The name Owram derives from the plural form of the
Old English ofer meaning 'a flat topped
ridge'. Southowram was historically a
township in the
ancient parish of Halifax. By 1866 part of the township was included in the borough boundaries of Halifax. In 1866 the remainder of the township was declared to be a
local government district, administered by a local board. Later that year the whole township was made a
civil parish. In 1894 local boards were reconstituted as
urban district councils under the
Local Government Act 1894, which also said that parishes could not straddle district boundaries. The part of Southowram parish within Halifax borough was therefore transferred to that parish, leaving a reduced Southowram parish covering just the urban district. In 1931 the parish had a population of 2,570. The parish and urban district of Southowram was abolished on 1 April 1937, with most of the area, including the village itself, being added to the parish and municipal borough of
Brighouse and a smaller part going to
Elland. Brighouse Municipal Borough was abolished on 31 March 1974, becoming part of the Metropolitan Borough of Calderdale. No
successor parish was created for the former borough and so Southowram is directly administered by
Calderdale Metropolitan Borough Council. Parts of Southowram's village centre were demolished and rebuilt in the 1970s and 1980s, but many older buildings remain, as do the ancient
stocks on Towngate. Old buildings were lost on New Street and were replaced by
council housing. More such housing is to be found in the lower part of the village. Southowram retains in the main, however, a mixture of older historic and new housing, council owned and private housing. A number of old halls and farms which survived until the 1940s and 1950s were lost in subsequent decades. ==Landmarks==