 Welcome to Bradford Mortgage Broker, the source of independent mortgage brokers for Bradford, West Yorkshire. OPEN 24 HOURS - 7 DAYS A WEEK! Whether you need a remortgage, a buy to let, or you are buying your own home, you need LOOK NO FURTHER. Please feel free to fill in the 'no fuss' enquire on line form.
We are a site putting you in touch with independent mortgage brokers covering Bradford. Our brokers are all fully qualified and are authorised by the Finanial Services Authority.
They will find you the best possible mortgage for your situation from thousands of mortgages AND being independent means they have instant access to the whole of the UK lending market. From application to completion they take care of your case every step of the way. They can even secure a solicitor from our panel to take care of your conveyancing. Sourcing a mortgage broker in Bradford has never been so simple. Using the menu at the top of the page you can request a call back at a time to suit you, view our contact details or fill in a short and simple on line enquiry form. Remember your broker represents you, not the lender. All the information you provide is strictly confidential. Our mortgage advisors are friendly and there’s no obligation. Bradford Mortgages For information on other areas please see below local and UK Independent Mortgage Broker & Advisor covering Leeds, Harrogate, Skipton, North Yorkshire, Ilkley, Otley, Horsforth, Wetherby, Tadcaster, York, Hull, Grimsby, Huddersfield, Scarborough, Doncaster, Rotherham, Sheffield, South Yorkshire, Manchester, Liverpool, Merseyside, Lancaster, Preston, Blackburn, Bolton, Lancashire, Nottingham, Newcastle, Middlesbrough, Teeside Sunderland, Carlisle, Chester, Cheshire. History of Bradford 'Broad Ford', later known as Bradford, was first settled in Saxon times and by the middle ages had become a small town centred on Kirkgate, Westgate and Ivegate. The 'Manor of Bradford' was first held by the De Lacy family until 1311 and then in turn by the Earls on Lincoln, John Gaunt and the Crown before passing into private hands in 1620. After an uprising in 1070 against the Norman conquest, Bradford was laid waste but began to extend slowly over the next two-hundred years with the woolen trade gaining in prominence. The Civil War caused a decline in the industry but with the accession of William and Mary in 1689 prosperity began to return. The launch of manufacturing in the early 18th Century marked the start of the town's development whilst new canal and turnpike road links encouraged trade. At the turn of the 19th Century, Bradford was a small rural market town of 16,000 people, where wool spinning and cloth weaving was carried out in local cottages and farms. By 1841 there were 38 worsted mills in Bradford town and 70 in the borough and it was estimated that two-thirds of the country's wool production was processed in Bradford. Less than ten years later, Bradford had become the wool capital of the world with a population of 100,000 leading to the development of a solid engineering and manufacturing base and a key financial centre which has continued to flourish ever since. |