Routes

Planner

Features

Updates

App

Login or Signup

Get the App

Login or Signup

Routes
Hiking trails & Routes
United Kingdom
England
South West England
Somerset
South Somerset
Yeovil

Summerhouse Hill – Ninesprings Café loop from Yeovil

Moderate

4.7

(3)

28

hikers

Summerhouse Hill – Ninesprings Café loop from Yeovil

02:45

10.2km

120m

Hiking

Moderate hike. Good fitness required. Easily-accessible paths. Suitable for all skill levels. The starting point of the route is accessible with public transport.

Last updated: July 11, 2026

Waypoints

A

Start point

Bus stop

Get Directions

1

817 m

Eastland Road Leather Dressing Yard and Tannery Ruins

Highlight • Historical Site

Grade 2 listed building .. built around 1828
From the early nineteenth century Yeovil developed into one of the country's main centres for leather production and glove making. Documentary sources indicate that by 1840 approximately 75% of the town's population were employed in the leather or gloving industries. Also, as these industries grew, so the population of the town grew - fourfold between 1801 and 1851 (2,774 to 8,739). It remained Yeovil's principal industry throughout the nineteenth century and continued to thrive until the mid-twentieth century. Many leather and gloving factories sprang up in the town but there is little today to remind us of these former industries.


Around 1828 (not 1850 as frequently recorded) William Bide Snr, a prominent leather and glove manufacturer, built the large leather dressing factory with a four-storey leather-dressing warehouse on the corner of Kiddles Lane (now Eastland Road) and Reckleford. William died in 1830 and the factory was left to his son, William Bide Jnr, and described in his will as a "newly-built glove factory, a yard and an old loft adjoining and around with a wall and parting door."

William Jnr employed over 250 men and women, with more than 2,000 outworkers. These outworkers were usually women and girls who undertook sewing in their own homes, collecting and returning their bundles each week. In the outlying villages delivery of leather and collection of gloves was carried out weekly by Bide’s own transport.

William Jnr erected stone-built cottages for his employees in Reckleford, on land adjoining the factory, at the same time providing pumps for the water supply. These cottages were only demolished for the widening of Reckleford in the 1960’s.

The Eastland Road Dressing Yard and Tannery, one of the town's last links with its industrial past, was originally four storeys, the lower three storeys built in stone while the top storey, now removed, was in timber as seen in some of the photographs below.

The main building was built in random coursed local stone, with some brick piers with timber infill at high level under slated roofs (now removed). The original and main block, along Eastland Road, was of four storeys with a double pitch gable end valley roof It had six arched windows at the lowest level, with windows with semi-circular arched heads at first and second floor levels as well as central doors to both levels, with a hoist and roller tackle projecting bar.

The building was sold in 1883, at which time it was occupied by Whitby Brothers, and the sale description in the Western Gazette described the property as follows "A Leather Dressing Yard, with the Outbuildings and other Premises belonging thereto, situate in Kiddle's Lane, comprising a substantial stone-built and slate-covered building, 137 feet long by 44 feet wide, and four stories high, the ground floor containing 24 pits, and the upper floors forming spacious lofts 133 feet long by 40 feet wide; and also a stone-built and slated building (adjoining the above premises) three stories high, and 122 feet long by 21 feet 6 inches wide, containing alum houses, drying stoves, and large and well ventilated drying lofts. The above premises are well supplied with water from a well and from a rivulet (Milford Brook) running through the yard."

Internally brick piers ran up through the full height of the building. The floors were broad elm boards except at attic level, where small boards alternated with spaces between the joists. This wooden upper storey was used for drying the wool from the skins, and these gaps, coupled with louvres in the timber infill of the outer walls, assisted the process.

The machinery was originally steam-powered but later driven by electricity and included combing tanks and dressing drums. A second, later, building runs parallel to the main block at the rear of the site, and was joined to it by a twentieth century single storey link block constructed of concrete blocks with corrugated asbestos sheet roof, now demolished.

Bide's account books for 1851 indicate that he held a considerable stock of 33,000 skins and finished pairs of gloves, amounting to a total value of £15,000.

After William Bide's death in 1864 the Eastland Road Dressing Yard and Tannery was sold to glove manufacturer William Raymond of Goldcroft and was, later still, owned and operated by the leather dressing and glove manufacturing business of the Goldcroft Leather Co Ltd. Latterly it was occupied by the Perrin Leather Co Ltd.

Today it is, sadly, derelict.

Source : yeovilhistory.info/bide-leatherworks.htm

Tip by

2

2.49 km

Butterfly Junction Railway Remains

Highlight • Historical Site

3

3.22 km

Summerhouse Hill

Highlight • Viewpoint

Part of Yeovil Country Park

Tip by

4

4.22 km

Ninesprings Café

Highlight • Cafe

The cafe here sells lovely cakes and biscuits.

Tip by

5

5.51 km

Comprising of five distinct zones, the park boasts a diverse array of landscapes and feautres. From the bustling pathways and water routes of Ninesprings to the Riverside walk, where the tranquil ambiance of the woods embraces you, allowing you to escape the urban bustle and wander alongside the meandering path of the River Yeo.

Tip by

6

6.00 km

One of the Springs of Nine Springs

Highlight • Natural Monument

B

10.2 km

End point

Bus stop

Loading

Way Types & Surfaces

Way Types

5.85 km

3.10 km

842 m

248 m

192 m

Surfaces

2.80 km

2.70 km

2.03 km

2.00 km

576 m

128 m

Sign up to see more specific route details

Sign up for free

Elevation

Elevation

Nothing selected – click and drag below to see the stats for a specific part of the route.

Highest point (80 m)

Lowest point (30 m)

Sign up to see more specific route details

Sign up for free

Comments

guide_signup

Want to know more?

Sign up for a free komoot account to join the conversation.

Sign up for free

Our route recommendations are based on thousands of hikes, rides, and runs completed by other people on komoot.

Save

Edit route

Download GPX

Move start point

Print

Share

Embed on a website

Report an Issue

Report restricted access

Nearby routes

Moderate

4.7

500

Golden Cap Circular Trail

03:10h

10.8km

290m

Explore
RoutesRoute plannerFeaturesHikesMTB TrailsRoad cycling routesBikepackingSitemap
Download the app
Follow Us on Socials

© komoot GmbH

Privacy Policy