Yearsley

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Yearsley
Yorkshire
North Riding

Yearsley Church
Location
Grid reference: SE588745
Location: 54°9’48"N, 1°6’2"W
Data
Post town: York
Postcode: YO61
Local Government
Council: North Yorkshire

Yearsley is a small village in the North Riding of Yorkshire, sitting between the market towns of Easingwold and Helmsley.. The parish population was less than 100 at the 2011 Census.

The entire parish of Yearsley is within the Howardian Hills Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. It was, and remains, a predominantly agricultural village with significant forestry on the moors to the north of the village.

History

The name 'Yearsley' is recorded in the Domesday Book as 'Eureslage' and then, in the Pipe Rolls of 1176, as 'Euereslai'. The origins of the name are probably Anglo-Saxon, from ‘’Eofores leah’’, meaning Boar’s Meadow.

Following the Norman invasion, the lands of Yearsley fell into the hands of Roger de Mowbray, who, by 1160, passed the estates to another Norman nobleman, Thomas Colville (from Collville-Sur-Mer on the Normandy coast). The heirs of Thomas Colville (also all called Thomas) owned the lands of Yearsley until 1398 when the next heir, William Colville, took the step of calling himself by the name of his English, rather than erstwhile Norman lands, and became William Yearsley.[1] The manorial estates of Yearsley passed to Sir William Yearsley (who was Clerk of the Wardrobe to Henry VI) and, in 1482, to a third heir, Thomas Yearsley, who died without male heirs in 1497. Through marriage, the estates of Yearsley then passed (by Thomas Yearsley's daughter, Thomasin) to William Wildon of Fryton.[2]

About the village

The parish church is St Hilda’s.[3]

Yearsley is the site of a number of barrows and other early earthworks.[4] Yearsley was also the site of the pottery of William Wedgewood, a relation of the famous Staffordshire Wedgwood family of potters. The village was part of the Newburgh Priory estate of the Wombwell family until 1944.

The Pond Head reservoir between Yearsley and Oulston is fed from the nearby source of the River Foss.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Yearsley)

References