Bizarre Leeds 'bread arch' royal tribute photo revealed

News imageLeeds Libraries/Leodis.net Loaf arch, LeedsLeeds Libraries/Leodis.net
The shot of the bread-based tribute arch is among the treasures found in the Leodis archive

An image showing a bizarre archway made of bread built to greet a visiting dignitary has been unearthed from an archive of over 60,000 images of Leeds.

Taken in 1894, the rediscovered photo shows an enormous bread arch built from about 1,500 loaves on Commercial Street, Leeds City Council said.

The unusual tribute was built to mark a visit to the city by the Duke of York, later George V, and his wife.

The stale loaves were later distributed to the city's poor, the council said.

News imageLeeds Libraries Loaf arch, LeedsLeeds Libraries
The commemorative bread arch was also used by a local baker on an advertising calendar in 1895

The photo came from Leodis, an online picture archive managed by the Leeds Libraries service.

The collection contains more than 67,000 pictures dating from 1866 to the present day which have been preserved.

News imageLeeds Libraries/Leodis.net Street sceneLeeds Libraries/Leodis.net
Archive staff are asking for more information about this picture of an unidentified street in Leeds

Councillor Debra Coupar said: "Leodis is far more than an archive. It's a powerful living record of day-to-day life in Leeds.

"We hope residents will continue to be inspired by the website and share images or memories."

Browsing the re-launched site, founded in 1999, was a "fantastic opportunity" to learn about the city, she added.

News imageLeeds Libraries/Leodis.net Chapeltown, LeedsLeeds Libraries/Leodis.net
Eager crowds in Chapeltown waiting for the carnival in 1980 were caught on camera

The thousands of pictures held online cover all aspects of the city's history.

Pictures include the female factory workers at the Barnbow No 1 National Filling Factory during World War, snapshots of the gypsy and traveller community and residents captured in photographs of "slum" clearances taken by the City Engineers from the 1890s to 1960s.

Coincidentally, the first ever moving images were captured in the city, at Roundhay and on Leeds Bridge, by Louis Le Prince in 1888.

The Leodis archive brings together library and museum collections with those from the Leeds Civic Trust, the Thoresby Society and West Yorkshire Archive Service.

News imageLeeds Libraries/Leodis.net Barnbow factory workersLeeds Libraries/Leodis.net
A photo of 'Barnbow Lasses' taken in 1918 after news of the end of World War One
News imageLeeds Libraries/Leodis.net BriggateLeeds Libraries/Leodis.net
A crowded Briggate in Leeds shown in an undated coloured postcard
News imageBBC Presentational grey line

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