Woodseats is a district of Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England in the Graves Park ward.
The building subsequently became a supermarket under various names until it was eventually bought by the Wetherspoons chain and is now The Woodseats Palace public house.
The Chantrey Picture House, also on Chesterfield Road, was subsequently used as offices for a number of years by the construction company Gleesons.
A Roman Catholic church at the boundary of Woodseats and Meadowhead, Our Lady of St Thomas was founded at the request of local Catholics who had been meeting at the Big Tree public house due to the lack of a suitable church in the area.
The church was built using local rubble for the walls, Bath stone for the window tracery and nave arcade, and Westmorland slates for the roof.
In the 1977 film The Price of Coal, a reference is made to a militant colliery at Woodseats where the officials are Communists and would not endorse a visit by royalty.