Risby, Yorkshire

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Risby
Yorkshire
East Riding
Risby Folly, from across the pond - panoramio.jpg
Risby Folly, in Risby Park
Location
Grid reference: TA008349
Location: 53°48’3"N, 0°28’13"W
Data
Post town: Beverley
Postcode: HU17
Dialling code: 01482
Local Government
Council: East Riding of Yorkshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Haltemprice and Howden

Risby is a tiny hamlet, and the site of a deserted village, in the parish of Rowley in the East Riding of Yorkshire. It is approximately three and a half mlies south-west of Beverley, a mile west of the A164 road. There was once a stately home here, the legacy of which forms the landscape around the hamlet.

The area has an open partially wooded parkland, once one of the largest deer parks in Yorkshire, that is popular with local walkers.[1] It also includes Risby Park, a farm, the Folly Lake Cafe. There are several fishponds in the ornamental lakes of the former hall, which have been operated as coarse fishing locations since 1990.[2] The site also has an octagonal brick folly that is designated Grade II.[3]

Name

Risby was mentioned in the Domesday Book as Risebi. The name is from the Old Norse hrís and bỹ, and means "village or farm in the brushwood, or where brushwood was collected".[4]

Risby Hall

Risby Hall was the home of the Ellerker family between the early 14th and the late 18th centuries.[5] It was built in the 1680s and expanded until it was ravaged by fire in the 1770s. It was repaired, but was destroyed by fire again in the 1780s. The hall's foundations are visible in the fields near Risby.

Parklands

The former Risby Hall had extensive parklands which included ornamental lakes, parkland, woodland and a brick folly which were extended in the late 18th century shortly before the hall's destruction.[3] The lakes were created by Easton Mainwaring Ellerker between 1769 and his death in 1771. The folly was built in about 1770 as part of a landscaping improvements by the Elleker Family.[6]

In 1550 a deer park was created through the enclosure of some of the estate, and it was subsequently expanded until the 17th century. Henry VIII and his court were entertained at Risby by Sir Ralph Ellerker at the former Ellerker manor house at nearby Cellar Heads,[7] shortly before the deer park's development in 1540.[8]

Outside links

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

References

  1. "About Us". http://follylakecafe.co.uk/about/. 
  2. "Welcome to Risby Park Fishing Ponds * Folly Lake Cafe". Risby Park Fisheries. http://www.risby-park.co.uk/. 
  3. 3.0 3.1 National Heritage List 1161815: Folly in Fishpond Wood (Grade II listing)
  4. Watts, Victor, ed. (2010), "Riseby", The Cambridge Dictionary of English Place-Names, Cambridge University Press, ISBN 978 0 521 16855 7 
  5. National Heritage List 1001419: Risby Hall (Register of Historic Parks and Gardens)
  6. "Archaeology Data Service: myADS". http://archaeologydataservice.ac.uk/archiveDS/archiveDownload?t=arch-888-1/dissemination/pdf/eddennis1-122693_1.pdf. 
  7. National Heritage List 1015312: Cellar Heads (Scheduled ancient monument entry)
  8. National Heritage List 1018600: Risby Jacobean gardens, hall and mediæval settlement remains (Scheduled ancient monument entry)
  • Gazetteer — A–Z of Towns Villages and Hamlets. East Riding of Yorkshire Council. 2006. p. 9.