Otley Run

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A sign outside Strawbs Bar on Woodhouse Lane welcoming Otley Run revellers. A-board outside Strawbs Bar, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds (25th August 2017).jpg
A sign outside Strawbs Bar on Woodhouse Lane welcoming Otley Run revellers.

The Otley Run is the name given to a pub crawl in Leeds, West Yorkshire. The popular route covers Far Headingley, Headingley and Hyde Park areas and commonly continues towards Leeds City Centre.

Contents

Today's Otley Run is seen as a rite of passage for students studying at Leeds' universities [1] [2] and its modern route features in a London Underground style pub map of Leeds designed by former graphic design student Steve Lovell. [3] [4] Participants now often wear fancy dress, [5] [6] coordinating their costumes to a particular theme.

Popularity and Participation

As a recurring event in Freshers' Week, Otley Road pub crawls serve to introduce incoming students at The University of Leeds and Leeds Beckett University (originally Leeds Polytechnic) to Leeds' residences and campus locations. [7] These are also a popular social gathering for student clubs and societies [8] throughout the year and have been adopted by Leeds College of Music, Leeds Arts University, and Leeds Trinity University.

Otley Run participants also include members of The University of Bradford Hockey Club and students of the Grammar School at Leeds, Lawnswood School, Roundhay School, Notre Dame Catholic Sixth Form College, Guiseley School, Horsforth School, St Mary's, Menston and Abbey Grange Church of England Academy do the Otley Run on their last day, as well as students from Otley's Prince Henry's Grammar School Sixth Form, with their run usually including various pubs and bars around Otley as well as the Headingley Mile venues. In 2010, Oz and Hugh's Raise the Bar featured the Otley Run in a five-minute segment, showing both presenters join a group of students taking part in fancy dress. [9] [10]

The enduring popularity of the Otley Run has seen it become a common activity for birthdays and other celebrations among graduates, city residents, and visiting parties. [11] It has inspired beer bottle designs, [12] a verse novella, [13] and artwork depicting the venues and scenery on the route. [14]

History of the route

Influences on the Otley Run's name and route over time include:

The tradition of starting an Otley Run early [28] predates The Licensing Act 1988's repeal of the law requiring pubs to close in the afternoon. [29] [30] Prior to this, Otley's status as a thriving market town [31] having given it exemption from this law made it popular with drinkers. For students, an Otley Road pub crawl might run to or from University Union premises [32] [33] and include (or stop at) residential cafeteria facilities and nearby Tetley pubs or the Bodington Hall on-site bar. [34] [35] [36]

As city centre pubs began to adopt the new longer opening hours, [37] the northern end point of the Otley Run route crept into Adel, Lawnswood, and Weetwood in keeping with the proximity of student residences such as Devonshire Hall, Bodington Hall, and Oxley. Starting around the ring road junction was also popular with student sports societies thanks to Bodington's playing fields, Sports Park Weetwood, [38] and location of The Stables (at University-owned Weetwood Hall). Woodhouse Lane/Albion Street bars and city centre clubs offered end points for south-bound runs should drinkers not qualify as members or guests as required for access to student union bars at the time. This journey would therefore pass or approach such sites as the University playing fields at Bodington Hall/Weetwood Pavilion, [39] as well as Carnegie stadium, Castle Grove Masonic Lodge, Associated Tower Cinemas' famous Lounge and Cottage Road cinemas, the site of the Skyrack wapentake Shire Oak [40] (now commemorated with a blue plaque at the Original Oak), Woodhouse Ridge, the site of Leeds Girls' High School, and Woodhouse Moor/Hyde Park.

As Headingley's student population subsequently grew, [41] more, larger, and longer-opening pubs arrived in the area [42] and were adopted into Otley Road crawls. With the eventual closure of the halls at Weetwood, Cavendish, Tetley, and Bodington in favour of alternatives in and around city centre, the formal route ceased inclusion of central Weetwood and beyond, commonly heading south from Woodies' Ale House instead. Woodies' (originally The Woodman) was close to the Headingley Centre boundary and as such served by cheap "Green Zone" [43] bus tickets. Main road pubs such as the Dry Dock and The Feast and Firkin (which had an on-site microbrewery) were among those promptly adopted, [44] [45] as were North Lane pubs such as Arc in due course. [46] Many city centre bars and club nights [47] also began to compete for acknowledgement as an official end point.

The idea that followers of the modern run should start early and visit as many venues as possible rather than cover a greater area has prompted creation of a Cumulative Impact Policy in 2005 aimed at limiting the adverse effect of Headingley's new pubs on the surrounding area [48] and quickly led to some pubs voluntarily setting up an informal warning network aimed at turning away visitors in fancy dress and in obvious large groups. [49] Crackdowns on commercial interest in the Otley Run have been proposed [50] [51] and University accreditation schemes have also threatened to look unfavourably on heavily promoted pub crawl events in general. In 2014 the Home Office proposed an Alcohol Impact Scheme aimed at student drinking [52] with support from the NUS. By 2022, the central focus of complaints had shifted from student sports societies to former students and visiting stag parties, [53] with increasing involvement of police and pressure on pubs and bars to take action against anti-social behaviour among drinkers. [54] [55]

Following an appeal to the original licensing rejection for conversion of the former Elinor Lupton Centre to The Golden Beam, [56] an updated application was accepted which stated that participants in the Otley Run would be refused entry. [57]

Other university pub crawls

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