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Somerset House, Halifax (Document ID: 102245)

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Somerset House, Halifax (Document ID: 102245)

Example of the interior plaster work from Somerset House

Author: H P Kendall
Date: not dated
Location: Halifax
Format: Photograph - Mono
Document ID: 102245
Library ID:


Photograph of fireplace and plaster work at Royds House, also known as Somerset House, Halifax, West Yorkshire.

Examples of the interior plaster work from Somerset House are preserved at Bankfield Museum.

Royds House, also known as Somerset House, is sited between Rawson St and George St in Halifax town centre. It is a vast 17 bay house and warehouse designed by John Carr of York in the 1760s, for John Royd, a textile merchant. In the 1800s, the building was used as a bank by the Rawson family and later the Huddersfield & Halifax Union Banking Company. Between 1850 and 1857, rooms above the bank were used as a post office. The house was curtailed and renamed Somerset House in the late 19th century. The first floor saloon still retains the decorative plasterwork by the Italian Rococo artist, Giuseppe Cortese, supposedly of John Royd, his wife and family. The Yorkshire Building Society uses the George St side of the building. The house is a Grade II* listed building and is still standing.

The photographer, Hugh Percy Kendall, was a founder member of the Halifax Antiquarian Society in 1900 and a frequent contributor to their transactions. He was also a former president of the Halifax Photographic Society. He died in 1937 at the age of 62.

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