Gawthorpe is a village to the north of Ossett, in the Wakefield district, in the county of West Yorkshire, England. It is roughly midway between Wakefield and Dewsbury north of the A638.
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![]() Gawthorpe Water Tower | |
![]() ![]() Gawthorpe Location within West Yorkshire | |
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Country | England |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
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Gawthorpe's name derives from Gorky, a Viking name, and thorpe was a settlement, but evidence suggests the village may have Roman origins.[1] Gawthorpe's Mayday celebrations date back to at least 1875 when a seventy-foot fir tree was bought and erected by public subscription on the village green. The maypole was last replaced in 1986.[1]
Gawthorpe Water Tower is a Grade II listed concrete structure built between 1922 and 1928 to store drinking water for the Ossett area.[2] The 55m tall tower[citation needed] is a prominent local landmark of the Ossett and Gawthorpe area.[2]
Gawthorpe hosts the World Coal Carrying Championships.[3] The Championships were originally run from the Shaw Cross colliery to the May Pole, although the collieries in this area all closed in the Robens era.[citation needed] It also gives its name to the Gawthorpe seam of coal, which stretches from the village down through Horbury and Crigglestone.[4]
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