Armley is a district in the west of
Leeds,
West Yorkshire, England. It starts less than from
Leeds city centre
Leeds city centre is the central business district of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It is roughly bounded by the Leeds Inner Ring Road, Inner Ring Road to the north and the River Aire to the south and can be divided into several quarters.
C ...
. Like much of Leeds, Armley grew in the
Industrial Revolution and had several
mills, one of which houses now the
Leeds Industrial Museum at Armley Mills. Armley is predominantly and historically a largely working class area of the city, still retains many smaller industrial businesses, and has many rows of
back-to-back terraced houses.
It sits in the
Armley ward of
Leeds City Council and
Leeds West
Leeds West is a borough constituency in the city of Leeds, West Yorkshire which is represented in the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It elects one Member of Parliament (MP) by the first-past-the-post system of elect ...
parliamentary constituency.
In 2022, statistics released by
West Yorkshire Police revealed Armley and New Wortley had the second highest crime rate in Leeds after
Leeds city centre
Leeds city centre is the central business district of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It is roughly bounded by the Leeds Inner Ring Road, Inner Ring Road to the north and the River Aire to the south and can be divided into several quarters.
C ...
.
Etymology
First attested in the
Domesday Book of 1086 as ''Ermelai'', the name ''Armley'' comes from
Old English
Old English (, ), or Anglo-Saxon, is the earliest recorded form of the English language, spoken in England and southern and eastern Scotland in the early Middle Ages. It was brought to Great Britain by Anglo-Saxon settlement of Britain, Anglo ...
. The second element is from Old English ''lēah'' ('open space in a wood'). The origin of the first element is less clear, but thought to come from an otherwise unattested Old English name ''Earma'', a plausible nickname form of the name ''Earnmund''. If so, the name originally meant 'Earma's woodland clearing'.
[Harry Parkin, ''Your City's Place-Names: Leeds'', English Place-Name Society City-Names Series, 3 (Nottingham: English Place-Names Society, 2017).]
Historically lying within the township of Armley, to the south of Armley's centre, the district of Green Side is first mentioned by this name in the nineteenth century. The origin of the name is not certain, but is probably named after the green space now constituted as Wortley Recreation Ground and Western Flatts Cliff park.
History

Armley is mentioned in the 1086 ''
Domesday Book'' reference to "Ristone, Ermelai". At the time there were eight villagers in Ristone (now east Armley) and Ermelai (now west Armley).
[Parsons, Edward]
"The Civil, Ecclesiastical, Literary, Commercial, and Miscellaneous History of Leeds, Bradford, Wakefield, Dewsbury, Otley, and the District Within Ten Miles of Leeds"
Volume 1, pp. 184, 185, 187. Nabu Press. Retrieved 23 December 2011 Armley was recorded as lying within the hundred of Morley and was estimated to comprise only four households, placing it in the bottom fifth of settlements in the Domesday Book by population size. The actual population is indeterminable as this only accounts for the 'head of household'.
Armley Mills, now the Leeds Industrial Museum at Armley Mills, was the world's largest
woollen mill
Textile Manufacturing or Textile Engineering is a major industry. It is largely based on the conversion of fibre into yarn, then yarn into fabric. These are then dyed or printed, fabricated into cloth which is then converted into useful goods ...
when it was built in 1788. In the 18th and 19th centuries Armley was, through its mills, a major contributor to the
economy of the city of Leeds. Many of the buildings standing in and around Armley were built in the 1800s, including many of the churches, schools, shops and houses. Ledgard Way is named after the entrepreneur
Samuel Ledgard. Armley also has picturesque views over the rest of Leeds from certain vantage points. William Tetley started his business of
malt
Malt is germinated cereal grain that has been dried in a process known as " malting". The grain is made to germinate by soaking in water and is then halted from germinating further by drying with hot air.
Malted grain is used to make beer, wh ...
ers in Armley in the 1740s. His grandson
Joshua Tetley founded
Tetley's Brewery in
Hunslet in 1822.
Damage caused by a raid in the
Leeds Blitz in March 1941 and later
slum clearance schemes brought about the
redevelopment of much of Armley in a programme beginning in the 1950s and finishing in the early 1970s.
From the 1870s until 1956, Armley was home to the J W Roberts
asbestos
Asbestos () is a naturally occurring fibrous silicate mineral. There are six types, all of which are composed of long and thin fibrous crystals, each fibre being composed of many microscopic "fibrils" that can be released into the atmosphere b ...
mattress and boiler lining factory. This facility exposed residents to asbestos fibres and resulted in a
mesothelioma cancer cluster which persists to this day. One of the victims, June Hancock, launched a court action against
Turner & Newall, the company that owned the J W Roberts' factory in 1993. Although the court case was successful, corporate restructuring had, as of 2005, avoided the case being settled. Hancock's story was the subject of a play, ''Dust'', by Kenneth F. Yates, performed in Armley and at the
West Yorkshire Playhouse
Leeds Playhouse is a theatre in the city centre of Leeds, West Yorkshire. Having originally opened in 1970 in a different location in Leeds, it reopened as West Yorkshire Playhouse, on Quarry Hill, in March 1990. After a refurbishment in 2018-20 ...
in July 2009.
The parish church,
St Bartholomew's, is home to a notable pipe organ built by the German organ builder
Edmund Schulze
Heinrich Edmund Schulze (26 March 1824 - 13 July 1878) was a German organ builder. He was the last of five generations of the Schulze family to build organs, starting with Hans Elias Schulze (1688–1762), Edmund's great-great-grandfather. He die ...
. Originally built for Meanwood Towers in 1866–69, it was opened by
S. S. Wesley. It was moved to St Bartholomew's in 1879. Schulze's work, and this organ in particular, had enormous influence on the development of British organ building in the 19th century. Both church and organ have been restored.
The smaller
Christ Church is located at the end of Theaker Lane nearer the centre of Armley.
Legend has it that a
pedlar called Charlie used to rest and water his pony and trap in Whingate Park in the 19th century. He apparently sold spicy shortbread to the citizens of
Upper Armley for 1d a piece. Today the triangular-shaped park is known as Charlie or Charley Cake Park. According to ''Armley Through the Camera'', written in 1901, the park was "within memory of many present residents of Armley, a patch of wasteland. Some of them regularly played cricket on its turf".
There were two railway stations in Armley.
Armley Moor railway station
Armley Moor railway station was a station on the former Great Northern Railway between Leeds and Bramley. The location was between Carr Crofts and Wortley Road bridges, accessed via Station Road.
It served the Leeds suburb of Armley in We ...
on the line between Leeds and Bradford Exchange closed 1966, and
Armley Canal Road railway station on the line between Leeds and Shipley closed 1965.
Geography
Armley is located between the
M621 motorway and the
River Aire, stretching from roughly the
New Wortley
Wortley ( ) is an inner city area of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It begins one mile to the west of the city centre. The appropriate City of Leeds ward is called Farnley and Wortley.
It was known as ''Wirkelay'' until about 1700. Wortley w ...
roundabout (the Armley Gyratory) to the start of the
Stanningley By-pass and Cockshott Lane where it merges into
Bramley.
Amenities
Armley Town Street includes high street names,
charity shops and food and independent retailers. There are bus links to Leeds, Bradford, Pudsey and Whinmoor. Armley's Town Street has free off-road car parking, but parking is mainly on-street, with few car parks in the centre. Armley's only supermarket is a
LIDL on Armley Road, but Aldi in neighbouring
Wortley in a five-minute walk from Town Street, Wortley also has an
Asda and
Bramley has
Tesco,
Aldi,
Morrisons and
Farmfoods. Towards
Farnley there is a
Sainsbury's. The former
Kwiksave store in
Pudsey is now a branch of Sainsbury's; a previous
Somerfield store is now the site of a Poundland.

Other amenities include
Armley (Gott's) Park, Gott's Park Golf Club and
Armley Mills Industrial Museum, and numerous former cinemas and churches. The old
Methodist chapel is now a carpet outlet, like a similar chapel in
Holbeck
Holbeck is an inner city area of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It begins on the southern edge of Leeds city centre and mainly lies in the LS11 postcode district. The M1 and M621 motorways used to end/begin in Holbeck. Now the M621 is the o ...
. There are present-day Methodist churches in Wesley Road, built in 1987,
and in Whingate, built in 1884. The Wesley Road Chapel is a
Local Ecumenical Partnership also involving the
Baptist and
United Reformed Churches. The current church is the fourth on this site, where the original Methodist Wesleyan chapel stood and where
John Wesley
John Wesley (; 2 March 1791) was an English people, English cleric, Christian theology, theologian, and Evangelism, evangelist who was a leader of a Christian revival, revival movement within the Church of England known as Methodism. The soci ...
once preached.
Armley's original leisure centre, based on the old Armley swimming baths, was demolished in 2009. The land is now a large car park for the new leisure centre. The closure of the original 25-metre swimming pool with redundant and unused space attracted some controversy because of the age and local architectural significance of the building. The new centre has state-of-the-art equipment.
Morley and
Beeston will also receive new leisure centres under a programme being run by
Leeds City Council.
HM Prison Leeds, formerly Armley Gaol is located in Armley.
Housing

Armley housing includes Victorian
back-to-back house
Back-to-backs are a form of terraced houses in the United Kingdom, built from the late 18th century through to the early 20th century in various guises. Many thousands of these dwellings were built during the Industrial Revolution for the rapidly ...
s, through terraces and tower blocks.
There is much council housing, although most of the housing stock is privately built and dates from the 1960s. Back-to-back housing has been converted to through terraces.
Corporation residential tower blocks, built to replace older housing stock at the centre of Armley, and neighbouring
Wortley, are amongst the tallest in Leeds.
Notable people
*
Alfred Atkinson VC – born in Armley in 1874
*
Alan Bennett – playwright
*
Barbara Taylor Bradford – novelist
*
Diana Coupland – film and television actress and singer born and lived on Tennant Street, Armley.
*
William Boynton Butler VC,
Croix de Guerre
The ''Croix de Guerre'' (, ''Cross of War'') is a military decoration of France. It was first created in 1915 and consists of a square-cross medal on two crossed swords, hanging from a ribbon with various degree pins. The decoration was first awa ...
– born in Armley in 1894
*
Chumbawamba
Chumbawamba () were a British rock band formed in 1982 and disbanded in 2012. They are best known for their 1997 single "Tubthumping", which was nominated for Best British Single at the 1998 Brit Awards. Other singles include "Amnesia", " Enou ...
– band; lived in Armley for some time
*
Benjamin Gott and
William Gott – mill owners in Armley
*
Lily Elsie
Elsie Cotton (''née'' Hodder, 8 April 1886 – 16 December 1962), known professionally as Lily Elsie, was an English actress and singer during the Edwardian era. She was best known for her starring role in the London premiere of Franz Lehár's ...
– actress born in Armley in 1886
*
Alice Nutter – writer and musician, who lived in Armley beginning in 1982
*
Geoff Gunney
Geoffrey Gunney (9 November 1933 – 7 June 2018), also known by the nickname of "Mr. Hunslet", was an English professional rugby league footballer who played in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, and coached in the 1970s. He played at representativ ...
- professional
rugby league footballer who played for Great Britain and Yorkshire and at club level for Hunslet.
Popular culture
The tank scene in the 1963 film
''Billy Liar'' was filmed in Wellington Road, Armley, and local residents were used as extras.
Location grid
See also
*
Listed buildings in Leeds (Armley Ward)
Armley is a ward in the metropolitan borough of the City of Leeds, West Yorkshire, England. It contains 49 listed buildings that are recorded in the National Heritage List for England. Of these, five are listed at Grade II*, the middle o ...
References
Further reading
*Kirkby T. (1901) ''Armley Through The Camera'', Hanson & Oak, Theaker Lane, Armley, Leeds.
External links
*
Photographs of the Leeds & Liverpool Canal at Armley, LeedsLeeds Industrial Museum at Armley Mills, Armley, Leeds*
{{City of Leeds
Places in Leeds