Dallowgill

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Dallowgill
Yorkshire
West Riding
Dallow - geograph.org.uk - 88013.jpg
Dallow; part of Dallowgill
Location
Grid reference: SE185725
Location: 54°8’42"N, 1°42’58"W
Data
Post town: Ripon
Postcode: HG4
Local Government
Council: North Yorkshire

Dallowgill (historically also Dallaghill) is a village in Nidderdale, in the West Riding of Yorkshire. It consists of a number of scattered settlements in the western part of the civil parish of Laverton.

History

Dallowgill takes its name from Dallow, now a small settlement in the south of the area. Dallow is derived from dæl haga, meaning "enclosure in the dale".[1] "Dallowgill" was originally applied to the ravine or gill of the River Laver below Dallow.

Anciently Dallowgill was accounted part of the parish of Kirkby Malzeard. It is a separate ecclesiastical parish, now part of the benefice of the Fountains Group of parishes.[2]

About the village

St Peter's church

The parish church is St Peter's. It was built in 1842, but closed in 2011.[3] There is also a Methodist chapel.[4]

A Crackpot Mosaics near Stang Brae

The Greygarth Monument (SE185723) commemorates Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee in 1897. At Carlesmoor in the north of the parish there is a sighting tower.

Dotted around Dallowgill are 22 mosaic panels depicting local scenes and wildlife. They were created and positioned in 1997 by local artists calling themselves the Crackpots.[5]

Outside links

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("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Dallowgill)

References