Sheffield Iris ended in 1848.
In 1754, the Sheffield Weekly Journal was a newspaper in Sheffield, England. It supported radical causes such as abolition of slavery and religious reform. It changed names and owners to Sheffield Weekly Register then Sheffield Register in 1787. Joseph Gales had met Thomas Paine and started to print articles praising the French Revolution. The British government tried to arrest Gales but he fled to Germany and sold the paper to James Montgomery. The name was changed to Sheffield Iris in 1795.
Sheffield Lancers ended in 1980.
Sheffield Development Corporation ended in 1997.
Sheffield Repertory Theatre ended in 1971.
Sheffield City Battalion ended in 1918.
Iris Associates ended in 1994.
Sheffield Wicker railway station ended in 1870.
Sheffield Victoria railway station ended in 1970.
Sheffield Co-operative Society ended in 2007.
Sheffield Park railway station ended in 1958.
Sheffield Wool Shear Workers Union ended in 2007.
Grange Lane railway station - Sheffield - ended in 1953.