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Seacroft

Coordinates:53°49′20″N1°27′36″W / 53.8222°N 1.4599°W /53.8222; -1.4599
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Suburb of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England
This article is about the area of Leeds. For the village in Lincolnshire, seeSeacroft, Lincolnshire.

Human settlement in England
Seacroft
Seacroft is located in Leeds
Seacroft
Seacroft
Show map of Leeds
Seacroft is located in West Yorkshire
Seacroft
Seacroft
Location withinWest Yorkshire
Show map of West Yorkshire
Population14,246 (2011 Census)[1]
OS grid referenceSE362365
Metropolitan borough
Metropolitan county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townLEEDS
Postcode districtLS14
Dialling code0113
PoliceWest Yorkshire
FireWest Yorkshire
AmbulanceYorkshire
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Yorkshire
53°49′20″N1°27′36″W / 53.8222°N 1.4599°W /53.8222; -1.4599

Seacroft is an outer-city suburb/township consisting mainly ofcouncil estate housing covering an extensive area of eastLeeds,West Yorkshire, England. It lies in the LS14Leeds postcode area, around 4 miles (6.4 km) east ofLeeds city centre.

It sits in theKillingbeck & Seacroft ward ofLeeds City Council andLeeds Eastparliamentary constituency.

The population of the corresponding Leeds City Ward was nearly 18,000 in 2001[2] and fell to 14,426 in 2011. The name is often used as a catch-all for Seacroft and the neighbouring areas ofWhinmoor andSwarcliffe, other large east Leeds council estates which merge into each other.

Seacroft includes one of the largest council estates in the country and Yorkshire's second-largest council estate, afterBransholme inKingston upon Hull. The latter, however, was part ofHumberside county from 1974 to 1996. Because of its size, Seacroft has often been referred to as a town. The original vision, envisaged by the council, was that it would be a 'Town within the City Limits', and the Seacroft Civic Centre was often referred to as the 'Seacroft Town Centre'.[3]

Etymology

[edit]

The nameSeacroft is first attested in theDomesday Book of 1086, asSacroft andSacrofft; the spellingsSecroft,Secrofte are attested around 1090 (surviving in a manuscript of 1403). The name comes from theOld English words ("large body of water") andcroft ("enclosure"). Thus the name once meant "enclosure near a pool or marsh".[4]: iv 121 

In vicinity of Seacroft was once found the field-nameChetwde, attested in 1341, which is unusual among English names for deriving partly fromCommon Brittonic: its first element is the word found today in modern Welsh ascoed ("woodland"). The second element, added after Brittonic ceased to be understood in the region is the English wordwood, making the name tautological in meaning.[4]: iv 122 

The Green

[edit]

Seacroft was at one time a small village between Leeds andYork. Thevillage green, known as "The Green" still exists, and is one of the oldest in the country. It has the Cricketers Arms pub on the north side and St James parish church (built 1845, architect T. Hellyer) on the south side.John Wesley preached on The Green, and as a result a Wesleyan Chapel (Methodist Church) was built close by.[5] Seacroft Green has anactive residents' association.

  • The Green
    The Green
  • Houses on The Green
    Houses on The Green
  • The Cricketers Arms, The Green
    The Cricketers Arms, The Green
  • St James's Parish Church (C of E), The Green (1845)
    St James's Parish Church (C of E), The Green (1845)


History

[edit]
See also:History of Seacroft

Seacroft village

[edit]
Areas of the original Seacroft village

Seacroft village is mentioned in theDomesday Book (1086).[6] Evidence of much earlier inhabitation was found during construction of the estate in the 1950s. A stone axe dating from theNeolithic age (3500–2100 BC) was found on Kentmere Avenue. In addition, two silver Roman coins were found on The Green in the 1850s.[7]

Seacroft Grange in 2017

Seacroft village is the original part of Seacroft, around The Green and Cricketers Arms (pictured above), and is often referred to today. Seacroft Hall was built in the 17th century by the Shiletto family incorporating extensive landscaping and parkland. Despite being alisted building, the hall was demolished in the 1950s. The original entrance lodge still stands on York Road, with Parklands School on South Parkway now occupying the location of the hall.[8] There is one shop in the area that was originally Seacroft Village, a small village off licence, which has been built since the building of the estate.

Seacroft Grange was built in 1627 for the Tottie family and is also known asTottie Hall.[9] It is a grade II listed building, along with its service buildings.[10][11] Although the English Heritage record says it was rebuilt in 1837[10] other sources record the building as original, noting that in 1837 the new tenant John Wilson renamed it to Seacroft Grange and set his coat of arms over the door.[12] The building included a celebrated late 17th century staircase thought to have been brought fromAusthorpe Hall.[10] It is now part of Seacroft Grange Care Village.[13]

See also The Seacroft Village Preservation Society.[8]

There is an old non-operating windmill, that pre-dates the estate, which has been incorporated into a hotel (now known as theBritannia Hotel Leeds).

Seacroft Windmill

Satellite town within the city boundary

[edit]

The village developed slowly over the centuries and saw very little change until the post-war years. Work on the estate began in the 1950s. Many of the older houses on the estate are more traditional red-brick semis built around the Beechwood area, to the North of the estate. In the 1960s manyprefabricated houses and high-rise flats were constructed on the estate. Two main roads were built through the estate, these being North Parkway and South Parkway. North Parkway was built with a dual carriageway, in a similar way as Oak Tree Drive, Coldcotes Drive and Gipton Approach in neighbouring Gipton.

In 1934, Leeds City Council bought 1,000 acres (4.0 km2) for municipal housing, and after World War II the majority of houses and blocks of flats were built. The council had planned for Seacroft to be a "satellite town within the city boundary"[14]

In addition to this vision, other areas surrounding Seacroft were built using the same principle. In the 1960s building work in theSwarcliffe and Stanks areas started, and in the 1970s inWhinmoor. However, none of these were as large or ambitious as Seacroft, with the intention that these areas use many of the amenities built along with the Seacroft Estate such as the Civic Centre and Seacroft's secondary schools. As such amenities were kept to a minimum in Swarcliffe and Whinmoor, with the estates only having small local shops, public houses and primary schools. Seacroft also has the main central bus interchange for North East Leeds, although the nearest railway station is inCross Gates.

Seacroft Civic Centre

[edit]
The former Seacroft Civic Centre in 1967

The 1960s also saw the construction of the Seacroft Civic Centre, which was at the time a novel way of building an outdoor purpose built town centre. The Civic Centre had aGrandways supermarket and aWoolworths as well as many other smaller shops, banks, pubs and a library. In the 1990s it had become apparent that the condition of the Civic Centre had deteriorated significantly in the 30 years since its construction. Talks were held withLeeds City Council, andTesco were found as the preferred bidder to rebuild the Seacroft Civic Centre.

Seacroft Green Shopping Centre

[edit]

In 1999, work began clearing the site and in 2000 the new Seacroft Green Shopping Centre opened. TheTesco supermarket was cited at the time to be the largest in Europe, a claim which may not have been true. It is, however, still an enormous supermarket spread over two levels (the second being a large mezzanine level, which was built a few years after the Tesco store had opened to give more space within the store). The car park was also enlarged and other shop units were built along the side of the supermarket, making the centre a crescent shape. The huge supermarket as well as the other shops promised to create hundreds more jobs then would be lost through the loss of trade in the Civic Centre, which among other factors made the redevelopment favourable with many Seacroft residents.[15]

Tesco at The Seacroft Green Shopping Centre

The Seacroft Green Shopping Centre is also the main transport interchange in Seacroft, with the main bus station for Seacroft and the surrounding areas being centred there. From here buses run out through the estate as well as to thecity centre,Wetherby andHarrogate. Seacroft bus station has five stands and an average daily footfall of 2,687.[16] (See Transport)

The centre was not entirely popular with many local residents who said they had lost their town centre to a Tesco supermarket and to an extent, this may be true. Although there are shops besides Tesco, they are far fewer than there were, the precinct area has been lost, the pubs in the centre have been lost, and there are no offices. Until the building of the new centre, and since the closure ofGrandways, it was said that Seacroft suffered from 'food poverty' and fresh produce could not be bought on the estate. This was probably not true as there was aCo-op (nowMcColls in 2018) on South Parkway.[17]

The rebuilding of the Civic Centre did not alter the deprivation on the estate. Throughout the 2000s (decade), the condition of many of the houses on the estate deteriorated, particularly amongst the prefabricated housing to the South West of the estate. Many houses were vacated and either their condition or lack of demand dictated that the council boarded them up. The estate's high rise flats are seen as a refuge as they are harder to break into and in better condition than the houses, as such they have largely been allocated to older residents. Some (including Queensview) have become sheltered housing.

Amenities elsewhere

[edit]

Regular bus services allow residents to use amenities inLeeds city centre,Cross Gates andWetherby. The Cross Gates Centre (formerly Arndale Centre) provides many high street shops which Seacroft lacks, while Wetherby's many pubs make it an alternative destination for evening entertainment.

Architecture

[edit]
See also:Architecture of Leeds
Concrete Council-built houses on North Parkway
High rise flats and brick semis

Seacroft has a variety of styles of architecture. The area surrounding the green has many old buildings, dating back to the 18th century and before. The estate also shows a variety of different styles employed byLeeds City Council for the duration of the estate's construction. The earlier houses dating back to the 1950s are red brick traditional terraces and semis. In the late 1960s and 1970sprefabricated housing was built towards the South West of the estate. The build quality of these houses was notably poor and many have now been demolished to be replaced with modern housing . The older council houses were generally built to a higher quality and are still in good condition. Thebrutalist Seacroft Civic Centre stood until its demolition in 1999, when it was replaced by the Seacroft Green Shopping Centre, which is of a fairly standard design for a large supermarket and purpose-built shops. There are also many high-rise blocks of flats around the estate, mainly near the Shopping Centre, towards the bottom of South Parkway and Beechwood Avenue, around the Ramshead area and in the Bogart Hill area. Starting in 2018, many new houses are being built on the eastern end of South Parkway.

  • Older housing, York Road, Seacroft Village
    Older housing, York Road, Seacroft Village
  • 1950s Semi-detached Council Housing
    1950s Semi-detached Council Housing
  • Later semi-detached houses
    Later semi-detached houses
  • Low-rise flats
    Low-rise flats
  • Shops on the South Parkway
    Shops on the South Parkway

Religious buildings include the stone-built St James's Parish Church (C of E, 1845), a brickWesleyan Chapel (1874), a brickCongregational Church (1951, badly damaged in an arson attack in 2015, leading to its demolition in 2017) and a brickRoman Catholic Church, Our Lady of Good Counsel (1954).

  • Methodist Church (Wesleyan Chapel) (1874), now Chapel FM Arts Centre (2014–present)
    Methodist Church (Wesleyan Chapel) (1874), now Chapel FM Arts Centre (2014–present)
  • Seacroft Congregational Church (1951) Demolished in 2017
    Seacroft Congregational Church (1951) Demolished in 2017
  • Our Lady of Good Counsel Catholic Church (1954)
    Our Lady of Good Counsel Catholic Church (1954)
  • St Richard's CofE church
    St Richard's CofE church
  • St James' CofE church predates the estate
    St James' CofE church predates the estate
  • Church of the Assumption, vacated by the church of England in 2012, now used by Forward in Faith
    Church of the Assumption, vacated by the church of England in 2012, now used byForward in Faith

Seacroft Hospital

[edit]
Main article:Seacroft Hospital
Seacroft Hospital Tower

Seacroft Hospital is Leeds' third-largesthospital, being significantly smaller than theLeeds General Infirmary andSt James' University Hospital. Situated between Seacroft andKillingbeck, opposite the former Killingbeck Isolation Hospital, the hospital is accessible from theA64 York Road. It was constructed between 1893 and 1904, with a brick clock tower (also a water tower) designed by E. T. Hall underArts and Crafts influence.[18][19]

Services have been moved from Seacroft Hospital to other hospitals around Leeds. Many of the buildings are in a poor state of repair. The health authority, in keeping with its policy to concentrate all services at the Leeds General Infirmary and St James hospitals, considers selling off the older parts of the hospital for redevelopment.[20]

Industry

[edit]

There is a small industrial estate in Seacroft on Limewood Approach.Cable and Wireless had a depot there for many years, but it closed in 2008. On the estate, Seacroft Waste Sorting Facility is based,Leeds City Council have a major depot andTransco operated a small facility until 2008. Large factories ofAgfa andUnilever are situated in nearbyWhinmoor.[21][22]

Education

[edit]

Primary

[edit]

The primary schools in Seacroft are:

  • Beechwood Primary School, Kentmere Avenue LS14 6QB
  • Grange Farm Primary School[1], Bancroft Rise LS14 1AX
  • Our Lady of Good Counsel Catholic Primary School, Pigeon Cote Road LS14 1EP
  • Parklands Primary School[2], Dufton Approach LS14 6ED
  • Seacroft Grange Primary School, Moresdale Lane, LS14 6JR

Secondary

[edit]

TheBishop Young Church of England Academy opened on 1 May 2017, the building was previously the David Young Community Academy (DYCA) which was founded in 2006 and closed in spring of 2017, named afterDavid Young, a former bishop of Ripon. It is a state-fundedacademy sponsored by theChurch of England.[23]

East Leeds Family Learning Centre (former Foxwood School) - now demolished.

Leeds East Academy is a coeducational school that originated in Parkland Girls' High School (built 1954) on South Parkway.[24] This was the last single-sex state school in Leeds before its closure. Leeds East Academy has now relocated to new buildings on the same site.

The mainsecondary school in Seacroft wasFoxwood School, which became an adult education centre, theEast Leeds Family Learning Centre,[25] but was demolished in 2009.The school was used as 'San Quentin High' inThe Beiderbecke Affair. The buildings were completed in 1962[26] and are a complex of buildings set in a square with a central courtyard. The main building was a six-storey tower block. Notable former pupils includeAndrew Edge (musician),David Harvey (footballer) andEllery Hanley (rugby league player). Former teachers includeColin Burgon (Labour Party MP forElmet which includedWetherby,Garforth,Cross Gates andSwarcliffe), who himself was fromGipton.

Politics

[edit]

Seacroft falls into theKillingbeck & Seacroft electoral ward ofLeeds City Council andLeeds Eastparliamentary constituency, represented byLabour MPRichard Burgon. As of2018, it has threeLabour councillors.[27]

Seacroft was formerly atownship in the parishes ofWhitkirk and Leeds and achapelry in the parish of Whitkirk,[28] in 1866 Seacroft became a separatecivil parish, on 9 November 1912 the parish was abolished and merged with Leeds.[29] In 1911 the parish had a population of 1695.[30]

Local media

[edit]

The local newspaper for Seacroft is theYorkshire Evening Post, thought theWetherby News is also sold in the area (although its news coverage generally stops beyond theShadwell andWhinmoor areas). The localBBC radio station isBBC Radio Leeds. Many other Leeds radio stations can be received, butChapelFM deals specifically with Seacroft and surrounding areas. Neighbouring areas such as Whinmoor are often covered in Wetherby'sTempo FM.

Reputation

[edit]
Boarded Housing in Seacroft (demolished)
some people remain in parts of South Parkway delaying regeneration (demolished)
Deserted Seacroft streets in the planned regeneration area (demolished)

Seacroft has a poor reputation across Leeds. A large portion of the housing is council owned, and the few jobs tend to be low paid casual or manual work. Many of the houses, particularlyprefabricated housing around South Parkway have been boarded up and are unfit for any future habitation. This is due to a multimillion-pound city re-development scheme whose earlier progress can be seen in the similar estates around the Coal Road area. The area's poor reputation has been focused on by journalistDonal MacIntyre. NeighbouringGipton also shares this poor reputation. 85.49% of occupied houses in Seacroft fall within the Band A council tax rate (the lowest based on house values).[31] However, the negative image of Seacroft was challenged in 2008 by aBBC article called 'The Estate' depicting life on the estate.[32][33]

Recorded crime statistics

[edit]

Below is a table from Leeds Observatory, detailing crime from 2018 ward in LS14 from March 2020 to February 2021.[34]

Recorded Crime (Most to Least)CountPer 1000% Of Total
All Crime5404231.46100
All Reported Crime (Excluding ASB)4,327185.3380.07
Violence And Sexual Offences2,00285.7537.05
Antisocial Behaviour (ASB)1,07746.1319.93
Criminal Damage And Arson57924.810.71
Public Order52622.539.73
Other Theft29612.685.45
Shoplifting2058.783.8
Domestic Burglary2018.613.72
Vehicle Crime1667.113.08
Other Crime1255.352.31
Drugs1014.331.87
Robbery371.580.68
Bicycle Theft331.410.61
Possession Of Weapons321.370.59
Theft From The Person241.030.44

Transport

[edit]

Public transport

[edit]
Seacroft bus station

Seacroft bus station was rebuilt as part of the Seacroft Green Shopping Centre and has five drive-in-reverse-out stands. Buses go from here toLeeds City Centre and to other neighbouring areas of the city such asCross Gates,Gipton andWhinmoor as well as Wetherby.First Leeds runs the majority of the services that serve the bus station. Their service 49 serves the Monkswood Gate area in the north of Seacroft, but not the bus station.[35]

The closest railway station isCross Gates, with services operating toLeeds,Garforth,Bradford Interchange,Halifax,York,Hull andScarborough.[36]

East Leeds Orbital Route (ELOR)

[edit]
This section needs to beupdated. The reason given is: ELOR is now open. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(April 2025)

Since the 1960s, theLeeds Outer Ring Road has been considered to create a social barrier between Seacroft andSwarcliffe,[37] which prompted calls for a bypass around East Leeds' suburbs. The project started in summer 2018 and is set to build a new 7.5-kilometre (4.7 mi) route linking the orbital Ring Road (A6120) at Red Hall to theA58, theA64 and Leeds Road to connect withThorpe Park at Junction 46 of theM1, set to be complete by summer 2023 with enhancement finished by autumn 2023.[38]

The East Leeds Orbital Route is the biggest infrastructure project undertaken byLeeds City Council for fifty years, since the completion of theLeeds Inner Ring Road in 1974. It is intended to ease congestion in existing residential areas likeCross Gates, Seacroft andWhitkirk, and will also play a key role in the growth plans for the city for years to come. It will allow the development of the surrounding areas of the road, with the development of possible new shops, houses, and schools.[38]

Distances to nearby places of significance

[edit]

Location grid

[edit]
Places adjacent to Seacroft

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^53 Super Output Areas within the Killingbeck and Seacroft ward make up Seacrofthttp://ukcensusdata.com/killingbeck-and-seacroft-e05001430#sthash.8wFY4n3n.vrLNgl3N.dpbs.dpbs
  2. ^Office for National StatisticsArchived 6 January 2009 at theWayback Machine 2001 census for Seacroft ward 17,725 on 29 April 2001
  3. ^Leodis photographic archive Seacroft Town Centre, aerial view
  4. ^abA. H. Smith,The Place-Names of the West Riding of Yorkshire, English Place-Name Society, 30–37, 8 vols (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1961–63).
  5. ^Leeds Methodist website Seacroft Methodist Church
  6. ^"Seacroft | Domesday Book".opendomesday.org. Retrieved20 February 2020.
  7. ^Weldrake, David."Seacroft History – Seacroft Today". Seacrofttoday.co.uk. Retrieved28 December 2008.
  8. ^ab"Seacroft Village". Home.freeuk.com. Retrieved28 December 2008.
  9. ^"History of the Village: Photographs (surviving buildings)".Seacroft Village Preservation Society. Retrieved24 September 2009.
  10. ^abcHistoric England."The Grange, The Green, Leeds (1255897)".National Heritage List for England. Retrieved24 September 2009.
  11. ^Historic England."Coach house and service range to The Grange, The Green, Leeds (1255898)".National Heritage List for England. Retrieved24 September 2009.
  12. ^"Seacroft Grange: Built in the 17th century for the Tottie family – what does the future hold?".Leeds History Journal.13.ISSN 1740-5696.
  13. ^"Seacroft Grange Care Village".seacroftgrange.com. Care Homes Leeds. Retrieved4 October 2017.
  14. ^"Seacroft, West Yorkshire | England | United Kingdom (UK) | Parish | Village | Community | Seacroft". Any-village.com. Retrieved22 June 2010.
  15. ^"Microsoft Word - 01136-TESCOJobGuarantee-Report.doc"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 7 March 2007. Retrieved28 December 2008.
  16. ^"West Yorkshire Metro | Bus Stations & Stops | Seacroft Bus Station". West Yorkshire Metro. Archived fromthe original on 5 January 2013. Retrieved28 December 2008.
  17. ^"Urban Regeneration, Social Inclusion and Large Store Development: The Seacroft Development in Context".Urban Studies.
  18. ^Steven Burt & Kevin Grady (2002)The Illustrated History of Leeds 2nd edn (Breedon Books, derby)ISBN 1 85983 316 0
  19. ^Brian Godward (2004)The Changing Faces of Leeds (Sutton Publishing, Stroud)ISBN 0-7509-3413-1
  20. ^"Hospital left in limbo over fate of buildings".Yorkshire Evening Post. Retrieved28 December 2008.
  21. ^"Archived copy"(PDF). Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 10 June 2011. Retrieved28 December 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  22. ^"07/04479/FU/HW"(PDF). Retrieved28 December 2008.
  23. ^"Bishop Young Church of England Academy - GOV.UK".Find and compare schools in England. Retrieved2 April 2021.
  24. ^Ofsted Parkland Girls' High School
  25. ^"Leeds East Academy - GOV.UK".Find and compare schools in England. Retrieved2 April 2021.
  26. ^"A photographic archive of Leeds". Leodis. Retrieved22 June 2010. An image of the new school
  27. ^democracy.leeds.gov.uk
  28. ^"History of Seacroft, in Leeds and West Riding".A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved12 October 2024.
  29. ^"Relationships and changes Seacroft CP/Tn through time". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved12 October 2024.
  30. ^"Population statistics Seacroft CP/Tn through time". A Vision of Britain through Time. Retrieved12 October 2024.
  31. ^"Housing and the Environment"(PDF). Statistics.leeds.gov.uk. Retrieved22 June 2010.
  32. ^"UK | The Estate".BBC News. 17 November 2008. Retrieved28 December 2008.
  33. ^Estate of the nation."BBC – Leeds – Places – Estate of the nation". Bbc.co.uk. Retrieved28 December 2008.
  34. ^"Leeds Observatory – Crime & Community Safety – Profiles (local areas)".observatory.leeds.gov.uk. Retrieved2 April 2021.
  35. ^Metro,Monkswood Gate – Bramley: 49, accessed 4 November 2018
  36. ^Metro."Metro | Bus stations | Seacroft Bus Station". Wymetro.com. Archived fromthe original on 5 January 2013. Retrieved22 June 2010.
  37. ^"a photographic archive of Leeds – Display". Leodis. Retrieved22 June 2010.
  38. ^ab"About The Project".East Leeds Orbital Route. Retrieved2 April 2021.

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