The August Bank Holiday or Summer Bank Holiday is a public holiday in the United Kingdom , part of the statutory bank holiday provision. Originally, the holiday was held on the first Monday of August across the country, but was changed in the late 1960s to the last Monday in August for England, Wales and Northern Ireland. It remains the first Monday for Scotland.
45-525: The Fforde Grene was a public house and music venue located in the Harehills district of the city of Leeds , West Yorkshire , England . It is now an ethnic supermarket and online grocer, CC Continental Supermarket . It hosted many bands before they became famous, including The Sex Pistols , U2 , Simple Minds , Dire Straits , Diamond Head , Be Bop Deluxe , Def Leppard , and The Rolling Stones and artists including Bo Diddley . Be Bop Deluxe played
90-399: A First West Yorkshire bus set alight by local residents, substantial vandalism, and anti-police sentiment as a result of local residents upset by a disturbance involving agency workers and children. The rioting began when a crowd of hundreds of people began attacking a marked police car. Footage shared on social media showed individuals using scooters, pushchairs, bikes, and bats to assault
135-531: A Lithuanian supermarket there since the 1970s. In the 1950s, invited workers arrived from the West Indies , particularly Saint Kitts , and in the 1960s, immigrants arrived from Pakistan and Bangladesh . The arrival of many people from the West Indies in the 1950s led to a growth of Pentecostal communities. The Greek community bought a former Methodist church on Harehills Avenue in 1966 and renovated it to make
180-735: A Methodist and two United Reformed Churches in the area. On Harehills Lane is the Baptist Church, a 1928 brick building and the Jamia Masjid Bilal Mosque built in 1996 to serve the local Pakistani community, but now having a much more diverse congregation of recent immigrants. On Easterly Road an old school building is (since 1988) home to the New Testament Church of God, a Pentecostal congregation of mainly African or Afro-Caribbean origin. The only Greek Orthodox Church in Leeds
225-453: A church and accommodation for social and schooling activities, consecrating the church of The Three Hierarchs in 1985. Since World War II , the manufacturing industry in the area has declined to be replaced by small shops and restaurants reflecting the vibrant ethnic mix of the area. Many pubs have closed because of the change in population with many Muslims in the area; the Clock cinema has become
270-401: A director of Melbourne's Brewery (a forerunner of Tetleys ) who could trace his ancestry back to a 13th-century relative called Richard del Fforde who lived in a house called Fford Grene. This venue was at the busy junction of Roundhay Road and Easterly Road A58 and Harehills Lane (B6159). This junction is still named the "Fforde Grene Junction" The name of the pub was to lend itself to
315-558: A four-term school year. Following the two year trial, each year's date was announced in Parliament on an ad hoc basis, causing problems for publishers of the calendars and diaries. The rule seems to have been to select the weekend of the last Saturday in August, so that in 1968 and 1969 Bank Holiday Monday actually fell in September, causing concern amongst some politicians. The date
360-425: A group of young children chasing vermin into an overgrown backyard. This is a sight you would expect to see in a third-world country not the modern, vibrant city that Leeds portrays itself to be." Another resident described it as being a pleasant place until the 1970s, but has since changed "beyond recognition". However a third interviewed resident was more positive, although critical in her report, and echoing many of
405-607: A mosque by the Bangladesh Islamic Society; it is noted for its sensitive engagement with the surrounding Victorian red-brick terraced houses. Racial tensions have caused problems in the area, contributing to the Harehills riot in 2001. Residents interviewed in 2002 noted their discontent at how the area had deteriorated since the 1970s. One resident described Harehills as "a horrible place to live" and complained about joy riding, rubbish, drug dealing, arson and vermin. The man's report went on to say: "Often you will see
450-482: A shoe works and a brick works between Hudson Road and Harehills Lane as well as an iron works on York Road. Harehills and the surrounding area also had significant mining infrastructure. Sydney Kitson designed the Church of England parish church of St Wilfrid in an Arts and Crafts style in 1913, but its construction did not begin until 1927. Jewish refugees from Russia and Poland formed a community around Spencer Place in
495-485: A shop. In the 1970s and 1980s, the Fforde Grene pub hosted many gigs. In 1984, some terraced houses in the area around the roads "Sandhurst Terrace", "Dorset Road", "Dorset Mount" and "Dorset Avenue" appeared in the beginning of rock band Queen's music video for " I Want To Break Free ". The Central Jamia Mosque or Leeds Islamic Centre, Spencer Place was designed by Finn & Downes Associates in 1997–2000, replacing
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#1733084532239540-678: A temporary Catholic church and Congregationalist church built by Tom Dyer in 1900–1901. The Sunday School of the Congregationalist Church is now the Bilal Mosque, constructed in 1999 to designs by Atba Al-Samarraie. The Baptist community planned a chapel on Harehills Lane designed by the London firm James Cubitt & Manchip in 1906–1907, finally built after World War I ; the hall is notable for its use of light and its Italian Romanesque design. On Harehills Avenue, Trinity Presbyterian Church
585-413: A tram stop on the proposed Leeds Supertram project. This project was abandoned in 2004 owing to spiralling costs. In 2007 it opened to the public as CC Continental Supermarket, an ethnic retail supermarket, providing fresh meat, vegetables and world foods. 53°49′03.9″N 1°30′55.3″W / 53.817750°N 1.515361°W / 53.817750; -1.515361 Harehills Harehills
630-636: Is St Aidan's , the Church of England parish church . The Anglican Church St Wilfrid's on Chatsworth Road is part of the Forward in Faith movement. The Roman Catholic parish church is St Augustine's, a 1937 brick building on Harehills Road, a little to the north of Banstead Park. On Banstead Terrace, the north side of Banstead Park is the Trinity United Church a 1983 brick building. It combined congregations from
675-421: Is The Three Hierarchs , in a former Methodist Church (1906 stone building) on Harehills Avenue, which attracts worshippers from all over Yorkshire. As of the 2021 United Kingdom census , the area's religious makeup is 41.9% Muslim , 37% Christian, 17.4% No Religion, with smaller numbers of Hindu and Sikh communities. Images of Harehills August Bank Holiday The holiday was one of four created by
720-558: Is a large brick building on Harehills Lane, and Harehills Liberal Club is round the corner on Foundry Approach. Schools include Bankside Primary School, Co-op Academy Nightingale, Co-op Academy Woodlands, Hovingham Primary School, Harehills Primary School and St Augustine's Catholic Primary School. There are no secondary schools actually in Harehills. Harehills is between the A58 and the A64 . Harehills
765-532: Is an inner-city area of east Leeds , West Yorkshire, England. It is about 1 mile (1.6 km) northeast of Leeds city centre . Harehills is between the A58 (towards Wetherby ) and the A64 (towards York ). It sits in the Gipton & Harehills ward of Leeds City Council and the Leeds East parliamentary constituency, between Burmantofts and Gipton , and adjacent to Chapeltown . Its boundaries are defined by
810-527: Is situated in Harehills. Since the 1890s, cheap housing has made it attractive to immigrants, with the result that it has a considerable cultural and ethnic mixture. On the August Bank Holiday the Leeds Carnival is held with a procession through Harehills and Chapeltown . The name Harehills is first attested in 1576, as Hayr Hylls . Scholars agree that the second element of the name Harehills
855-604: Is the topographic term ' hill '. There has been some debate about the first element, however. Eilert Ekwall , in his influential Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place Names , thought that the name came from the Old English word hār ('grey'). However, the subsequent research by A. H. Smith for the English Place-Name Society concluded that, as the modern spelling would suggest, the name does originate from hare , and thus originally meant 'hill characterised by
900-471: Is well-placed for access to Leeds city centre and Wetherby . Buses run through Harehills to Leeds city centre , Oakwood , Roundhay , Gipton , Seacroft and Wetherby . Harehills was served by the Leeds Tramway . In 1949 Tetley's Coaches, a local coach operator, was founded in Harehills. However, since then the coach operator has moved its offices to Hunslet . Harehills was on a proposed route of
945-507: The Bank Holidays Act 1871 (along with Easter Monday , Whit Monday and Boxing Day ), being the only one which was not linked to an Anglican religious festival. The act was introduced by Liberal politician Sir John Lubbock . Lubbock argued that the act was passed with relative ease because of the naming as a 'bank' holiday, with those who might have opposed it thinking it only applied to banks. In 1964, an experimental move to
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#1733084532239990-570: The Leeds Supertram before its cancellation. The location of St James' University Hospital prompted the inclusion of Harehills in the Trolleybus project however the Trolleybus plans were cancelled in May 2016 because it was claimed that they would have provided little value for money. Part of the Gipton and Harehills ward, in 2015 this ward had the highest levels of unemployment in Leeds. In 2020, it
1035-426: The 1890s, St Aidans Anglican church was built on Roundhay Road in a Romanesque style with mosaics by Frank Brangwyn ; it was designed by Robert James Johnson of Newcastle. Irish Catholics who settled in the area received a parish church in 1905; Scottish Presbyterians also settled here early on. Following rapid growth around the turn of the century, two churches were built on Harehills Road close to each other:
1080-494: The 1920s. The Third Church of Christ Scientist on Easterly Road was designed by Davidson, Son & Sherwood in 1927; it became the home of the Pentecostal New Testament Church of God in 1984 after the group had met in private homes in Leeds since 1959. The Catholic church of St Augustine was designed by Gribbon, Foggit and Brown in 1937 in a more modernist style notable for its open interior structure, replacing
1125-538: The Chadssidishe Shul synagogue of 1934 whose hall still exists behind the mosque. In the 2000s, many Eastern European immigrants moved to Harehills, particularly from Poland and the area is also home to refugees from Zimbabwe , Somalia and Iraq as well as asylum seekers. Shah Jalal Mosque in Ellers Road was built in 2003-2004 designed by Atba Al-Samarraie, replacing a late 1970s conversion of two houses into
1170-634: The Harehills Festival in 2018. Since 2008, Shine social enterprise has had a great impact supporting non-violent women ex-offenders to reintegrate into society and take care of their children; providing education and cultural activities for local children; supporting entrepreneurs and artists to develop sustainable local businesses; and in helping the environment by providing green space and working towards improving pedestrian and cycling routes in Harehills. The area saw more rioting on 18 July 2024 , with West Yorkshire Police officers attacked, cars and
1215-621: The Harehills Neighbourhood Improvement Plan was put in place addressing issues of health and wellbeing; unemployment and local economy; crime and anti-social behaviour; the local environment; and community activities to encourage community cohesion. Harehills Lane Shopping was allocated £200,000 of funding under the Town and District Centre scheme. Leeds City Council reported investment in the area in 2021. Harehills' amenities are not located within one centre but spread across
1260-455: The area as: "Romanian, Gypsy, Pakistani, Asian – this is what it means to be from Harehills". Leeds' Roma community is mostly based in the area, although there are also Roma communities living in Beeston and Armley . The area has at least eight places of worship, indicative of the changing population of the area, with an Anglican church being the oldest and a mosque the most recent. The oldest
1305-509: The area, mainly on Roundhay Road and Harehills Lane; there are many small shops, restaurants and supermarkets, including catering for different immigrant communities. Roundhay Road has been referred to as 'Curry Mile'. There are several public houses in Harehills, although considerably fewer than there once were. The last Pub remaining in Harehills is the Samuel Smith Old Brewery pub, The Brown Hare . Harehills Conservative Club
1350-589: The city council as "the boundary of Spencer Place to the West, Harehills Avenue to the North, the boundary of Foundry Place to the East and Compton Road and Stanley Road to the South." As the name suggests, it is a hill area, basically a south-facing slope, with many streets of terraced houses on hills. In the middle is Banstead Park, a grassy slope with trees and play areas, giving a view over
1395-535: The city of Leeds. There are two main shopping streets, Harehills Lane and Harehills Road which join at the junction of Roundhay Road ( A58 road ) leading to Oakwood . Also, heading 0.6 miles (1 km) up Harehills Lane towards the A64 York Road at the junction with Compton Road, is Harehills's other main shopping area. Harehills provides many shops such as casinos, corner shops and fast food. You may also find jewellery and barber shops. St James' University Hospital
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1440-425: The community effort is a number of colourful mosaic street signs, made by youths who are residents of Harehills. In 2014–15, it was reported that several voluntary sector agencies operate within the area including Shantona Women's' Centre, Bangladeshi Centre, ECHO centre, Bilal Sports Centre and CATCH Hovingham Hub. Over the past years residents and local agencies have come together and organised community events like
1485-453: The complaints before, she mentions the "pride of the residents in the upkeep of their houses". As housing has increasingly been bought to let out much less money has been spent on the upkeep of houses and gardens. A report published in 2008 notes that there was a high level of crime in the area particularly related to drugs and gangs. The Fforde Grene Public House (now closed) was raided by police in 2004 who recovered drugs and guns. A man
1530-454: The early 20th century temporary church on the site. In 1958–9, Geoffrey Davy designed the Anglican church of St Cyprian with St James on Coldcotes Avenue; it is designed in a Corbusier style around an organ from St James church in the city centre and has typical contemporary stained glass used by Davy in several churches. After 1921, Montague Burton 's established the largest textile factory in
1575-533: The end of August was announced by the Secretary of State for Industry, Trade and Regional Development , Edward Heath , taking effect for two years from 1965, responding to pressure from the holiday industry to extend the season. The move applied to England and Wales, but not to Scotland. There was consultation on other methods of staggering holidays and reducing congestion related to this. Other suggestions included staggering school holidays by region, and introducing
1620-423: The preceding year. According to the 2021 census for the wider ward, 38.2% of people are Asian, 34.5% are white, 17.4% are Black, with mixed, Arab and other ethnic groups comprising the rest of the community. Within the total population, 23.7% are self-define as English, Welsh, Scottish or Northern Irish, whilst 22.6% are Pakistani or British Pakistani. The community is diverse, with a local resident describing
1665-438: The presence of hares'. In the early 19th century, the area covered by Harehills existed as woods between Leeds and the village of Chapel Allerton . Leeds had developed in the west, north and south but not much to the east. The area began to be developed from the 1820s, when people sought to escape the overcrowding in the centre of Leeds, wide streets and detached houses were envisaged in a plan titled 'New Leeds'. However, it
1710-476: The vehicle. The police car was overturned, and fires were lit on the streets of the community. In November 2003, Harehills received £100,000 toward regeneration from Yorkshire Forward . Investment has also included a children's centre which opened in March 2006. Improvements to The Compton Centre community hub and library have been made to include a one-stop centre and job shop for Leeds City Council . In 2014–2015,
1755-659: The venue to a packed house of fans who became incensed that the landlord would not allow an encore, resulting in a riot. The police were called to find the carpet under a sea of broken glass and the furniture smashed to matchwood. The band's gear was untouched. Built in 1938, the pub closed its doors in July 2004 and is now one of the UK's largest ethnic supermarkets and online grocer which opened in 2007 as CC Continental Supermarket. The patrons of Fforde Grene were an inspiration for Chumbawamba 's classic " Tubthumping ." The pub took its name from
1800-480: The world on Hudson Road, where 10,000 people worked, producing 3,000 suits a week; the factory had a large canteen. In the middle of the 20th century, Harehills had three cinemas, a roller rink and dance hall, all have closed since. To the south of Harehills, St James' Hospital grew out of a workhouse and industrial school particularly in the 1950s and 1960s. Following World War II , Greek Cypriots and Eastern European immigrants settled in Harehills; there has been
1845-622: Was built in 1906 by W H Beevers in a Gothic style and a Primitive Methodist Chapel by Dinsley was also built on the Avenue. By the time that the 1906 Ordnance Survey map was produced, Harehills was an established community. At this time Harehills was home to a purpose built reservoir sited between Harehills Lane and Harehills Recreation Ground, shown on the 1906 map as owned by the Leeds Corporation Water Works. The 1906 map also shows two clothing factories on Hudson Road along with
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1890-478: Was closely packed back-to-back housing for workers that came to be built in the 1890s. Expansion happened very rapidly. Harehills was on the route of the Leeds Tramway to Roundhay and Chapeltown opened from 1891. Transport links contributed to the growth of the area. In 1891, Harehills Board School opened on Roundhay Road, designed by Charles Barker Howdill (1863–1940). In 1897, the Gipton Board School
1935-427: Was described as the second most socio-economically deprived area in Leeds; 74.2% of households in the area were deprived in 2021. In 2023, the most frequently reported crimes were violence and sexual offences, public order violations, and incidents of criminal damage and arson. In 2023 the crime rate was 209.85 per 1000 residents. In 2024 West Yorkshire Police reported that crime in the ward had reduced by 40% over
1980-524: Was opened on Harehills Road, designed by Walter Samuel Braithwaite (1854–1922). Braithwaite used features found in many of the Leeds Board Schools built at this time, in a Renaissance Revival style. It later became known as Gipton Council School, and in the 1950s, Harehills County Secondary School. It became Harehills Middle in the 1970s and closed in 1992 later being redeveloped as a business centre that encourages start-ups and social enterprises. In
2025-410: Was shot in 2008, believed to be a case of mistaken identity. Another shooting also occurred in 2008. In 2008, a 14-year-old girl was sexually assaulted and murdered by a serial attacker who lived nearby. In 2019, police and firefighters were pelted with bricks and other missiles on Bonfire Night . Community groups have combatted youth crime by running cultural and sporting activities. A feature of
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