Scotby

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Scotby
Cumberland

Village green, Scotby
Location
Grid reference: NY440551
Location: 54°53’17"N, 2°52’23"W
Data
Post town: Carlisle
Postcode: CA4
Dialling code: 01228
Local Government
Council: Cumberland
Parliamentary
constituency:
Carlisle

Scotby is a village in northern Cumberland close by the City of Carlisle, from which it is separated by the M6 Motorway. It is close to other commuter villages in the area, such as Wetheral, Cumwhinton and Aglionby.

History

During the Second World War, on 11 March 1943, a village dance was being held in the village hall when a bomb penetrated the hall roof which resulted in a local farmer being killed.

In the field on the opposite side of the Tyne Valley Line to the Church, rubber tubes were laid out so as to represent railway lines to make the German Luftwaffe think that it was a major railway sidings of Carlisle. It is thought that the Luftwaffe, which was returning from a bombing raid on the munitions factory at Gretna, released their bomb load on to the fake sidings in the hope of destroying them, and also to lighten their plane load for their flight home. On the same night, a bomb also landed near to the War Memorial in the churchyard Although it did not explode, It did damage some of the church windows.

Community

Scotby School is the main primary school for children living in the area. It has around 250 registered pupils, and its catchment includes Wetheral village and parts of eastern Carlisle.

There is a village green in the centre of the village, and the village hall is located beside it. The hall, which is arranged as a single floor, was constructed in 1926, and an extension was added to the front of the building in 1953.

Also on this side of the green is a building which used to be the Quaker Meeting house. It is now part of a small development called Scotby Green Steading. The Quakers had a strong religious presence in the village going back to at least the mid 1600s. The Meeting House was used by them until as late the Second World War. Along with the cemetery adjacent to the Meeting House, the Quakers also had a burial ground situated off Broomfallen Road on what is known as White Hill. This can be seen from Ladysteps; it is the small wood to the right of the skyline.

The Royal Oak

Opposite the green is the village Shop and Post Office, a public house (the Royal Oak) and Scotby Parish Centre. The Parish Centre was originally built as a Reading Room by the Quakers in the 1880s.

Also in the village is White Waters hairdressing salon which is on the road towards the village of Cumwhinton which is approximately a mile and a half away. This hairdressing salon was built on the site of the former Village Smithy.

The village Church is All Saints Church Scotby, which is located on a piece of high ground situated between the village green and the Tyne Valley Line railway. The church was consecrated on the 11th of October 1855. Before this date, residents of the village had to travel to the Holy Trinity church in Wetheral to worship, and to be buried in Wetheral Churchyard cemetery. To reach the cemetery, a number of Corpse Roads were used and many of these lonnings exist today, for example, the lonning at the top of Ghyll Road in Scotby. For more information on the church visit[1]

Sport

  • Cricket: Scotby Cricket Club

The Hartley Recreation Ground on Parkett Hill is an 8-acre playing field which has been enrolled as a Queen Elizabeth II Field.

Transport links

There was formerly a railway station, Scotby Station, here, on the Tyne Valley Line. The station was closed though in 1959 (before the Beeching Axe). The Settle-Carlisle Railway also runs through the village and Scotby also had a station on this line until 1942.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Scotby)

References