Barmston, Yorkshire

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Barmston
Yorkshire
East Riding

All Saints church, Barmston
Location
Grid reference: TA163591
Location: 54°-0’55"N, 0°13’31"W
Data
Population: 275  (2011)
Post town: Driffield
Postcode: YO25
Dialling code: 01262
Local Government
Council: East Riding of Yorkshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
East Yorkshire

Barmston is a village in the East Riding of Yorkshire. It stands on the Holderness coast, overlooking the North Sea and to the east of the A165 road. Barmston is approximately six miles south of Bridlington town centre. The parish includes the village of Fraisthorpe, the former villages of Auburn and Hartburn have been abandoned due to coastal erosion.

Barmston is listed in the Domesday Book as having eight ploughlands and belonging to Drogo of la Beuvrière.[1] The name of the village derives from Beorn's Tun (Beorn's Village).[2] The 2011 census recorded Barmston and Fraisthorpe together as having a population of 275.

About the village

The parish church of All Saints is a Grade I listed building.[3] Barmston’s one public house is the ‘’Black Bull’’.

The Old Hall is a Grade II* listed building.[4]

The Black Bull
Barmston Sands

A key industry in the village is tourism and there is a caravan park located on former agricultural land near the beach. The cliffs are made of soft marl clay and are subject to erosion. Numerous properties have been demolished over the years to prevent them from falling into the sea.[5] The position of a road leading down to the beach (long since lost to the sea) is clearly visible. The road still exists to the clifftop, which is blocked off by a barrier, and the rocks that supported the slope are still visible at low tide, giving an indication of how far the cliff has eroded. The coast road was completely lost to the sea by 1996.[6] Barmston is one of the worst locations on the coast for coastal erosion: in 1967, twenty feet of coastline was lost over just two days due to storms in October.[7] The rate of erosion varies from year to year and is down to the tides and which way the winds are blowing, but typically the amount is between 4.0 feet (1.2 m) and 8.2 feet (2.5 m) per year.[8][9]

Barmston is the proposed landfall site for a carbon capture and storage scheme linking the proposed Don Valley Power Project at Stainforth, near Hatfield, in the West Riding and the White Rose CCS project at Drax Power Station with porous rock beneath the North Sea.[10][11][12][13]

The parish is almost completely low lying agricultural land with several farmsteads; excluding the Holderness coast and the two villages of Barmston and Fraisthorpe. The A165 Bridlington Road passes through the parish.

History

The village of Barmston gave its name to the ancient parish of Barmston.[14] The parish was bounded by watercourses of Earl's Dike (also known as Watermill Grounds Beck) to the north, and Barmston drain to the south.

The village of Hartburn on the Holderness coast was deserted after the 15th century and no longer exists due to coastal erosion.[15] The village was located just south of the outflow of Earl's Dike on the coastline.[16]

The hamlet of Winkton in the parish of Barmston had also been long abandoned by the 1850s.[17]

The village of Auburn in the former parish of Fraisthorpe was abandoned to coastal erosion, except for a farm;[18] the chapel was dismantled in the 1780s.[19]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Barmston, Yorkshire)

References

  1. "Barmston | Domesday Book". https://opendomesday.org/place/TA1558/barmston/. Retrieved 29 April 2020. 
  2. Ekwall, Eilert, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 4th edition, 1960. p. 27 ISBN 0198691033
  3. National Heritage List 1083851: Church of All Saints (Grade I listing)
  4. National Heritage List 1204832: Old Hall (Grade III* listing)
  5. "Owners need to demolish homes". infoweb.newsbank.com. 12 April 2004. https://infoweb.newsbank.com/apps/news/document-view?p=AWNB&t=&sort=_rank_%3AD&fld-base-0=alltext&maxresults=20&val-base-0=Barmston%20erosion&docref=news/101EEF9C20B01B55. Retrieved 29 April 2020. 
  6. "North division: Barmston | British History Online". https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/yorks/east/vol7/pp213-223. Retrieved 29 April 2020. 
  7. "Holderness Coast (United Kingdom)". p. 5. http://copranet.projects.eucc-d.de/files/000164_EUROSION_Holderness_coast.pdf. Retrieved 29 April 2020. 
  8. "Erosion's a beach". infoweb.newsbank.com. 24 April 2008. https://infoweb.newsbank.com/apps/news/document-view?p=AWNB&t=&sort=_rank_%3AD&fld-base-0=alltext&maxresults=20&val-base-0=Barmston%20erosion&docref=news/123494BBA1B40D40. Retrieved 29 April 2020. 
  9. "Villagers with worst coast erosion in Europe fear being swallowed by sea". infoweb.newsbank.com. 12 January 2008. https://infoweb.newsbank.com/apps/news/document-view?p=AWNB&t=&sort=_rank_%3AD&fld-base-0=alltext&maxresults=20&val-base-0=Barmston%20erosion&docref=news/11E26DC9A25922F8. Retrieved 29 April 2020. 
  10. "Samsung backs £5bn Hatfield carbon-capture project". BBC News (BBC). 28 March 2012. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-south-yorkshire-17534481. Retrieved 19 June 2012. 
  11. "New public exhibitions for Yorkshire carbon dioxide pipe". BBC News (BBC). 19 June 2012. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-18503078. Retrieved 19 June 2012. 
  12. "Local residents to have their say on CCS project". National Grid. 18 June 2012. http://www.nationalgrid.com/uk/Media+Centre/PressReleases/2012/CCS+18.06.12.htm. Retrieved 19 June 2012. 
  13. "Welcome to the website for the National Grid Yorkshire and Humber carbon capture, transportation and storage (CCS) project.". National Grid. http://www.ccshumber.co.uk/. Retrieved 19 June 2012. 
  14. "Barmston EP through time : Administrative history of Ecclesiastical Parish: hierarchies, boundaries". A Vision of Britain Through Time. University of Portsmouth. 2009. http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/relationships.jsp?u_id=10396750&c_id=10001043. 
  15. Allison, K. J.; Baggs, A. P.; Cooper, T. N.; Davidson-Cragoe, C.; Walker, J. (2002). "North division: Barmston". in Kent, G.H.R.. A History of the County of York East Riding: Volume 7: Holderness Wapentake, Middle and North Divisions. pp. 213–223. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=16147. Retrieved 13 August 2011. 
  16. Ordnance Survey, 1854, 1:10,560
  17. Sheahan, J. J.; Whellan, T. (1857). "History of Holderness : Barmston". History and topography of the City of York, the East Riding of Yorkshire .... 2. pp. 401–402. https://books.google.com/books?id=pnEMAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA401. 
  18. 54°2’44"N, 0°13’5"W Site of the mediæval village of Auburn
  19. Sheahan, J. J.; Whellan, T. (1857). "Dickering Wapentake : Auburn". History and topography of the City of York, the East Riding of Yorkshire .... 2. p. 463. https://books.google.com/books?id=pnEMAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA463. 
  • Gazetteer — A–Z of Towns Villages and Hamlets. East Riding of Yorkshire Council. 2006. p. 3.