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==History== Oxenhope's name derives from the Old English ''hop'' which means [[valley head]], so Oxenhope literally means ''Oxen Valley Head''.<ref>{{cite web |title=Oxenhope; Assessment of Conservation Areas |url=https://www.bradford.gov.uk/media/2454/oxenhopeconservationareaassessment.pdf |website=bradford.gov.uk |access-date=10 April 2019 |page=7 |date=2004}}</ref> The industrialisation of the village came about through the cloth and wool trade and by 1850, Oxenhope was host to over 20 mills. Leeming Reservoir was constructed between 1872 and 1873 to supply the many mills in the area. Its construction necessitated the closure and demolition of at least two mills and their associated houses. The modern village of Oxenhope encompasses what were originally the separate settlements of '''Uppertown''', '''Lowertown''', '''Leeming''' and '''Horkinstone'''. The historic hamlets of '''Marsh''' and '''Shaw''' are also included in the village. The area became known as Oxenhope when the Railway Company named the station serving the area opened the line from Keighley in 1867. Until then, the name Oxenhope referred to a small settlement between the hamlet of Marsh and Haworth. The street pattern of Oxenhope was much altered when the railway arrived. It had originally been intended that the railway would terminate at Haworth; however the owners of Lowertown Mill in Oxenhope persuaded the railway company to extend the line. It was found impracticable to take the railway as far as Lowertown because of the gradients that would have been required. As a compromise, the railway built a road from its station to Lowertown, appropriately named Station Road. The bridge by which this road crosses Leeming Water is of the same construction as many of the railway's bridges.
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