7. Carriers Arms
Looking towards Bank Street from Jackson Lane and across Webster's Yard after the whole area had been cleared of slum housing in April 1963 Through the centre of the picture is a view to Troy Hill and the old Carriers Arms is still standing. Photo: David Atkinson Archive
8. Great Northern Hotel
These are houses and old rag warehouses at the High Street end of Hunger Hill. The building shown on the left here as Bragg's rag warehouse was for a long while the Great Northern Hotel. At the time this photo was taken in January 1967 practically all the other buildings on the street had been demolished, most of them before the Second World War. Photo: David Atkinson Archive
9. Dartmouth Arms
Bruntcliffe Lane circa 1900 showing the Dartmouth Arms on the left, where beer barrels are in the process of being unloaded from a horse-drawn cart. The pub was demolished around 1945. Victoria Road is seen in the distance. Photo: David Atkinson Archive
10. The Rock Inn
A view of the end of the row on Albert Road which accommodates the Rock Inn, so called because of the steep rock face behind it, between Station/Albert Road and Troy Road, above which was Morley's first quarry. The spot where the car is parked was the site of the pinder's cottage. Pictured in January 1965. Photo: David Atkinson Archive
11. Gillroyd Hotel
The entrance to Morley Tunnel taken from the Leeds platform of Morley Low Station. The isolated building in the top left hand corner is the Gillroyd Hotel. Pictured in 1895. Photo: David Atkinson Archive
12. Malt Shovel Inn
The bottom of Scatcherd Hill, Queen Street, Morley, with tramcar no. 247 just turning the corner to go up Chapel Hill, in the mid to late 1920s. The taller block in behind the tram is called Cheapside and dates from 1895, with the Conservative Club up Chapel Hill at the end of that row dating from 1899. This was built on the site of the Old Malt Shovel Inn. Photo: David Atkinson Archive