Month: March 2024

  • Cold Moor Lane β€” Hollow Way and Medieval Trod

    Cold Moor Lane β€” Hollow Way and Medieval Trod

    Taking a respite from the biting easterly breeze while in the shelter of Cold Moor Lane, a sunken bridleway climbing out of Chop Gate, a debate unfolded about its origins. Well, if we concede that its sunken characteristic stems from centuries of human and animal movement along this route, then I suppose one could argue…

  • Dovedale Griff

    Dovedale Griff

    On the weather front, a rather dreary day unfolded with the National Trust at Bridestones. Nevertheless, a new view for me as I stood atop one of the High Bridestones, gazing down upon the narrow upper stretch of Dove Dale, also known as Dovedale Griff. Beneath me, the valley slopes will, in a few months,…

  • Gin Garth β€” A Smugglers’ Retreat

    Gin Garth β€” A Smugglers’ Retreat

    In the 17th through to the 19th centuries, Yorkshire’s coast was notorious for smuggling, and today, places like Saltburn, Staithes, and Whitby all have their smuggling attractions and yarns. They had this intricate operation going on, and it was no secret β€” everyone knew about the ‘coopering’ business in the North Sea. Dutch ships, sailing…

  • Ashmore, Benson, Pease and Co.’s tank at Rounton Grange

    Ashmore, Benson, Pease and Co.’s tank at Rounton Grange

    Rounton Grange, the ancestral home of the Bells, is now a bit of a no-show, given that the house was demolished back in 1965. The site’s now reverted to woodland. But a few buildings in the grounds are still hanging on. Like this one with an unmistakable cast iron tank proudly sporting the name of…

  • Beyond the Mist β€” The Battle of Stokesley

    Beyond the Mist β€” The Battle of Stokesley

    This morning, the air on Great Ayton Moor was crystal clear, but away in the south-west, a low mist crept up the Vale of Cleveland, making the wind turbines at Seamer look like they’re levitating. That white house yonder caught my eye. Turns out, it’s Howe Hill. Now, I can therefore take a brief detour…

  • Siberia on the Moors β€” A Lost Railway Community

    Siberia on the Moors β€” A Lost Railway Community

    For nigh on seventy years, this exposed stretch on Greenhow Moor, with its splendid panorama of the Cleveland Plain and beyond, served as home for a community of railway workers and their families. Sited at the top of the Ingleby Incline, a cluster of building once stood here, in a location so remote and exposed…

  • A Tale of Erosion and Repair on Roseberry Topping

    A Tale of Erosion and Repair on Roseberry Topping

    Roseberry Topping, perhaps the most popular honey pot in Cleveland, bears the weight of incessant foot traffic. Prior to the National Trust’s takeover in 1975, the upkeep was a bit lax, as it was deemed mere agricultural land. Fast forward to 1995, the Trust had rolled up its sleeves and pumped some serious effort into…

  • Ghosts on the Hambleton Road β€” Echoes of Drovers and a Lost Farmstead

    Ghosts on the Hambleton Road β€” Echoes of Drovers and a Lost Farmstead

    High Mossy Grange, just off High Lane, that’s the local name for this section of Hambleton Road, an ancient route snaking from the southern reaches of England to bonny Scotland. Used to be a post-medieval farmstead, but now High Mossy Grange has all but been wiped off the map. What’s left is this patch of…