CHILDREN’S favourite Postman Pat famously had a black and white cat… and now the home of his creator has a blue and white plaque.
John Cunliffe came up with the idea for the stop-motion animation starring the fictional village of Greendale’s affable postie, which first began airing on the BBC in 1981.
John lived with his wife Sylvia in Heath House on Wells Walk in Ilkley from 1992 until his death in 2018, aged 85.
Now Ilkley Civic Society has honoured his time there with a blue plaque fixed to the gatepost of Heath House.
It was unveiled by Sylvia at her former home and is the 23rd blue plaque to be placed around the town by the Civic Society.
Alex Cockshott, Vice Chair of Ilkley Civic Society said: "This was our twenty third Blue Plaque, to celebrate an author who brought pleasure to so many children."
You can spot others at the railway station, the town hall, Craiglands Hotel and the Manor House.
Heath House had an illustrious history even before the Cunliffes moved in just over 30 years ago.
The land was sold during the Middelton land sales and by 1874 was owned by Robert Morrell, a Bradford provision merchant. He obtained planning permission for a pair of villa residences - Barlby Villas, designed by architect Thomas Clarke of Bradford and Ilkley. Robert Morrell lived there for a while with his niece Eleanor and two servants.
By 1884 it had been leased to James Crowther Naylor, a dentist. He continued to live there until at least 1922. Meanwhile the ownership of the property passed through several hands and in 1929 it was sold to Mrs Annie Thornton. She continued to rent the house out, and renamed it Athos and later Heathville. Ownership changes took place until the Lamberts bought it to be their family home. In 1986 the name changed to Heath House and in 1992 John and Sylvia Cunliffe bought it.
John Cunliffe was born in 1933 in Colne. He was a librarian and held various posts, including a mobile library in Northumbria. Finally he became Childrens’ Librarian in Brighton.
He began to write children’s stories, which were published as picture books. He also published collections of poetry.
He and Sylvia married in 1960. In 1972 they moved to the Lake District so John could train as a primary school teacher. He obtained a post in Ambleside. Here he could live among the mountains he loved, and continue to write stories in the holidays. He created Postman Pat and later wrote and presented Rosie and Jim.
The first broadcast of Postman Pat was in September 1981. The books based on the characters he wrote later.
By 1992 they were looking for a new home. They couldn’t find what they were looking for in the Lake District but by chance found it in Ilkley. John spent the next 26 years there happily writing stories, accumulating more and more books, and exploring the surrounding countryside with great pleasure. He became a feature of the Ilkley Literature Festival.
Postman Pat enabled John to write full time. Heath House provided him with the best possible environment to do that.
John valued Ilkley with all its advantages – cultural, culinary and countryside – a writer’s paradise, and the perfect setting for him to write the final scripts for Postman Pat.
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