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Photograph - Mono (Document ID: 102017)

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Photograph - Mono (Document ID: 102017)

Five different views of High Sunderland, West Yorkshire, including close-ups of stonework.

Author: John Y. Stapleton
Date: 1950
Location: Shibden
Format: Photograph - Mono
Document ID: 102017
Library ID: 45, 46, 47, 48, 49

p1-2: Front view of Hall, taken November 1949.



p3: Taken in June 1950, when demolition was half complete.



p4: The porch of High Sunderland with one of the 'shameless little boys' described by Emily Bronte in the opening paragraphs of 'Wuthering Heights'.



p5: One of the many Latin inscriptions on the walls of High Sunderland. This is probably the last photograph to have been taken of this historic building



These photographs were amongst those published between June 1949 and July 1950 in 'Notable Houses of West Yorkshire', a
weekly series of articles in 'The Yorkshire Observer'. The photographs were taken by the author, John Y. Stapleton, during the above period.



"May the Almighty grant that the race of Sunderland may quietly inhabit this seat, and maintain the rights of their ancestors free from strife, until an ant drink up the waters of the sea, and a tortoise walk round the whole world." So read the inscription above the front window of one of the most impressive homesteads in the local area. Its name was High Sunderland and it stood on a plateau at Horley Green, overlooking the Shibden Valley.



A house had stood here for 700 years. In John Crabtree's "History of Halifax", the author states that the house was built by Richard Sunderland about 1587, although there are suggestions that his son Abraham was responsible for the house being constructed in 1629. There can be no doubt, however, that this gabled, timber framed house, with its ornate carvings, was a sight to behold. The building was encased in stone between 1622 and 1634.



The front of the property was very imposing, with its decorative mullioned windows and high gateway depicting the coats of arms of the Sunderland and Rishworth families. It is thought that the name derives from the fact that the land was sundered or divided from lands surrounding it, with the "high" referring to its elevated position.



Bronte experts have conceded that Lockwood's description of his first visit to Wuthering Heights fits that of High Sunderland. The inscriptions are fictional but the carvings are real. The interior of "Wuthering Heights" also corresponds with the house plan to a great extent.



Emily Bronte would have been familiar with High Sunderland having spent some time at Law Hill School in Southowram. It is thought she used the house as "Wuthering Heights" but located it to Top Withens on Haworth Moor.



Over the years the house was divided into separate dwellings and occupied by several different families. After 1861 it fell rapidly into decay. By the late 1940s it was reported that the building was derelict and unsafe. The owner of the building at that time, a Mrs Holden of Harrogate, offered it first to Halifax Corporation and then to the Bronte Society. However, the high cost of repair meant that both offers were turned down. High Sunderland was finally demolished in the early 1950s.



Further information on High Sunderland can be found in the Halifax Antiquarian Society Transactions for 1907 and the Calderdale Archives Department.

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