The Thoresby Society: The Leeds Historical Society is the historical society for the city of Leeds in West Yorkshire, England, and the surrounding district. It was founded in 1889 and named after the historian of Leeds, Ralph Thoresby (1658–1725).[1]
Name and history
The Society takes its name from Ralph Thoresby (1658–1725), the first historian of Leeds and a pioneer in the field of local history. It was founded in 1889 and by the end of that year had 172 subscribers. By 1912 this had grown to 397, and by 1986 reached 528. The society's activities in its first century included publication of transcriptions of local records and of original research, lectures, and "the educational and social pleasures of imaginatively organised excursions" (423 of which took place in its first 100 years).[2]
Activities
The society's activities, as of 2023[update], include:
An annual programme of monthly lectures, evening and lunchtime, many of which are available on YouTube[3]
A series of annual publications, each related to some aspect of the history of Leeds, as listed below
The maintenance of a Library and Archives, housed at The Leeds Library
A programme of excursions.
Aims
The objects of the Society, as set out in the Memorandum of Association, are:
To be the premier history society of Leeds and its neighbourhood and accordingly to cultivate an interest in the history of Leeds and its neighbourhood through the collection and preservation of books, documents and other matter that may assist this purpose;
To promote the dissemination of knowledge by all appropriate means of the history of Leeds and its neighbourhood and to promote a wide public interest therein;
To oversee the publication of documents, monographs and papers relating to the history of Leeds and its neighbourhood.
Library and archives
The Society maintains a large library of books relating to the history of Leeds and District, and conserves an archive of papers and images relating to Leeds.[4]
A catalogue of the Society's archive holdings may be accessed from its webpage, along with specific catalogues of maps and plans, sales particulars, abstracts of title, images, and ephemera.[5]
The Society's Library was moved in 2015 into the Leeds Library, where it is available for public access.[6]
List of publications
Digitised versions of the First Series publications, and information about Second Series publications, can be accessed from the Society's website.[7]
First series
I Leeds Parish Church Registers, First and Second Books, 1572–1612; ed. by Samuel Margerison; 1891
II Miscellanea I; 1891
III Leeds Parish Church Registers, Third and Fourth Books, 1612–1639; ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1895
IV Miscellanea II; ed. by E. Kitson Clark; 1895
V Adel Parish Church Registers, 1606–1812, and Monumental Inscriptions; ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1895
VI Calverley Charters presented to the British Museum by Sir Walter Calverley Trevelyan, Baronet, Volume I. Transcribed by S. Margerison and ed. by W. Paley Baildon and S. Margerison; 1904
VII Leeds Parish Church Registers, 1639–1667, Fifth and Sixth Books; ed. by, G. D. Lumb; 1897
VIII Coucher Book of the Cistercian Abbey of Kirkstall, in W.R.Yorks,[a] Printed from the Original Preserved in the Public Record Office; ed. by W. T. Lancaster and W. Paley Baildon; 1904
IX Miscellanea III; ed. by E. Kitson Clark; 1899
X Leeds Parish Church Registers, 1667–1695, Seventh and Eighth Books; ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1901
XI Miscellanea IV; ed. by E. Kitson Clark; 1904
XII Methley Parish Church Registers, 1560–1812; transcribed and ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1903
XIII Leeds Parish Church Registers, 1695–1722, Ninth and Tenth Books, with Armley Chapel, 1695–1711, and Hunslet Chapel, 1686–1724; ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1909
XIV Leeds Grammar School Admission Books, 1820–1900; ed. and annotated by Edmund Wilson; 1906
XV Miscellanea V; ed. by B. P. Scattergood; 1909
XVI Architectural Description of Kirkstall Abbey; by W. H. St. John Hope and John Bilson; 1907
XVII History of the Parish of Barwick-in-Elmet; by F. S. Colman; 1908
XVIII Place-Names of the West Riding of Yorkshire; investigated by F. W. Moorman; 1910
XIX Testamenta Leodiensia; Wills of Leeds, Pontefract, Wakefield, Otley and District, 1539–1553; extracted and ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1913
XX Leeds Parish Church Registers, 1722–1757, Eleventh and Twelfth Books: ed. by G.D. Lumb; 1914
XXI Letters Addressed to Ralph Thoresby, printed from the originals in the possession of the Yorkshire Archaeological Society; ed. by W. T. Lancaster; 1912
XXII Miscellanea VI; ed. by G. D. I.umb; 1915
XXIII Registers of the Chapels of the Parish Church of Leeds. 1724–1703, with a few earlier years (St. John's, Holy Trinity, Armley, Beeston, Bramley, Chapel Allerton, Farnley, Headingley, Holbeck and Hunslet), First and Second Books; transcribed and ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1916
XXIV Miscellanea VII; ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1919
XXV Leeds Parish Church Registers: Baptisms and Burials, 1757–1776 (Thirteenth and Fourteenth Books); Marriages, 1754–1769; transcribed by J. Singleton; ed. by J. Singleton and Miss Emily Hargrave; 1923
XXVI Miscellanea VIII ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1924
XXVII Testamenta Leodiensia; Wills of Leeds. Pontefract, Wakefield, Otley and District, 1553–1561; extracted and ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1930. Part1 1919, Part 2 1921
XXVIII Miscellanea IX; ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1928
XXIX Registers of the Chapels of St. John, Holy Trinity, Headingley, Bramley, Beeston, Chapel Allerton and Farnley, all in the Parish of Leeds, 1763–1812, and in some cases later years; ed, by G. P. Lumb; 1928
XXX History and Description of the Priory of St. Mary, Bolton-in-Wharfedale, with some Account of the Canons Regular of the Order of St. Augustine and their Houses in Yorkshire; by A. Hamilton Thompson; 1928
XXXI Registers of the Chapels of the Parish Church of Leeds, 1764–1812: Holbeck, Armley and Hunslet; ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1934
XXXII Leeds Woollen Industry, 1780–1820; ed. by W. B. Crump; 1931
XXXIII Miscellanea X; ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1935
XXXIV Court Books of the Leeds Corporation: First Book, 1662–1705; transcribed by J. G.Clark; 1936
XXXV History of Methley: ed. by H S. Darbyshire and G. D. Lumb; 1937
XXXVI Parish Register of Aberford, 1510–1812; transcribed and ed. by G. D. Lumb; 1937
XXXVII Miscellany XI; ed. by G. D. Lumb and W. B. Crump. 1945.
XXXVIII Extracts from The Leeds Intelligencer and The Leeds Mercury, 1769–1776: ed. by G. D, Lumb. 1938.
XXXIX. Yorkshire fairs and markets, to the end of the eighteenth century; by K, L. McCutcheon. 1940.
Mon. I. Thomas Taylor: Regency architect, Leeds; by F. Beckwith. 1949.
Mon. II. A survey of the plate of Leeds Parish Church and its ancient chapelries; by J. Sprittles. 1951.
Mon. III. Social reform in Victorian Leeds: the work of James Hole, 1820–1895; by J. F. C. Harrison. 1954.
XL. Extracts from The Leeds Intelligencer and The Leeds Mercury, 1777–1782; ed. by G. D. Lumb and J. B. Place; with an introductory account of The Leeds Intelligencer, 1754–1866, by F. Beckwith, 1955.
XLI. Miscellany XII. 1954.
XLII. The Kirkstall Abbey chronicles; ed. by John Taylor. 1952.
XLIX. Pontefract Priory excavations, 1957–1961; by C. V. Bellamy. 1965.
L. Miscellany XIV. 1968.
LI. Kirkstall Abbey excavations, 1960–1964, with appraisal of results since 1950. 1967.
LII. Links with Bygone Leeds, by J. Sprittles. 1969.
LIII. Miscellany 15. 1971–73.
LIV. Miscellany 16. 1974–79.
LV. Leeds and the Oxford Movement, by Nigel Yates. 1975.
LVI. Miscellany 17. 1979–81.
LVII. The Manor and Borough of Leeds, 1425–1662: an edition of documents, edited by J. W. Kirby. 1983.
LVIII. Kirkstall Abbey, 1147–1539: an historical study, by Guy D. Barnes.1984.
LIX. Miscellany 18. 1985–86.
LX-LXI. East End, West End: the face of Leeds during urbanisation, 1684–1842, by Maurice W. Beresford. 1988.
LXII. The Georgian Public Buildings of Leeds and the West Riding, by Kevin Grady. 1989.
LXIII. Miscellany 19. 1990.
LXIV. CENTENARY EDITION 1989 MISCELLANY Leeds in the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries
Second Series
1. Miscellany. 1991.
2. R. D. Chantrell, Architect: his life and work in Leeds, 1818–1847, by Christopher Webster. 1992. ISBN9780900741272
3. Miscellany. 1993.
4. Miscellany. 1994.
5. Miscellany. 1995.
6. The Fawkes Family and their Estates in Wharfedale, 1819–1936, by Marion Sharples. 1997. ISBN9780900741449
7. Church Architecture in Leeds, 1700–1799, by Terry Friedman. 1997. ISBN9780900741494
8. Miscellany. 1998.
9. The Moravian Settlement at Fulneck, 1742–1790, by Geoffrey Stead. 1999. ISBN9780900741555
10. Miscellany. 2000. index to vols lii–lxiv; second series vols 1–14 3
11. Miscellany. 2001.
12. Anglican Resurgence under W. F. Hook in Early Victorian Leeds: Church Life in a Nonconformist Town, 1836–1851, by Harry W. Dalton. 2002. ISBN9780900741609
13. Miscellany. 2003.
14. Miscellany. 2004.
15. More Annals of Leeds 1880–1920. William Benn. 2005 ISBN9780900741630
16. The Memoranda Book of John Lucas 1712–1750. 2006 ISBN9780900741647
17. The Monuments of the Parish Church of St Peter-at-Leeds, by Margaret Pullan, 2007 ISBN9781905981526
Leeds in Maps Leeds Library and Information Service, The Thoresby Society, Yorkshire Evening Post. 2007
31. Knowing One's Place: Community and Class in the Industrial Suburbs of Leeds during the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries, Robin Pearson, 2022. ISBN978-0-900741-82-1
32. Tudor Palaces of Lord Darcy of the North: Temple Newsam and Temple Hirst, Peter Brears, 2023. ISBN978-0-900741-83-8
34. The Leeds Bantams: A Testimony of the Great War, edited by Chris Hindle, 2024, ISBN978-0-900741-85-2
Notes
^Book containing partial records of the grants of land to Kirkstall Abbey, which were retained among the records of the Duchy of Lancaster in Lancaster Place, London.[8]
References
^"Home page". Thoresby Society. Retrieved 31 January 2019.