Welcome to Visit Monk Bretton Places
The Walkfo guide to things to do & explore in Monk Bretton


Visit Monk Bretton PlacesVisit Monk Bretton places using Walkfo for free guided tours of the best Monk Bretton places to visit. A unique way to experience Monk Bretton’s places, Walkfo allows you to explore Monk Bretton as you would a museum or art gallery with audio guides.

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Monk Bretton is a village in the Metropolitan Borough of Barnsley in South Yorkshire. It lies approximately two miles north-east from Barnsly town centre. When you visit Monk Bretton, Walkfo brings Monk Bretton places to life as you travel by foot, bike, bus or car with a mobile phone & headphones.

  

Monk Bretton Places Overview: History, Culture & Facts about Monk Bretton


Visit Monk Bretton – Walkfo’s stats for the places to visit

With 22 audio plaques & Monk Bretton places for you to explore in the Monk Bretton area, Walkfo is the world’s largest heritage & history digital plaque provider. The AI continually learns & refines facts about the best Monk Bretton places to visit from travel & tourism authorities (like Wikipedia), converting history into an interactive audio experience.

Monk Bretton history


Monk Bretton has been a settlement since medieval times and was originally known as just ‘Bretton’. It is sometimes thought to have taken its name from the twelfth-century Adam fitz Swain de Bretton, whose family owned much land in the area and who also founded Monk Bretton Priory. However, in the Domesday Book of 1086 the area is already known as Brettone, and the name may have originally meant ‘Farmstead of the Britons’, suggesting that a remnant of the old Romano-British population may have lived here into the Anglo-Saxon period. According to Domesday Book, the local Saxon lord in 1066 had been an individual called Wulfmer, who by 1086 had been replaced by a Norman lord, Illbert de Lacey, a major landholder associated with many other locations in the county. By 1225 the village was referred to as Munkebretton, ‘munke’ referring to the monks of the nearby Priory. In 1444, Sir William de Bretton gave to Thomas Haryngton, esquire, and other trustees, lands and tenements in Monk Bretton, which his father and grandfather had leased to the prior and convent for a term of years. The mediaeval village cross, today known as the ‘Butter Cross’, still survives, standing at the junction of High Street and Cross Street. This precious monument had the go ahead for a traffic island to protect it in 2011. The scheme, costing £106,000 also saw the road junction widened for buses and other large vehicles to pass on the correct side of the road rather than the opposite as in previous years. The cross may have had a social as well as a religious function, a place to meet and hear news. The village park also shows traces of mediaeval ridge and furrow cultivation. An act of 1609 gave all freeholders of Monk Bretton manorial rights and, since it was not repealed, technically everyone who owns freehold property or land is a ‘lord’ of the village. On Burton Bank is a Quaker burial ground dating from the 1650s. The land was donated by a local benefactor, George Ellis, and the first recorded burial on the site took place in 1657. Later a small meeting house was erected, which became a focus for local Quakers up until the 19th century. An almshouse was founded in 1654 by a Dame Mary Talbot and was still in existence 180 years later. Although the nearby Priory formed a Christian community (until dissolution by Henry VIII), Monk Bretton did not possess a church until 1838. The village formed part of the extensive parish of Royston. In 1838 the foundation stone for the first church was laid on a site donated by Sir George Wombwell, at the corner of Cross Street and Burton Road. A new chapelry district, separating Monk Bretton (with Cudworth) from Royston parish and enabling ‘baptisms, churchings and burials’, was created by Queen Victoria by an order in Council on 22 July 1843. The first church was replaced (on the same site) by the present St Paul’s Church in 1878. The church, built in the late Decorated style, is now a grade II listed building. The churchyard contains 16 burials from the 1866 Oaks Colliery explosion. In 1801, Monk Bretton had a population of 480. By the 1870s, this had grown to just over 1900, according to John Marius Wilson’s Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales 1870–72. Wilson also stated that besides its church, Monk Bretton had three Methodist chapels, as well as a national school and six alms-houses. Monk Bretton Colliery opened in 1870, extracting coal from the Barnsley Seam. The colliery was modernised on nationalisation and pit head baths, which still stand today, were opened. A village Miners’ Welfare Hall was opened in Cross Street. The colliery was closed in 1968. In February 1888 Monk Bretton was the location of a notorious murder, when the local doctor, William Burke, shot dead his own nine-year-old daughter Aileen Burke in the Norman Inn before attempting suicide with the same weapon. Despite shooting himself in the chest, Burke survived and was convicted of murder. He was sentenced to death but the sentence was later commuted. However, Burke subsequently died in prison in May 1889. Monk Bretton once possessed some of the most historic buildings in the Barnsley area, but these were never preserved. The Manor House and several other interesting structures on Cross Street and High Street disappeared in the 1960s. Also demolished was Monk Bretton ‘Castle’, a folly on Burton Bank built by a local priest as a look-out tower or observatory and subsequently used for the lighting of beacons on occasions such as royal events and the end of wars. Only Manor Farm remains, and the oldest structure still standing is a 17th-century barn at the junction of Cross Street and Westgate, belonging to the farm. The village greatly expanded in the 19th and 20th centuries with the building of new housing estates, so that today Monk Bretton more or less merges into nearby Lundwood, Carlton, Athersley and Smithies.

Why visit Monk Bretton with Walkfo Travel Guide App?


Visit Monk Bretton PlacesYou can visit Monk Bretton places with Walkfo Monk Bretton to hear history at Monk Bretton’s places whilst walking around using the free digital tour app. Walkfo Monk Bretton has 22 places to visit in our interactive Monk Bretton map, with amazing history, culture & travel facts you can explore the same way you would at a museum or art gallery with information audio headset. With Walkfo, you can travel by foot, bike or bus throughout Monk Bretton, being in the moment, without digital distraction or limits to a specific walking route. Our historic audio walks, National Trust interactive audio experiences, digital tour guides for English Heritage locations are available at Monk Bretton places, with a AI tour guide to help you get the best from a visit to Monk Bretton & the surrounding areas.

“Curated content for millions of locations across the UK, with 22 audio facts unique to Monk Bretton places in an interactive Monk Bretton map you can explore.”

Walkfo: Visit Monk Bretton Places Map
22 tourist, history, culture & geography spots


 

  Monk Bretton historic spots

  Monk Bretton tourist destinations

  Monk Bretton plaques

  Monk Bretton geographic features

Walkfo Monk Bretton tourism map key: places to see & visit like National Trust sites, Blue Plaques, English Heritage locations & top tourist destinations in Monk Bretton

  

Best Monk Bretton places to visit


Monk Bretton has places to explore by foot, bike or bus. Below are a selection of the varied Monk Bretton’s destinations you can visit with additional content available at the Walkfo Monk Bretton’s information audio spots:

Monk Bretton photo Swallownest F.C.
Swallownest F.C. are currently members of the Northern Counties East League Division One. They are based in Rotherham, South Yorkshire.

Visit Monk Bretton plaques


Monk Bretton Plaques 1
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Monk Bretton has 1 physical plaques in tourist plaque schemes for you to explore via Walkfo Monk Bretton plaques audio map when visiting. Plaques like National Heritage’s “Blue Plaques” provide visual geo-markers to highlight points-of-interest at the places where they happened – and Walkfo’s AI has researched additional, deeper content when you visit Monk Bretton using the app. Experience the history of a location when Walkfo local tourist guide app triggers audio close to each Monk Bretton plaque. Explore Plaques & History has a complete list of Hartlepool’s plaques & Hartlepool history plaque map.