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Results Found (5), Result Page (1 of 1)
Search Aspect ( Arthington Lane )
Location - Leeds & District

[1]
Arthington Lane, Ash Tree House (Harewood)
Black & White imageUndated. View of Arthington Lane looking in the direction of Pool, showing a cottage known as Ash Tree House. The cottage is situated about half a mile beyond Arthington Hall and Arthington Park, opposite the lane to Mill Farm.
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[2]
Arthington Lane, Main Street junction (Pool) (1 comment)
Black & White image19th November 1979. View of Arthington Lane showing the junction with Main Street to the right and Pool Bank to the left. The White Hart public house is on the right of the picture Midland Bank and B & P.J. Shepherd, newsagents, can be seen on Main Street, with an advertisement for the Evening Post and Yorkshire Post on the wall outside the newsagents.
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[3]
Arthington Lane, White Hart (Pool) (2 comments)
Black & White image19th November 1979. View of the White Hart public house from Arthington Lane, with the junction with Main Street on the left. Formerly a farm owned by John Milthorp, the White Hart has been a hotel since at least the late 19th century.
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[4]
Main Street, White Hart (Pool)
Black & White image19th November 1979. View of the White Hart public house from Main Street, with Arthington Lane leading off on the right. Cars are parked in the hotel car park on the left.
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[5]
St. Peter's Church, Arthington Lane (Arthington)
Black & White imageUndated, Early 1900s view of the Church of St. Peter on the south side of Arthington Lane. It dates from 1864 and was built in rock-faced sandstone to designs by Sir George Gilbert Scott in the Gothic style and included sittings for 307 persons, a western tower and a spire containing one bell. The building work was financed by William Sheepshanks esq. of Arthington Hall and there are many memorials within the church to members of the Sheepshanks family. The first vicar was the Reverend Thomas Sheepshanks M.A., who gifted the vicarage situated behind the church. The clock was a later addition to the tower, installed in 1910, and it was made by William Potts & Sons of Leeds. Due to dwindling numbers making up the congregation the church was forced to close in 2007, and the final service was held on Sunday 2nd September of that year. The Grade II listed building of St. Peter's was acquired in 2007 by the Christian Coptic Orthodox Church of Egypt, a church dating back to the third century.
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