Out & About …

… on the North York Moors, or wherever I happen to be.

  • Simondscliff — the medieval name of Park Nab

    Simondscliff — the medieval name of Park Nab

    In the 13th-century, the Lord of the Manor of Kildale, William de Percy, granted a chapel ‘for the safety of my soul (and the souls) of my wives, children, my parents and all my ancestors’ to the Augustinian  Priory at Healaugh Park near Tadcaster. The charter describing the land is in Latin but a translation…

  • “Murder at Kildale”

    “Murder at Kildale”

    West House Farm, at the foot of the climb up Kempswithin on the Westerdale road. Seen here across Peat Carr, the boggy watershed between Kildale and Commondale. The farm was listed as part of Kildale Estate when it was sold by Sir Charles Turner in 1806. Then, it was occupied John Rigg who paid a…

  • Turkey Nab

    Turkey Nab

    Turkey Nab with a backdrop of Carr Ridge and White Hill. A gloomy over cast day, which doesn’t do credit to probably the best view of the Cleveland Hills and the fertile plain below. The stiff, steep climb of Turkey Nab, a favourite for off-road enthusiasts, is an ancient track over the dark moors to…

  • All Saints Church, Great Ayton

    All Saints Church, Great Ayton

    The architectual historian Nikolaus Pevsner has this to say about All Saints:— Nave and chancel. Norman masonry, Norman chancel N window, Norman nave corbel-table, S doorway with two orders of colonnettes, scallop capitals and zigzag in the arch, blocked N doorway. The chancel arch has scallop and spirally volute capitals. But the nave fenestration is…

  • Runswick Bay Rescue Boat

    Runswick Bay Rescue Boat

    While a number of fishermen were on the look-out during the height of the storm at Runswick Bay on Saturday afternoon, a large laden vessel was seen drifting towards the shore. So enormous were the waves that at times only the tops of the masts were visible. Just outside the broken water a huge wave…

  • Boosbeck

    Boosbeck

    East Cleveland is a not so frequented neck of the woods for me, yet it is an area steeped in history. This is Boosbeck, at the head of the Margrove valley, which Elgee insisted on calling the Boosbeck valley. His reasoning? The valley originally drained east from the moors beyond Aysdale to Saltburn Gill. This…

  • ‘A Yorkshire Tragedy’

    ‘A Yorkshire Tragedy’

    I don’t usually do this view — on a sunny day it would be into the sun — but, a bit cloudy today, and with a surprising chilly wind. From Great Ayton Moor. On this day (23rd April) in 1605, Walter Calverley of Calverley Hall murdered his two sons, and seriously wounded his wife, and…

  • An old holloway up Carlton Bank

    An old holloway up Carlton Bank

    I tried to use a little used Public Footpath which loops around from the foot of Carlton Bank to the now demolished Underhill House. But I became distracted by a mountain bike track and ending zig-zagging up through the trees eventually coming across an old holloway, well above the present road. Overgrown by gorse, it…

  • More Devil’s work

    More Devil’s work

    The devil works hard so they say, but he doesn’t seem to be very good at any of his whimsical, crackpot schemes. It’s said he took a dislike of Aldborough but his ‘Arrows’ fell short and only just missed striking Boroughbridge. Then there’s his grandiose scheme for dividing the North Sea which got no further…

  • A lost path of Golstandale

    A lost path of Golstandale

    Alec E. F. Wright (1900 – 1981) was a local artist whose formative years were between the wars. His work is described as surrealist; some can be browsed here. I hadn’t realised it but Wright drew the maps for Bill Cowley’s book of the Lyke Wake Walk, a copy of which I have had on…

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