Historically Denby Dale is part of the
West Riding of Yorkshire in the
Wapentake of Staincross. The Wapentake almost corresponds with the current
Barnsley Metropolitan Area, although a few settlements and townships within the Staincross Wapentake such as Denby Dale were put outside the Metropolitan Borough of Barnsley and now lie within the current
West Yorkshire Metropolitan Area since April 1974. First recorded as Denby Dyke, before the
Industrial Revolution the village was sparsely populated with a small textile industry at the crossroads of the
Barnsley to Shepley Lane Head and the
Wakefield to Denby Dale roads. Within 25 years, factories and mills had been built and had a railway station on the
Penistone Line. Denby Dale provided the textile industry with raw materials, coal, and transportation. Silk for
the Queen Mother's wedding dress was made at Springfield Mill. With the economy flourishing, the population increased and the village grew. In 1674, the Denby Petition, created by Nathan Staniforth, then headteacher of
Penistone Grammar School, was signed by over 50 residents of Denby, in defence of Susanna Hinchcliffe and Anne Shillitoe against charges of
witchcraft. ==Transport==