Featherstone
West Yorkshire
Featherstone is nearly 6 miles east of Wakefield city centre and 3 miles south of Castleford.
The present town, adjoining Purston Jaglin, grew between the 1800s and 1900s as a result of the coal mining communities of the local pits. Its position is about a mile south of the original Featherstone village, now called North Featherstone.
The town had seen decades of decline since the closure of the pits and only now is starting to see some signs of recovery as new industry and housing is developed in the area.
Station Lane is the high street of Featherstone leading up to the level crossing next to the town's station.
Further down Station Lane is an eye-catching doorway-like sculpture in a shopping courtyard, The Precinct. Close inspection reveals the doorway design to be formed of pit props and a pit-head winding wheel as this public art is in fact a memorial arch to the Featherstone Massacre of 1893, placed there on its centenary. The plaque records the incident in the mining town on September 7, 1893, when a disturbance led to The Riot Act being read and troops opening fire on demonstrators, killing two and wounding others.
Town features
Featherstone has pubs.
The town has a range of shops and supermarkets.
The town has a Post Office.
The town has a pharmacy.
Takeaway food outlets in the town include fish and chips, chinese, curries, pizzas.
The town has a library.
Featherstone has a community hall - sharing a building with the library
Featherstone has a town hall.
The town has a sports hall with swimming pool.
Featherstone has schools.
Places of worship: Anglican, Methodist, other.
Travel
Featherstone station Station Lane
⇆ Most trains to Knottingley return to Leeds via Castleford (and vice-versa).
Station managed by: NORTHERN. Operator/s: NORTHERN.
NATIONAL RAIL - Departure and station info
External link to National Rail live departure board for services at this station (opens in new tab).
Bus travel
The town has buses to neighbouring towns and villages.Road travel
Featherstone can be reached via the A645 B6421 B6428Places to Visit
Sandal Castle
Manygates Lane, Sandal Magna, near Wakefield, West Yorkshire
About two miles south of the city centre, the ruins of the medieval motte and bailey castle are freely open to the public and overlook the River Calder and the city. Some walkways at the castle, including steps to the keep, have recently been undergoing renovation and repairs following a £700,000 investment by Wakefield Council. The castle stood just above the site of the War of the Roses Battle of Wakefield in December 1460. Its damage, however, was ordered by Parliamentarians after the surrender of a Royalist garrison there in October 1645 during the English Civil Wars. More information at the Wakefield Council - Sandal Castle web pages.
Find on map: Sandal Castle
The Hepworth, Wakefield
Gallery Walk, Wakefield
A modern building next to the River Calder in Find out more at The Hepworth website.
Find on map: The Hepworth, Wakefield
National Coal Mining Museum for England
The National Coal Mining Museum for England is mid-way between
More details at the
Yorkshire Sculpture Park
West Bretton
The Yorkshire Sculpture Park is the UK's leading open-air sculpture gallery, situated at More information at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park website.
Find on map: Yorkshire Sculpture Park
Nostell
off Doncaster Road, Wragby , near Wakefield
The site of a medieval priory, Nostell features a mid-18th century Palladian-style house which has been described as an architectural masterpiece. It includes interiors added by Robert Adam and furniture by Yorkshire-born furniture designer Thomas Chippendale. The house, 6 miles south-east of More information can be found on the National Trust - Nostell web pages.
Pontefract Castle
Castle Garth, Pontefract
Once the most impressive castle in Yorkshire, Pontefract Castle has been a ruin for nearly 380 years. It is believed to be the place where King Richard II died in 1400, the king having been imprisoned there in 1399. The castle was referred to (as Pomfret) in William Shakespeare's play Richard III as the place where Richard II was 'hack'd to death', although many historians put starvation as the likely cause. Mystery still surrounds the death as there were also stories of Richard's escape to Stirling in Scotland. The castle was visited in August 1541 by King Henry VIII with his queen of the past year, Catherine Howard, and also Thomas Culpeper. Culpeper was at the end of that year beheaded in London for his alleged adultery with the queen, who was herself executed a few weeks later. Pontefract Castle was a royalist stronghold in the English Civil War and was beseiged several times by Parliamentarian forces before its remains were destroyed in 1649. Low and excavated sections of the castle's once formidable walls and towers and parts of the cellars of the castle are all that remain today. The castle is managed by Wakefield Council. More information at the Experience Wakefield - Pontefract Castle website.
Find on map: Pontefract Castle
Fairburn Ings
Near FairburnSituated 2 miles north-east of Castleford (3.5 miles by road), the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds reserve at Fairburn Ings offers hides, trails and a visitor centre. It has a variety of birdlife habitats, including lakes, woodland and wet grassland with resident and migrating birds depending on the season. The visitor centre is open each day except Christmas Day. The reserve holds events and discovery days through the year and there are also opportunities for pond-dipping.
Emergency services
West Yorkshire PoliceWest Yorkshire Fire and Rescue Service
Yorkshire Ambulance Service NHS Trust
Local government
Civil parish council
Featherstone Town CouncilProvides some local services in the area.
Link to council website:
Metropolitan district council
Wakefield CouncilWakefield Council covers an area extending many miles beyond the city of
The council is made up of 63 councillors elected 3 per ward across 21 wards. Elections held in 3 in every 4 years elect one councillor per ward for 4-year terms.
Political composition after May 2024 election:
63 members
Link to Wakefield Council website .
County strategic authority
West Yorkshire Combined AuthorityCovers some combined services of the five metropolitan district councils of
Elected mayor:
Police and Crime Commissioner
The Police and Crime Commissioner for West YorkshireThis role has become one of the many responsibilities of the West Yorkshire elected mayor since May 2021.
National government region
Yorkshire and the HumberFire Authority
West Yorkshire Fire AuthorityThe fire authority is made up of elected members of each of the five metropolitan district councils of West Yorkshire - Bradford, Calderdale, Leeds, Kirklees and Wakefield.
Parliamentary constituency
Normanton and HemsworthElected MP: