Great coverage for Wednesday’s History Society meeting in this week’s Keighley News. The talk is about how the Ice Age influenced, and was influenced by, the local landscape, to be given by Philippa McHugh and Alan Pearson. The meeting is on Wednesday 10th September 2025 at 7.15pm in the Civic Centre on North Street. All welcome.
This month’s History Society meeting includes a talk by History Society members Philippa McHugh and Alan Pearson, who take us on a journey through the local area during the most recent ice age. Discover which areas the ice covered, where the lakes formed and the rivers flowed, and the evidence it has left behind.
And why not go see the ‘Ice Age Art Now’ exhibition at Cliffe Castle Museum (on until 14th September) as a “warm up” for this talk?
The History Society meeting is on Wednesday 10th September 2025 and will be held in the Main Hall, upstairs in Keighley Civic Centre. Doors open at 7.15pm. There is a lift to access the first floor. Entry is free to History Society members and is £3.50 to anyone else (pay on the door – cash only) – all are welcome to attend. The meeting is scheduled to finish around 8.45pm. Members of the History Society also have the option of joining the meeting online via Zoom.
Membership of the History Society costs £15 for the calendar year. If you join at this meeting you will get membership for the rest of this year and all of 2026 (cash only please).
Keighley Local Studies Library is hosting a session on ‘5 Strategies for Researching Yorkshire Family History’, led by respected local and family historian Jude Rhodes, on Wednesday 10th September at 2.15pm. Free to attend. See poster for more details.
The History Society will have stalls at two events coming up over the next couple of weekends.
On Sunday 31st August we will be at the Keighley Bus Museum fundraising event in Keighley College car park. The event runs from 10am to 3pm. See the poster for more details.
On Saturday 6th September we will be at Keighley Show, between 10am and 4pm. See the poster for more details, including the chance to buy cheaper tickets in-advance.
Please come along and say hello, and support these local events.
Great coverage of next week’s History Society meeting in this week’s Keighley News. The meeting focusses on largely-forgotten crime writer Austin Lee, who was born in Cowling and educated at Keighley Boys Grammar School. During the 1950s and 1960s he published various whodunnit novels, many featuring amateur detective Miss Flora Hogg (including ‘Miss Hogg and the Bronte Murders’, with some very evocative descriptions of Haworth in the 1950s).
Speakers will be writer and journalist Sharon Wright, Bronte Parsonage Principal Curator Ann Dinsdale, and History Society committee member Tim Neal, talking about how they became converts to Lee’s cause. There will also be a small display about Austin Lee, courtesy of Keighley Local Studies Library.
The meeting is on Wednesday 13th August 2025, at 7.15pm in the Keighley Civic Centre on North Street. All are welcome to come along. Entry is £3.50 or free to History Society members. History Society members can also join the meeting via Zoom if they prefer. The meeting ends around 8.45pm.
This month’s History Society meeting is on Wednesday 13th August, upstairs in the Civic Centre on North Street at 7.15pm. The subject of the talk is ‘Austin Lee: Man of Mystery’. Austin Lee was born in Cowling and attended Keighley Boys’ Grammar School, and went on to have multiple careers including being an outspoken vicar, a barman, a teacher and the author of a series of cosy-crime novels featuring amateur sleuth Miss Flora Hogg. It’s a bit of team effort this time, with speakers Sharon Wright, Ann Dinsdale and Tim Neal, all of whom are keen to resurrect the profile of this most astonishing Keighley man.
Doors open at 7.15pm at the Civic Centre. All are welcome. Entry is free for History Society members and £3.50 for anyone else. Keighley Local Studies Library have copies of many of Austin’s books if anyone fancies reading them.
August’s History Society meeting (on 13th August 2025) explores the life and works of vicar and crime novelist Austin Lee. If you fancy any summer reading in advance of the meeting, plenty of Austin’s books are available in Keighley Local Studies Library (just ask at the desk) – including some he wrote under his pen names of Julian Callender or John Austwick. We recommend ‘Murder in the Borough Library’ – set in a library inspired by Keighley’s own library (which is where Austin wrote it!).
A selection of books by Austin Lee, available to read in Keighley Local Studies Library. Photos: Tim Neal.
A big thank you to John and Mary Hindle from the Roman reenactment group The Tungrians, who spoke to the History Society last night. They also brought examples of costume and armour along. They have their own website and Facebook page if you want the chance to see more of them and their reenactments. And a thank you to the society members and guests who joined us in the Civic Centre or on Zoom. Photographs by Tim Neal and Anne-Marie Dewhirst.
John and Mary of the Tungrians talk to the History Society in July 2025.
August’s talk will be a bit of a team effort, as we look back at the work and life of whodunnit author and vicar, the Reverend Austin Lee. Born in Keighley, with his murder-mystery novels often set in recognisable locations, Lee was a popular writer in the 1950s, and whose own story is full of twists and turns.
A small exhibition on Keighley-born historian Asa Briggs (1921-2016) is available to view in Keighley Local Studies Library for the next few months. He was educated at Keighley Boys’ Grammar School then at Cambridge. His main areas of interest were the social and cultural histories of the past two hundred years, resulting in books ranging from the Victorians to a comprehensive history of the BBC. He also wrote about his time working at Bletchley Park during the Second World War.
Asa Briggs exhibition at Keighley Local Studies Library, July 2025. Photographed by Tim Neal.
A short leaflet on Asa Briggs is available at the library, and in August a new biography is to be published by Harper Collins. The author is Adam Sisman and he visited Keighley Local Studies Library last year to research his subject’s links with the town.
There are several local history events and opportunities to keep an eye out for in July 2025…
Wednesday 9th July – this months History Society meeting in Keighley Civic Centre at 7.15pm. Featuring a talk by John Hindle from the Tungrians (a reenactment group who recreate Roman life in Britannia in the Second Century).
Friday 11th July – Community Curator Heather Millard will be giving her talk on the Butterfield Women of Cliffe Castle, at the Bradford Mechanics’ Institute at 10.30 am. Book a free place via Eventbrite (https://www.eventbrite.com/…/butterfield-ladies-of…)
Thursday 17th July – this will be the next Thursday Talk organised by the Bronte Society, held in the Old School Rooms in Haworth. More information is available on the Bronte Parsonage Museum website, but tickets are free to residents from postcodes BD20, BD21 and BD22.
And all through July the ‘Ice Age Art Now’ is running at Cliffe Castle Museum, admission is free. The museum is open Tuesdays to Sundays (i.e. is closed on Mondays).