Category: East Cleveland

  • Dipping Toes and Donning Macintoshes: A History of Sea-Side Bathing

    Dipping Toes and Donning Macintoshes: A History of Sea-Side Bathing

    Numerous folk were having a refreshing dip at Saltburn this morning, seizing the opportunity presented by the autumn sun’s warm rays and the surging waves. The surfers had donned their wet-suits, which bestowed upon them some protection against the chilly clutches of the North Sea. One fellow strolling back along the shore confessed that it…

  • On me bike which meant I had to negotiate Guisborough’s busy town centre!

    On me bike which meant I had to negotiate Guisborough’s busy town centre!

    Surprisingly quiet. The town cross is relatively modern but the steps are worn, perhaps part of the Medieval Market cross although a 17th or 18th century engraving shows circular steps. Perhaps the engraving also shows the town’s bull-ring which was located very near the cross. Yes, bull-baiting was a very popular in this period and…

  • It’s good to see blue skies after the grey of the last few days

    It’s good to see blue skies after the grey of the last few days

    This is the sands at Redcar. A few years after the turn of the 19th-century Redcar, with the exception of Scarborough, was described as “the most extensively patronised seaside resort on the N.E. coast.” An old Redcar woman, Mrs. Diana Carter, had begun providing the first bathing machines at Redcar in about 1802. Six years…

  • Dunsdale’s Tin Tabernacle

    Dunsdale’s Tin Tabernacle

    Sometime last week, I posted about a young girl’s letter from 1913 about her village of Kildale. I’ve come across another letter in the same newspaper this time from Ida Sanderson who lived in Dunsdale in 1917: DUNSDALE VILLAGE. Dear Daddy — l was very much pleased when I saw my name in print. In…

  • 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…

  • Guibal fan-house, Skelton Shaft ironstone mine

    Guibal fan-house, Skelton Shaft ironstone mine

    A great visit around the surface remains of the Skelton Park and Skelton Shaft Ironstone Mines, guided by the knowledgeable Simon and Steve from the Cleveland Mining History Society (CMHS). Along with the powder magazine, the fan-house at Skelton Shaft are the only buildings remaining. The rest of the site was demolished as a condition of…

  • Moorsholm Docks

    Moorsholm Docks

    Right on the High Street of this delightful little village that just missed out on the ironstone mining activities of the rest of East Cleveland, is a row of six sunken sandstone water troughs that have become known as the Moorsholm Docks. Probably dating from the 19th-century they are fed by piped water from a…

  • Skelton Park Pit

    Skelton Park Pit

    Very little remains of Cleveland ironstone mines. It was second only to coal as the UK’s biggest extractive industry. Ironstone had been mined in the Cleveland Hills since the 12th Century when primitive furnaces called bloomeries were used to melt the iron out of stone gained from rock outcrops along the dale sides. But it…

  • Saltburn Pier

    Saltburn Pier

    “Forth, Tyne, Dogger: East 5 to 7, occasionally gale 8 in Forth and Dogger, veering southeast 4 or 5 later. Rough, occasionally very rough later in Forth and Dogger. Occasional rain. Moderate or good”. A late afternoon walk on the beach at Saltburn with the tide on the turn. Breezy and big seas.