Huddersfield is a large market town in the Metropolitan Borough of Kirklees, West Yorkshire, England. Huddersfield was a prominent mill town in the industrial revolution. To the town's west are the Pennines, south is the River Holme's discharge into the similar-sized Colne. The town's historic county is the West Riding of Yorkshire.
The rivers around the town provided the volumes of soft water required for textile treatment in the large weaving sheds which were associated with an economic boom in the early part of the Industrial Revolution. The town has much neoclassical Victorian architecture centrally, among which its railway station which is a Grade I listed building (the highest category of statutory recognition and protection) – described by John Betjeman as "the most splendid station façade in England".