Leeds's Military Legacy
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Paul Chrystal
Paul Chrystal is the author of some seventy books published over the last decade, including recent publications such as Wars and Battles of the Roman Republic, Roman Military Disasters and Women and War in Ancient Greece and Rome. He is a regular contributor to history magazines, local and national newspapers and has appeared on BBC Radio 4, BBC World Service and on BBC local radio throughout Yorkshire and in Teesside and Manchester. He writes extensively for several Pen & Sword military history series including ‘Cold War 1945–1991’, ‘A History of Terror’ and ‘Military Legacy’ (of British cities).
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Leeds's Military Legacy - Paul Chrystal
INTRODUCTION
Leeds has a rich and varied military heritage. This book charts that heritage from Roman times to the end of the Second World War.
There was clearly limited military activity after the Roman invasion of Britain and through the Anglo-Saxon periods. Decisive battles of the Wars of the Roses skirted Leeds to the south but, as a strategically important city, Leeds only came into its own in the English Civil War when it was a target for both Royalist and Parliamentarian armies. The city had a flirtation with the conflicts of the 18th-century Jacobite Uprisings and its regiments were mobilized in the industrial and social unrest caused by Chartism and Luddism.
Leeds responded enthusiastically in the call to arms for volunteer regiments in the 19th century amid fears of French invasion and French-style popular revolution. Some its most famous regiments find their origins at this time: Leeds Volunteers, Leeds Rifles and the 1st (Leeds) Yorkshire West Riding Artillery Volunteer Corps; 2nd West Yorkshire Royal Engineer Volunteers and the Yorkshire Hussars Yeomanry (Alexandra, Princess of Wales’s Own). Local industry, not least brewers Joshua Tetley, supported this with a ready supply of horses and men.
The Second Boer War saw Leeds regiments serve with distinction, winning one VC. But it was in the First World War where Leeds men and women excelled themselves in patriotism and bravery and, sadly, sacrifice and slaughter. On the home front local industry and local men and women excelled in war-effort work: military uniforms were made in their tens of thousands while the heroines of the Barnbow munitions factory turned out even more munitions: thirty-seven of the Canary Girls and two men tragically died working for their country in three fateful explosions.
The Second World War was met by the people of Leeds with similar patriotism and fortitude, be it on the home front or on the front line. Industry boosted the war effort and regiments and an RAF squadron fought with distinction.
As a fitting epilogue we visit the remarkable Leeds Royal Armouries Museum, no better place to celebrate Leeds’s glorious military heritage.
1. ROMAN, ANGLO-SAXON AND NORMAN MILITARY LEEDS
The place we now know as Leeds was of little, if any, military significance until the English Civil War in the 17th century. Before the Romans came in AD 43, and during the early part of their occupation at least, the region, Brigantia, was occupied by the Celtic tribe known as the Brigantes, the largest tribe in Britain in terms of territory. No doubt the Brigantes fought with neighbouring tribes to defend their territory against incursions, livestock raids and kidnappings; no doubt they responded in kind with raids over their borders into enemy territory. The Carvetii were to the north-west, the Parisii to the east and the Corieltauvi and the Cornovii to the south. To the north were the Votadini who settled the lands up to the present-day border between England and Scotland.
While of no strategic significance, the area around Leeds was settled by Bronze Age and Celtic peoples. Roman Bronze Age objects have been found, including two barrows on Woodhouse Moor. In the pre-Roman and Roman Iron Age, Brigantian earthworks and a possible Roman paved ford across the Aire at today’s Leeds Bridge have been excavated. The Leeds historian Ralph Thoresby (1658–1725) cites evidence (now lost) of a Roman fort at Quarry Hill on the site of the West Yorkshire Playhouse but this remains doubtful, as does the suggestion that this was in fact Cambodunum, which is actually at Slack near Huddersfield. We are on safer ground with part of a Roman hypocaust (the underground heating system for a house or bath house) which was unearthed in the early 20th century in the sewage works that stood where the White Rose Centre is now. Roman coins and other small finds have been made on the Cardinals Estate and up Churwell Hill. Just east of Leeds Bridge, archaeological finds may suggest the presence of a mansio, one of the thousands of posting stations along the cursus publicus following the major road network of the Roman empire where riders rested and horses were watered, shoed, cared for by vets, stabled and passed on to the next dispatch rider.
Brigantian and Roman remains have also been found at Adel, a place of minor military strategic importance. Adel (Roman name Burgodunum) is near the site of a Roman fort on the Roman road from York to Ilkley via Tadcaster; five Roman-inscribed stones have been found there. The footpath by the side of Long Causeway was allegedly made from the original Roman stones, until removed by the council in the 1960s on the grounds of health and safety.
Of the five inscribed stones there are two altar stones dedicated to different goddesses, one found in 1879 at Church Lane, Chapel Allerton and now in the Leeds Museum; the other found in 1816 at Adel and now in the coach-house of Adel Church. The first is inscribed MΛTRIBVS ... ... M ‘To the Mother [goddesses … a vow absolved freely and] deservedly’; the second DEΛE BRIGΛN D CINGETISSA P ‘To the goddess Brigantia a dedication placed by Cingetissa’. The third is a building stone inscribed with a phallus found in the same year that carries the inscription PRIMINVS MENT[U]LA ‘Priminus is a Prick’! The other two are fragments of two tombstones discovered in 1702 at Adel Mill; both are now lost. The inscriptions read: D M S CADIEDI NIAE FORTVNATAE PIA V A X … ‘To the holy shades of the departed Cadiedinia Fortunata Pia, who lived for [...] years [...]’; and [...] IVGI PIENTISS H S E ‘[...] to a most dutiful spouse who lies here’. At Alwoodley in Headingley a Roman stone coffin was found in 1995 at Beckett’s Park.
The Romans had invaded Britain in AD 43. In AD 51 Caratacus, veteran British chieftain and king of the Catuvellauni, led his tribe along with the Silures and Ordovices against Publius Ostorius Scapula, the Roman governor. Scapula finally defeated Caratacus, capturing Caratacus’s wife and daughter and taking his brothers prisoner. Caratacus himself fled to the Brigantes seeking asylum but, unfortunately for Caratacus, the queen of the Brigantes, Cartimandua (r. caAD 43–caAD 69), a Roman vassal, had him bound in chains and handed over to the Romans. Caratacus’s reputation as a warrior preceded him and he was a star feature in Emperor Claudius’s triumph in Rome marking his successful invasion. Cartimandua was amply rewarded. She divorced her husband Venutius for his armour-bearer Vellocatus; in AD 57 Venutius declared war against her and against the Romans, launching an unsuccessful invasion of Brigantia. However, in AD 69 Cartimandua had to be evacuated by the Romans after another attack by Venutius; their faithful client was no more, so, to control the troublesome Brigantes, the general Quintus Petillius Cerialis led the 9th Legion north from Lindum (Lincoln) across the Humber. Eboracum (York) was founded in AD 71 when Cerialis built a military fortress at the confluence of the rivers Ouse and Foss, some twenty-five miles from what was to become Leeds.
There is evidence too of Roman activity in Tadcaster and Wetherby. Tadaster (fifteen miles north-east from Leeds) was founded by the Romans who called it Calcaria, place of the lime burners, from the Latin word for lime, which, along with the Calcaria pub in Westgate, attests to the limestone deposits that have been quarried there for centuries. There was a Roman villa at nearby Kirkby Wharfe from which a tessellated pavement was excavated in 1711. Near Wetherby (thirteen miles north-east) is Dalton Parlours Roman villa, the only known example of its type in West Yorkshire. It comprises a main residential building, two bath blocks, other domestic buildings and outhouses and wells.
When the Romans left, the people of the area around Leeds resorted to local squabbling and intermittent fighting with outsiders. The Kingdom of Emlet was overrun by Edwin the Anglo-Saxon king of Northumbria in 617. However, Edwin’s Christian church and palace were torched when the town was sacked by King Penda of Mercia after Edwin was killed at the battle of Hatfield Chase near Doncaster in 633.
The she-wolf (lupa) and Romulus and Remus – symbols of Rome and of Romanization. The mosaic, from the 4th century AD, was found at Aldborough and is now in the Leeds City Museum.
In AD 655 the battle of the Winwaed took place at what is now Whinmoor on the outskirts of modern Leeds, near the river now known as Cock Beck in the Elmet, which runs through Penda’s Fields in Leeds, before joining the River Wharfe. Here Penda was killed and decapitated by Edwin’s nephew, the Christian King Oswiu of Bernicia (one of the two kingdoms of Northumbria), fighting to regain control of Northumbria. Christianity was established as the principal religion in Anglo-Saxon England after the Winwaed.
The first record of the name ‘Leeds’ comes from Bede in his Historia Ecclesiastica (Book II Chapter 14) around AD 731 when he mentions an altar from a church built by Edwin of Northumbria, in ‘the region known as Loidis’. We learn from an 11th-century manuscript that in the 10th century, Loidis lay on the boundary between the Viking kingdom of Jorvik and the Welsh-speaking Kingdom of Strathclyde – Lancashire, Cumbria and south-western Scotland. The names Pen-y-Ghent, Craven, Hatfield, Aldborough and Stanwick provide more evidence of the Welsh influence. The name crops up again in the 1086 Domesday Book describing a settlement, in Old English, as Ledes. Domesday tells us that ‘Ledes’ has ‘a priest, a church, a mill and 10 acres of meadow, 27 labourers, 4 freemen, 4 cottagers’. In 1086 Leeds had a population of some 200 people.
Military significance comes from The Annals of Yorkshire, 1862, from which we learn that ‘In excavating for the foundations of the warehouses on the south side of West Bar, in 1836, the workmen discovered the remains of the Castle Moat. It appeared to have had a semicircular form, and to have terminated in the Mill Goite, extending considerably on each side of Scarbrough’s Hotel, on which site the castle is supposed to have stood. A tower also stood near Lydgate in Woodhouse Lane, called Tower Hill; which was probably connected with the castle; but not a vestige of either fabric remains’.
After the Norman conquest Leeds itself was spared the devastation and depredation that was the fate of many settlements during the vengeful Harrying of the North by William I; however, Seacroft, Garforth, Coldcotes, Manston, Bramley, Beeston, Halton, and Allerton were comprehensively laid waste as vivid examples of how not to behave under the Normans.
We know from The Leeds Guide of 1837 that Ilbert de Lacy built a second castle around 1080 on Mill Hill – today’s City Square – besieged by Stephen on his way to Scotland in 1139. The Castle of Leeds occupied the site surrounded in 1862 by Mill Hill, Bishopgate and the western part of Boar Lane. It was probably encircled by a moat, and an extensive park, as evidenced by the names Park Row and Park Square. According to the Hardynge Chronicle