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  1. The guardians met on the 13th accordingly, and adjourned the meeting to Monday, the 20th of November, the day the collision took place. But on Saturday, the 18th, in the evening a troop of the 15th Hussars, from Leeds, arrived in Bradford, and were quartered at the different inns in the town.

  2. What was happening in Bradford in 1837 was shared to varying degrees across much of England and Wales. This short essay is an attempt to place the Bradford events into a national context while remaining focused on events in the town.

  3. 1 July: An estimated 1,394 young men from Bradford and District (The Bradford Pals, the 16th and 18th Battalions of the Prince of Wales's Own West Yorkshire Regiment) leave their trenches in Northern France to advance across No Man's Land, in the first hour of the first day of the Battle of the Somme.

  4. Victorian Bradford (1837 – 1901) During the time of Queen Victoria, Bradford was famous for making woollen cloth called ‘worsted’. Huge wealth was made and Bradford grew from a small town into a great city.

  5. Following the creation of the Bradford Union in February 1837, the town was the scene of vigorous anti-Poor Law campaigning. This peaked in November 1837 during a visit of Assistant Poo Law Commissioner Alfred Power — his meetings with the Guardians were disrupted and he was attacked by a crowd.

  6. 6 Early Victorian Era (1837-48) By the first half of the 19th century people moved to work in Bradford’s textile mills, making it the fastest growing town in England. With its large coal reserves, it had a huge advantage when steam replaced water power.

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  8. Jul 17, 2017 · The Bradford canal had opened much earlier in 1774 and ended at a canal basin and a large warehouse. These locations show well on the earlier map. Nearby, at the end of Well Street, is a large coal staithe.

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