[1]
| Andover Place nos. 1 - 5, Lady Pit Lane (Hunslet) (1 comment) |
 | 24th November 1965
View of back-to-back scullery houses in Andover Place looking from the junction with Lady Pit Lane. A scullery was a very small room with a water supply used for food preparation and other household tasks. It was situated next to the living room where originally the cooking of family meals would have taken place. The houses are numbered, from left to right, 1 to 5. [internal reference; 200372_66387576:WYAS Northcote Road (Hunslet Hall Road) Box 82, no. 70] |
[2]
| Andover Place, Lady Pit Lane, Wesleyan Methodist Chapel, Progress Works (Hunslet) (1 comment) |
 | 22nd November 1965
View of the rear and side of what was once the Lady Pit Lane Methodist Chapel, originally called Wesleyan. It was built to seat 250 people. By the time this photograph was taken it had closed as a chapel and undergone a change of use to a sheet metal working and light engineering works by the name of Progress Works, occupied by Thompson Green and Co Ltd. [internal reference; 200372_69732303:WYAS Northcote Road (Hunslet Hall Road) Box 82, no. 65] |
[3]
| Andover Street nos. 2 - 8 (Hunslet) |
 | 24th November 1965
View of back-to-back brick built terraced properties in Andover Street, looking in the direction of Lady Pit Lane. From the left, houses number 8 to 2. A gas street lamp lights the entrance to outside toilets at night (far left). [internal reference; 200372_41909426:WYAS Northcote Road (Hunslet Hall Road) Box 82, no. 72] |
[4]
| Andover Street, Lady Pit Lane (Hunslet) |
 | 24th November 1965
On the left, at number 9 Lady Pit Lane, is a grocery and the business of A. Thorpe. It had been a grocery for many years. Number 11 Lady Pit Lane is part of the same property as 1 Andover Street. On the right of it is number 3. [internal reference; 200372_69515628:WYAS Northcote Road (Hunslet Hall Road) Box 82, no. 71] |
[5]
| Back Beverley Terrace, from Lady Pit Lane. (Beeston) |
 | 2008.
Image shows the even-numbered side of Back Beverley Terrace, taken from the junction with Lady Pit Lane. These are through red-brick terraced houses with front doors opening on to Beverley Terrace at the other side. Many of the homes are boarded up and have been acquired by the council as part of a regeneration programme. A few are still occupied and there is a line of washing further up the street. There are plans for new housing development after clearance of the Beverleys. [internal reference; 2008116_167809:LEO 3511b] |