Pocklington

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Pocklington
Yorkshire
East Riding
Market Place, Pocklington.jpg
Market Place, Pocklington
Location
Grid reference: SE802486
Location: 53°55’39"N, 0°46’40"W
Data
Population: 8,337  (2011)
Post town: York
Postcode: YO42
Dialling code: 01759
Local Government
Council: East Riding of Yorkshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
East Yorkshire
Website: www.pocklington.gov.uk

Pocklington is a small market town situated at the foot of the Yorkshire Wolds in the East Riding of Yorkshire, approximately 13 miles east of York.

The town's skyline is dominated by a 15th-century tower of All Saints church. Pocklington lies at the centre of the ecclesiastical Parish of Pocklington, which also encompasses the small hamlet of Kilnwick Percy as well as a scattering of outlying farms and houses.

The town's architecture is a mixture of quaint old houses and modern buildings and the town has several unusual street names reflecting its history from the Iron Age onwards.

It is now considered to be a commuter town for York, Hull and Leeds.

Geography

Pocklington Market Place in 2005.

Pocklington is situated at the foot of the Yorkshire Wolds, hills which form the eastern edge of the Vale of York, and stretch from Pocklington 40 miles or so in a north-easterly direction to the east coast around Bridlington.

Geologically speaking, the whole area was originally under water, and, when the land rose, the chalk Wolds were formed from the skeletons and shells covering the sea floor. The landscape around Pocklington therefore varies from flat arable land primarily devoted to agriculture to the south and west, and grassy, limestone hills and valleys to the north and east. A lot of this lower farming country was originally reclaimed from marshland, from the Middle Ages onwards.

Crops grown include traditional arable crops seen elsewhere in the country but also include rape seed, turf and sugar beet. The last is a familiar sight being hauled by tractor in large open-top trailers to York, where it is used by firms such as Nestlé and British Sugar. Recent job cuts[1] have put this crop in jeopardy, although feasibility studies have shown that sugar beet could be used commercially to produce cleaner car fuel.[2]

Pocklington is bisected by the largely invisible (it now runs underground for much of its length) Pocklington Beck, a small stream that feeds into the Pocklington Canal. The beck and canal are usually good fishing grounds but a sewerage overflow in 2003 killed thousands of fish and severely damaged the ecosystem, from which it is still recovering.[3]

Churches

Churches within Pocklington include:

  • Church of England: All Saints' Church, known in the area as the Cathedral of the Wolds, dates from the late 12th to early 15th century
  • Methodist: Pocklington Methodist Church
  • Pentecostal: Pocklington Christian Fellowship, formerly known as Pocklington Pentecostal Church
  • Roman Catholic: St Mary & St Joseph's

History

All Saint's church

Pocklington gets its name via the Old English Poclintun: "Pocel's clan's village".[4] but though the town's name can only be traced back to around 650 AD, the inhabitation of Pocklington as a site is thought to extend back a further 1,000 years or more to the Bronze Age.

In the Iron Age Pocklington was the regional capital of the Parisii tribe.[5] By the time of the Domesday Book in 1086 it was the second largest settlement in Yorkshire, after York itself.

Pocklington developed through the Middle Ages while many similar places fell into dramatic decline. Pocklington owed much of its prosperity in the Middle Ages to the fact that it was a local centre for the trading of wool[6] and lay on the main road to York, an important national centre for the export of wool to the continent. Wool was England's principal export in the earlier Middle Ages.

Economy

The high street contains a mix of public houses, shops (overwhelmingly independents, very few national chain stores), banks and restaurants.

A large number of Pocklington residents are commuters to nearby cities York, Hull and Leeds. Of those who work within the local area, of those not employed within the cluster of town centre services, a number work on the Pocklington Industrial Estate (light industrial) and Pocklington Business Park (commercial). Leading employers include Bond International] (tyre distributors), Vebra, Ryedale Telecommunications and Phoenix Software. Agriculture is still a large employer, both directly in the form of farming, and also in secondary enterprises such as Yara Phosyn (Agrochemicals).

Tourism

Near the centre of Pocklington is Burnby Hall Gardens. These gardens are home to the National Collection of Hardy Water Lilies - the biggest such collection to be found in a natural setting in Europe. The Burnby Hall Gardens collection of water lilies has been designated as a "National Collection" by the National Council for the Conservation of Plants and Gardens.

Day trippers also visit Millington Wood (a Site of Special Scientific Interest) and Pocklington Canal Head, with footpaths along the canal. The canal has been named one of the top ten places to see watery wildlife in Britain. Nearby Allerthorpe Lakeland Park has parkland for walking, a lake with watersports facilities, a separate lake for fly fishing, and a BMX trail. There is also a large caravan park for holidaymakers.

Well known for its windmills, which have been depicted by so many artists over the years, Pocklington has many ancient windmills which are still in working order, hence the town's nickname as "The Great Wind Factory".

Entertainment and culture

The Pocklington Arts Centre, which opened in 2000, "offers a mixed programme of film, music, drama, dance, lectures, workshops and exhibitions".[7]

In a tribute to Munich's traditional Oktoberfest, Pocklington also hosts its own annual Pocktoberfest. Unlike the original on which it is based, Pocktoberfest is pared down to a single-issue event: beer. In the 2006 event, 19 casks (or about 452 litres) of ale were consumed.[8]

In 2006, Pocklington celebrated its second annual Flying Man Festival with a multitude of themed events from 12 to 14 May, in memory of the showman Thomas Pelling, the "Flying Man of Pocklington", who, with a pair of homemade wings, attempted a flight from the top of the local church, meeting his end when he collided with one of the church's buttresses.[9]

Sport

  • Rugby: Pocklington RUFC
  • Golf:
    • Allerthorpe Park Golf Club - 18-hole course
    • Kilnwick Percy Golf Club

Pocklington has a Queen Elizabeth II Field.

Media

Outside links

Commons-logo.svg
("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Pocklington)

References

  1. "Terry's factory to close in 2005". BBC News. 22 June 2004. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/north_yorkshire/3830363.stm. Retrieved 22 May 2010. 
  2. MacAlister, Terry (21 June 2006). "Put a beet in your tank ... BP plans UK's biggest green fuel plant". The Guardian (London). http://www.guardian.co.uk/climatechange/story/0,,1802296,00.html. Retrieved 22 May 2010. 
  3. Wainwright, Martin (4 June 2003). "Pollution kills fish in waterways". The Guardian (London). http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,3604,970026,00.html. Retrieved 22 May 2010. 
  4. A.D. Mills, The Popular Dictionary of English Place-Names, Parragon, 1996 ISBN 0-7525-1851-8 (based on A Dictionary of English Place-Names, OUP, 1991). Retrieved 1 November 2006.
  5. (Claudius Ptolemaeus), Geography, Book 2, Part 2 - "The Tribes and Cities of Mainland Britain"
  6. "In Praise of Pocklington". Yorkshire Today. Business Link Magazine Group. http://www.yorkshiretoday.net/pocklington.html. Retrieved 20 June 2009. 
  7. "About Pocklington Arts Centre"
  8. http://www.pocklingtontoday.co.uk/ViewArticle2.aspx?SectionID=996&ArticleID=1824667 pocklingtontoday.co.uk
  9. http://www.eastriding.gov.uk/leisure/tourism/pdf/leaflets/wolds2.pdf eastriding.gov.uk

Books