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Danby Lodge - Photo:
Dave Stamp
CCL |
This tiny village is the
home of The Moors Centre, a national park
visitor centre which sits in 13 acres of land
and hosts exhibitions, giving a unique insight
into the moors and its people. It was
originally a shooting lodge for the Dawnay
family. Danby is also famous as the home of
the 19th century cleric Canon Atkinson who
wrote ‘Forty Years in a Moorland Parish’. He
had three wives and 13 children. |
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Danby Castle is a 14th
century edifice that was once the residence of
Catherine Parr, sixth wife of Henry VIII.
Close to the Moors Centre is a mediaeval
packhorse bridge over the River Esk. On the
parapet is the coat of arms of the Neville
family. Danby Watermill, dating to the 17th
century, is the only remaining watermill
working on the Esk. |

Duck Bridge - Photo:
Colin Grice
CCL |
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Sleightholmedale Lodge, private residence -
Photo:
Colin Grice
CCL |
Surrounded by moorland
countryside, this tiny village with its own
green lies close to Kirkbymoorside in the
Tabular Hills. The picturesque valley of
Sleightholmedale is nearby. |
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Summer visitors apart,
this is a sleepy village that springs to life
at Easter time when thousands of wild
daffodils blossom on the banks of the River
Dove. |

Farndale Daffodils - Photo:
Alan Walker
CCL |
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Gillamoor View - Photo:
Gordon Hatton
CCL
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This hamlet with its neat
village green lies in the beautiful valley of
Bransdale, near Kirkbymoorside, surrounded by
rich heather and babbling brooks. |
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The village of Glaisdale
was once an important location for the mining
of ironstone but it is more famous for
Beggar’s Bridge, a packhorse bridge over the
turbulent River Esk. The story goes that it
was built by one-time beggar Tom Ferris who
was unable to cross the river to go 'a-courtin’.
After making his fortune in the navy he
returned home to erect the bridge. |

Beggars Bridge - Photo:
Paul Allison
CCL |
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Guisborough Priory - Photo:
Alison Stamp
CCL |
This lovely village with a
Gothic church, built around 1500, and the
ruins of a 12th century priory church used to
be the capital of the Cleveland district and
was then part of Yorkshire’s North Riding. It
also has an unusual memorial to the local de
Bruce family which had links with the Scottish
warrior Robert the Bruce. Carved in 1521 and
known as the Brus Cenotaph, it was given to
the priory church by Margaret Tudor, daughter
of Henry VII. Robert the Bruce’s grandfather
is buried at nearby Guisborough Priory, a
magnificent ruin which looks out onto the
grounds of Guisborough Hall, built by Sir
Thomas Challoner. It was Challoner’s son who
first began mining alum on the moors in the
early 17th century. Tocketts flourmill, with a
working waterwheel, is about a mile from here.
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The Cleveland Way Walk
starts in this busy but attractive market
town, which is the administrative base for the
North York Moors National Park. It lies below
picturesque moorland on the River Rye and
boasts the ruin of a 12th century castle once
regarded as impregnable. The castle was bought
in 1689 by Sir Charles Duncombe of nearby
Duncombe Park, but fell into disrepair when he
decided to live in a 200-room mansion in the
grounds. |

Helmsley Castle during battle re-enactment -
Photo:
Paul Allison
CCL |
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Feeding the ducks at Helmsley - Photo:
Dave Dunford
CCL |
The castle was probably
built by Walter L’Espec who also founded
nearby Rievaulx Abbey - the first Cistercian
house to be built in the north of England.
Founded in 1131 it is one of the most
magnificent ruins in the country, with fine
views and an unusual terrace. |
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Hovingham is one of
Yorkshire's prettiest villages. It lies along
an old Roman road to Malton, and Roman remains
have been found on the site of Hovingham Hall,
home of Sir Marcus Worsley. There is an
unusual entrance to the Hall through the
stables; the lawn is also the village cricket
field! The Ebor Way long distance footpath
passes through the village. |

Hovingham Cottages and Church - Photo:
Stephen Horncastle
CCL
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Cruck framed cottage - Photo:
Humphrey Bolton
CCL |
Something of a showpiece
village, Hutton-le-Hole provides the rural
setting for the Ryedale Folk Museum, a
remarkable exhibition of rescued and
reconstructed period buildings including a
photographer’s studio, a cruck-framed house
and a row of shops. Surrounded by moors, this
picturesque location is blessed with pretty
stone cottages, glistening streams and a
series of intriguing bridges. The oldest
building here is Quaker Cottage, which dates
from 1695 and is associated with John
Richardson, a missionary to America who
befriended William Penn, the founder of
Pennsylvania. |
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An ancient village
surrounded by sublime moorland scenery,
Kildale is in the Esk Valley and lies on the
Esk Valley railway line. In the mid-19th
century a treasury of Viking relics was
discovered in St Cuthbert’s Church. |

Lonsdale view from Cokshaw Hill - Photo:
Mick Garratt
CCL |
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Kirkbymoorside Market Place - Photo:
Colin Grice
CCL |
This quiet moorland town
comes alive on market days and from Vivers
Hill there are splendid views over the Vale of
Pickering.
The town’s Market Hall dates from 1700 while
the Black Swan inn is a half-timbered building
dating from 1634. The town has fine
countryside around it and a short drive will
take visitors to nearby Ryedale Folk Museum at
Hutton-le-Hole, a fascinating living museum. |
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Lastingham is one of the
most fascinating villages in the North York
Moors and holds a unique place in the hearts
of Christians who have been coming here for
centuries. The reason is that the Lindisfarne
monks built a monastery here in 655AD.
Although it was destroyed Abbot Stephen of
Whitby built a crypt to replace it in the 11th
century and had the saint’s bones interred
within it. Remarkably, the crypt – or small
church - has withstood the test of time and
looks much as it did when it was first
constructed. Inside are pieces of ancient
crosses. |

Lastingham Village - Photo:
Colin Grice
CCL |
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Lealholm Station - Photo:
Edward Nicholl
CCL
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Beautiful Lealholm nestles
in the valley of the Esk and is a magnet for
photographers and artists, offering
picturesque scenery and a traditional village
setting. Nearby is the steep gorge of 'Crunkley
Gill’, not forgetting Fryup Dale and Little
Fryup Dale. |
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Lying on the River Derwent,
this is an important market town near
Pickering and was known as Deventio in Roman
times. The present Malton dates mainly from
the 18th century when it prospered as a river
port. Old Malton is nearby. North lies the
former prisoner-of-war site Eden Camp, which
has been transformed into a museum of everyday
life in World War Two. |

Eden Camp gate guard Hurricane - Photo:
Phil Catterall
CCL |
Four miles away stands one of
Britain’s greatest houses, Castle Howerd. Boasting
a fine collection of furniture and paintings and a
magnificent park, it was designed in 1699 by John
Vanbrugh for the 3rd Earl of Carlisle, taking 100
years to complete. Today it is most familiar as
the setting for the acclaimed TV drama ‘Brideshead
Revisited’.
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Situated along the Esk
Valley rail line and just four miles from
Pickering’s steam railway, this tiny,
fascinating village is famous as the
birthplace of the great explorer Captain James
Cook who entered the world in 1728.
The area’s public park now
plays host to the Captain Cook Birthplace
Museum which has a large collection of
memorabilia. A granite urn marks the location
of Cook’s old house. The man who discovered
Australia was baptised at St Chuthbert’s
Church which now has a stained-glass window to
commemorate him. |

Marton Bridge - Photo:
Stephen Horncastle
CCL
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Nunnington Hall - Photo:
Humphrey Bolton
CCL |
This delightful village
boasts a three-arched bridge that spans the
River Rye and the impressive mansion of
Nunnington Hall which partly dates to the 13th
century. One of its owners was Viscount
Preston, Secretary of State for Scotland to
James II. |
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This moorland village
which looks out onto Ampleforth Valley has
ancient origins and archaeologists have
uncovered earthworks showing there were
settlements here early in the Bronze Age. The
beautiful parish church of St Oswald - from
which the village derives its name - was
dedicated to the Anglo Saxon king of
Northumbria, a Christian convert who died in
642 while fighting pagan King Penda of Mercia. |

Church of St. Oswald - Photo:
Alison Stamp
CCL |
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Pickering Centre - Photo:
Charles Rispin
CCL |
Lying just outside the
National Park, this ancient market town lies
at the foot of heather-clad moors and was
originally a Celtic settlement dating to
270BC. Its church has medieval frescoes,
discovered beneath whitewashed walls, which
include a 9th century scene of King Edmund
being put to death. Pickering Castle was once
besieged by Robert the Bruce but is now a
joyously well-preserved ruin. It was
apparently used as a hunting lodge by every
English monarch up to 1400. Richard II was
kept prisoner here in 1399 shortly after being
deposed. Beck Isle Museum has rooms devoted to
different aspects of life in the past - from a
barber’s shop to a public bar. |
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Port Mulgrave lies close
to the path of the Cleveland Way and was once
a hectic port that shipped iron ore to the
rivers Tees and Tyne, although little of this
major industry survives here today. |

Mudstone Nodules on the Shore at Port Mulgrave
- Photo:
Mick Garratt
CCL |
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Rosedale - Photo:
Andy Beecroft
CCL |
Rosedale sits in one of
the prettiest valleys in the North York Moors
but during the 19th century it was a veritable
hive of industry, its population multiplying
after the discovery of high-grade iron ore
sparked a mini-Klondike. Mines were pushed
deep in to the bowels of the valley’s
hillsides and the North Eastern Railway
Company seized the opportunity to build a new
line. Kilns can still be seen but stones from
the walls of 12th century Rosedale Abbey were
pilfered to build houses for the miners, so
little remains of the original nunnery. |
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Saltburn has the
traditional charm of a Victorian seaside
resort including colourful Italian gardens and
walks through wooded glens. Saltburn has the
oldest water balanced cliff tramway in
Britain, linking the town with the pier 120
feet below. You can park at sea level where
the old fishing village straddles Skelton
Beck. The Old Ship Inn is the focal point,
steeped in smuggling folklore. Old fashioned
amusements and good play facilities for
children make this an attractive family venue.
The Cleveland Way passes through and follows a
steep path up to Huntcliff, the site of a
Roman Signal Station. |

Saltburn cliff tramway - Photo:
James Hearton
CCL |
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Slingsby High Street - Photo:
Roger Gilbertson
CCL |
This village provides the
setting of the remains of Slingsby Castle, a
17th century house built for Sir Charles
Cavendish who fought with Charles I at the
momentous Battle of Edgehill. He apparently
fled before the great house could be
completed. |
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With a picturesque harbour
draped with fishing nets, the neat resort of
Staithes offers spectacular views of sheer
cliffs.
Explorer Captain James Cook was apprenticed
here as a 17-year-old draper’s assistant in
1728, although the little shop where he worked
has long since been washed away by the ocean.
England’s highest perpendicular cliff, Boulby
(700ft), is just a couple miles away.
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Staithes - Photo:
Paul Allison
CCL |
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Converted Windmill at Ugthorpe - Photo:
Colin Grice
CCL |
This ancient moorland
village probably dates from Saxon times and
provided a base for the ill-fated Catholic
clergyman Nicholas Postgate who risked his
life by spreading the gospel of Catholicism
during the 17th century. Even though he had
grown old he was eventually arrested and hung,
drawn and quartered at York. He later became
known as the martyr of the moors. |
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