Sheffield’s, Kelham Island, was created by the building of a goit, fed from the river Don to serve the water wheels powering the workshops of the area, at the height of its industrial output, when inventions of technologies such as crucible steel gave a cutting edge over other towns. Since that time, it has become [...]
Long, long ago, in this fair shire, there lived a Saxon chief by the name of Wade. Wade and his wife, Bell, were of giant stock; so huge in stature that no town could contain them, so they made their home on the expanse of the North Yorkshire moorlands. They were kindly rulers, both fine builders, [...]
The North Yorkshire moors are my homeland. They are where my heart is and I feel their pull on my life with an emotion that I can’t find words rich enough to describe, especially at this time of year, when the heather is in full bloom. The deeper coloured, ‘bell heather,’ comes first, with its [...]
By 1066, the Normans had arrived in Flamborough, King Harold, who died at the battle of Hastings, had a manor house there and a constabularius was established. In that role, the Constable family arrived from Chester in the twelth century and stayed for four hundred years. They built their own grand, fortified manor house [...]
Flamborough’s headland is the most north-easterly point in England and its origins as a settlement go back many thousands of years, with archaeological evidence uncovering flint tools and arrowheads dating from Neolithic civilisation. We know that the Beaker People, from about 2,000BC, lived in the area of Beacon Hill, where fragments of their distinctive pottery [...]
Mortimer the mammoth guards the entrance to Hull and East Riding Museum. Situated in the peaceful grounds of the beautiful, Mandela gardens, which are in themselves a lovely way to idle away a sunny afternoon or linger over a picnic, this gem of a place is packed with information set out in a family friendly and interesting way. I personally think [...]
Hull’s Museum Quarter is a real treasure trove for all ages. The Streetlife Museum is billed as a transport museum and is principally the collection opened on a different site in 1925 by Hull’s first curator, Thomas Shepperd, but much has been added since, to encompass all aspects of transport and social history in Hull [...]
All Yorkshire folk worth the title know that today, August 1, is Yorkshire Day. It is the day when tykes unite together to declare their gratefulness for being born in this most hallowed and beautiful county. A county with more acres than there are letters in the whole of the King James’ Bible. The day [...]
In many parts of England, bloodsports used to be associated with Lent and Eastertide and for most places, Shrove Tuesday was marked by cockthrowing – the tradition given a nodding remembrance to in the tossing of the pancake, but in one part of North Yorkshire, cockthrowing was entertainment for the whole of the fifty liturgical [...]
To a Snowdrop. Lone Flower, hemmed in with snows and white as they But hardier far, once more I see thee bend Thy forehead, as if fearful to offend, Like an unbidden guest. Though day by day, Storms, sallying from the mountain-tops, waylay The rising sun, and on the plains descend; Yet art thou welcome, [...]