for each of these small communities to run
a peddling Art Gallery, Museum, or even a complete Library. Obviously one really
big Institution of each sort should be located at Doncaster, and, where necessary,
branches in the surrounding communities. It is needful to labour this point because
unquestionably the drawback to the small isolated town (so admirable in many respects)
is the narrow scope it offers to the study and enjoyment of the higher branches of art
and science. The great city has these compensations Liverpool, Birmingham, and
:
Manchester, for example, can just produce a Repertory as distinct from ordinary
Theatres : Leeds, again, is large enough to support a season of Grand Opera.
Orchestral Concerts, in the same way, and important Picture Exhibitions are practi-
cally limited to the few large towns.
It is contended that, on the system of growth and urbanisation advocated for this
Region, the advantages of the small towns will be obtained with their proximity to the
country and farm produce, their low density of houses and their closeness to places of
work ; at the same time the whole Region will have the advantage of being a great
foyer of civilised life, with all that this implies.
It may sound an impossible thing to limit the size of growing communities : in
one way, by adopting a limited density per acre and refusing to allow the extension of
boundaries of urban districts, the nominal population can be restricted. But not the
actual, as growth will overflow beyond the artificial boundary line. This matter
has received very careful consideration ; and, attractive as it would be to parcel out
the limits of urban areas, showing green separating strips, it is difficult to do this
until some further indications are given of the early points of development of the
large factory areas.
At the same time a visionary plan is submitted to show what
would be the ideal lines of growth for the region. And it might be added that if due
encouragement by means of road and railway facilities, etc., were given to Doncaster and
its surrounding communities to grow where and in the manner indicated in this Report,
this ideal has every prospect of being realised by natural means. It has also already
been pointed out (Part II., B) that the skilful preparation and administration of local
town-planning schemes can do much to guide the new growth in the right direction,
provided they are always related to a Regional ideal.
86
APPENDIX on COAL SUBSIDENCE
PLATE AXIII.
To
Mr. Francis Alvey Darwin, I now have pleasure in briefly reporting to you my views on
Subsidence, due to the sinking of Coal-pits, and to the working of Coal Seams in the area
under review, as affecting the important question of Town Planning.
If I do not make my views clear, I will be pleased to give any further information so
far as my technical knowledge is concerned, extending continuously over a period of forty
years, and obtained principally in Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Warwickshire and Yorkshire,
including professional visits to other coalfields in the United Kingdom, also on the continent
of Europe.
and is matter when the Ordnance Datum approximates sea level, owing to the
a serious
damage it may cause to Agricultural pursuits, to property, and the ill effect it may have on
Sanitary and Drainage arrangements, which, if neglected, will jeopardise the health of the
community living in the vicinity.
The cause of subsidence may in several ways.
be explained First and foremost, the
surface naturally goes down if you take away
intervening
itssupport such as a coal measure,
mineral substance, without replacing it with a support
and ironstone measure, or any other
equal to the one taken away.
Secondly, if water in large volumes is pumped, whilst sinking through a running sand
measure, peat bog, or crushed limestone, or any other porous strata of a like nature, subsidence
will follow. If freezing or cementing the sides of the shafts is resorted to, this danger is
eliminated to a ^reat extent.
Thirdly, you may leave a pillar, but if the coal is worked around it, and a runnmg
sand,
pillar, you get subsidence
or a like mea'sure, such as peat bog or crushed limestone, is over the
of the land on the pillar as the water runs out of the land,
around the pillar, and subsidence
into a lagoon made round the pillar, due to subsidence when the
peat, or crushed limestone
P03I n3ri nP^n PVf'T"3.CtGd.
Fourthly assuming the not large enough, or the same is intersected by fissures
pillar left is
or breaks as the faces work up to the same, the pull of the goaf area will cause subsidence over
the whole or a portion of the pillar area, dependent on the position of the fissures and the angle
to the working face. , . ,
n j . l
spontaneous combustion, and allowed to burn
Fifthly, assuming a pillar is fired by
is
follow.
itself out, due to air leakage, subsidence will
M 89
DONCASTER
Sixthly, subsidence often takes place when water is tapped from old workings drowned out
previously, owing to the water before being drawn off acting as a support.
Seventhly, a pillar left as a support is sometimes affected by an earth movement, which may
or maynot cause subsidence, owing to the disintegration of the same.
review is 100,000 acres or thereabouts, and as this large area, in the writer's
T^he area under
opinion, is only in its infancy as regards miscellaneous developments, the importance of looking
ahead is most essential if the health of the people, in what will be a thickly populated area, is to
have the care shown to it such an important matter deserves.
100,000 acres multiplied by 35 feet thick multiplied by 1300 tons per acre would represent
4550 millions of tons, which, if worked out at the rate of ten to twelve millions of tons per
annum, would not be exhausted under 400 years or thereabouts.
When I refer previously to the whole of the coal seams being extracted under Doncaster,
I am assuming that coal will have such a value as time rolls on, and the science of mining will
have made such strides, that it will become a practical proposition under the heading of
mechanical stowing of the goaf areas to carry out such a scheme with a minimum of subsidence
that would not seriously afi^ect the Ordnance Datum.
THE PROBABLE OUTPUT PER ANNUM OVER THE NEXT HUNDRED TEARS
This can only be mere conjecture, because there are so many factors to take into considera-
tion. First of all, it is quite possible that other nationalities will become serious competitors
90
:
APPENDIX
for our foreign markets; then, as years follow on, surely
we will realise more fully the intrinsic
value of our coal deposits, especially as to their bye-product
constituents. When we grasp this
as a nation, surely less coal will be needed for home
consumption. If electricity is to play the
important role we hope it is, the expansion of such a pliable power,
economically handled, should
reduce our home coal bill one-half or thereabouts.
Therefore, assuming we need over the next loo years twice
the light, heat, and power,
then we shall not need to exhaust the Doncaster Coalfield under review probably
at a greater rate
than twelve milhons of tons per annum multiplied by loo years equals 1200 million
tons.
tons years
12,000,000 X
100,000 acres
100
= 12,000 tons ^
per acre.
feetworked out
9-23 X -60 = subsidence 5-52 ^^et over 100 years.
The probable Subsidence after the whole of the minerals are exhausted would be as follows
acres feet tonnage per foot per acre
100,000 X 35 X 1300
or less parcelled out to various colliery owners, and, with the exception of the shaft pillars, the
writer's opinion is that there is no need for any other pillars except in exceptional circumstances,'
'
and then, as I say, it may pay to extract the coal and resort to mechanical stowing. Any future
shafts, otherwise than those already in the mines of the colliery proprietors, can be
sunk on the
goaf in this area, thus minimising the necessity for shaft pillars.
91
DONCASTER
THE RISK RUN IN LEAVING PILLARS OF COAL
First of all, a pillar essential for the support of a town is quite another matter in area as the
lower seams are worked, or, in other words, the pillar left in the deeper seams must not be less
than an area which spreads itself out at an angle of 45. Then there is always the pull over to
take into consideration as the long wall faces advance up to the pillar ; especially is this a serious
matter when you have to consider there may be large vertical fissures in the limestone (or faults
lying at an angle with the horizontal), and in some instances hidden by the overlying sandstone.
What is the moral? In all cases where the whole of the coal can be extracted, the safest
method to adopt, if mechanical stowage is not resorted to, is to ensure that the site chosen for
a village or township should be well above sea level in the first instance, and as far as possible
chosen on ground that is not faulted or subject to dislocation in the limestone.
collieries are putting down, can be mutually or compulsorily arranged, then I see no reason why
a single acre of land should go out of cultivation, as it is simply a question of levels, raising river
banks, and the sides of the dykes, to meet the continual subsidence going on, plus the cost of
electrical pumping from the areas affected from time to time, which need not be a serious matter
financially.
92
APPENDIX
Doncaster itself appears to me so situated geographically and geologically, that its future as
a large Coal producing and manufacturing centre is undoubtedly assured, hence the necessity for
taking into consideration the creation of a Doncaster and district worthy of its name for
generations to come.
rUE VALUE OF THE COAL SEAMS OVER THE AREA UNDER REVIEW AS
COMPARED WITH THE COST OF STSTEMATIC DRAINAGE AND PUMPING
Assuming twelve millions of tons of Coal are extracted per annum from this area, and the
Government arrange with the landed proprietors and the colliery owners that a levy on every
ton raised shall be made, so that the whole of the land can be kept under cultivation, what
would it amount to ? For the sake of argument, say id. per ton ; this would bring in ^50,000
per annum.
In conclusion, I would respectfully suggest that the coal owners and landed proprietors, etc.,
etc., in the area under review, should be asked to meet representatives of the Government to
formulate a joint scheme that would, in the near future, deal with the question of Subsidence
for all time. I feel in my own mind this is a question of national importance, owing to the
variety of interests involved, and realising the enormous benefits to be derived from unity of
action (in advance), rather than leaving the matters in the hands of individual interests to work
out their own salvation, will mean, that large sums of money would be saved, the health of the
people of the area under review would be dealt with in the most efficient manner, and in such a
way as to give the best results, and that the amount of expenditure by united effort will absolutely
eclipse in moderation the individual effort of the various interested parties whose interests are
bound to clash. .
Yours faithfully,
93
J
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