Borrowby

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Borrowby
Yorkshire
North Riding

The Market Cross in Borrowby
Location
Grid reference: SE428892
Location: 54°17’49"N, 1°20’36"W
Data
Population: 386  (2011, with Leake)
Post town: Thirsk
Postcode: YO7
Local Government
Council: North Yorkshire

Borrowby is a village in the North Riding of Yorkshire, sitting situated halfway between Thirsk and Northallerton, about twenty-five miles north of York, in the Vale of Mowbray, a low-lying agricultural landscape shaped by the last glaciation, that lies between two national parks, the North York Moors to the east and the Yorkshire Dales to the west.

Borrowby is one of the so-called Hillside Villages and can be found towards the eastern fringe of the vale where the land begins to rise to the moors.

The village is said to be of Danish origin (ending –by) when it was some kind of stronghold. It was then mentioned in the 1086 Domesday Book[1] and other early records under various spellings of "Berghby" meaning 'village on a hill'.[2] This exposed location has always been good for growing orchards[3] as the hill tops escaped the glacial debris and cannot be reached by the flood plains of the river, the Cod Beck. Borrowby was once part of the parish of Leake, which is further north, and in the first half of the 19th century there was an extensive manufacture of linen.[3] Since 1978 the village has been a conservation area.[4]

The village grew in a linear form along the main road sloping upwards to the north. It is characteristic, that to the front the buildings are separated by a broad grass verge to the main road and the backs of the properties are associated with the adjoining long plots that are accessed via a back lane. A triangular street formation divides High Borrowby from Low Borrowby and acts as a village green and centre with a public house, (The Wheatsheaf Inn), village hall and church. On the village green is an old cross which is said to have marked the border between Borrowby and the town of Gueldable,[5] (and the two Wapentakes of Allerton and Birdforth) at a time when both townships were completely intermixed.[6]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Borrowby)

References

  1. Borrowby in the Domesday Book
  2. Ekwall, Eilert, The Concise Oxford Dictionary of English Place-Names. Oxford, Oxford University Press, 4th edition, 1960. ISBN 0198691033
  3. 3.0 3.1 A History of the County of York: North Riding - Volume 1 pp 410-418: Parishes: Leake (Victoria County History)
  4. "Conservation areas and listed buildings". https://www.hambleton.gov.uk/info/20039/planning/277/conservation_areas_and_listed_buildings/4. Retrieved 17 May 2018. 
  5. Grainge, William (1859). The Vale of Mowbray: a historical and topographical account of Thirsk and its neighbourhood (2 ed.). Ripon: Simpkin & Co. pp. 313–314. OCLC 559956399. 
  6. Information on Borrowby  from GENUKI
  • Grainge, William (1859); The Vale of Mowbray: A Historical and Topographical Account of Thirsk and Its Neighbourhood; G. H. Smith & Son, reprint 1993. ISBN 0904775887
  • Bogg, Edmund; The Golden Vale of Mowbray, Elliot Stock; reprint edition (1909)