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Gargrave

Village and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England

Gargrave

Summary

Village and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
static_image_nameLeeds&LiverpoolCanalGargrave.jpg
static_image_captionA view of the village of Gargrave
official_nameGargrave
coordinates
population1,755
population_ref(including Bank Newton)
civil_parishGargrave
regionYorkshire and the Humber
unitary_englandNorth Yorkshire
lieutenancy_englandNorth Yorkshire
constituency_westminsterSkipton and Ripon
post_townSKIPTON
postcode_districtBD23
postcode_areaBD
dial_code01756
os_grid_referenceSD931541

Gargrave is a large village and civil parish in the county of North Yorkshire, England. It is located along the A65, 4 mi north-west of Skipton. The village is situated on the very edge of the Yorkshire Dales; the River Aire and the Leeds and Liverpool Canal pass through it. It had a population of 1,764 at the 2001 census, reducing slightly to 1,755 in 2011. Until 1974 it was part of the West Riding of Yorkshire and it was part of the district of Craven from 1974 to 2023; it is now administered by the unitary North Yorkshire Council.

Etymology

Multiple etymologies have been proposed for the name Gargrave. The name may contain Old English gāra in its original meaning of "spear" formed with graf apparently meaning wood, originally meaning "wood from which spear-shafts were cut". The first part of the name may also have had the sense "triangular piece of land" and was replaced by the cognate Old Norse gieri. Also suggested is that the name contains one of the Old Norse names with Geir- (e.g. Geirmundr, Geirlaug) with the Old English termination græf, "grave, trench", Gargrave therefore meaning "grave of the Scandinavian Giermundr, Geirlaug etc". William Wheater thought Gargrave to be derived the Celtic caer and the Saxon gerefa, meaning "the camp or city of the reeve/governor". The element -grave may be a "Celtic lenited" variant of Craven.

History

Gargrave – The Old Swan

In the second century, the Romans built a villa in flat meadowland near the River Aire at Kirk Sink; it was excavated in 1968–1974 by Brian Hartley. Its central room had a seven-metre square mosaic floor and a bath house was built alongside. The villa was surrounded by two ditches.

In the 1820s, the main industry in Gargrave was cotton manufacturing and there were numerous warehouses along the side of the canal. The population at this time was 972 and there were several public houses including the Masons Arms and the Swan Inn.

Gargrave House was built in 1917 by the distinguished Scottish architect, James Dunn; it is a Grade II listed building.

The Old Swan is also Grade II listed and was named the Keighley and Craven CAMRA Pub of the Season in summer 1998.

Governance

Gargrave was in the Gargrave and Malhamdale ward of the non-unitary authority, Craven District Council, also served by the North Yorkshire County Council for local services. The population of this ward at the 2011 Census was measured at 3,037.

Since 2023, it has been part of the Mid Craven ward of the unitary North Yorkshire Council.

The village is in the Skipton and Ripon constituency of the UK Parliament; the seat is held currently by Julian Smith of the Conservative Party.

Transport

The main road through Gargrave is the A65 Leeds to Kendal road. There has been a long-running campaign to have a by-pass built around the village, given the volume of traffic it provides.

Northern Trains operates regular services from Gargrave railway station to and in the east; and are destinations to the west and north-west.

Local bus services are operated by Kirkby Lonsdale Coaches, Keighley Bus Company and North Yorkshire Council; destinations include Skipton, Settle, Malham, Barnoldswick and Preston.

The Leeds and Liverpool Canal passes through Gargrave.

Religion

Gargrave Church

St Andrew's Church, Gargrave was built in 1521 and restored in 1852, though there is thought to have been a church on the site long before this time. Robert of Newminster who was born in the parish in about 1100 was an early rector.

Gargrave was the centre of an ancient parish, which also included the townships of Bank Newton, Coniston Cold, Eshton, and Flasby with Winterburn. Henry de Percy, 1st Baron Percy of Alnwick, granted the advowson of Gargrave Church and its chapels of ease to Sawley Abbey, before his death in 1314.

Former Chancellor of the Exchequer Iain Macleod is buried in the south-east corner of the churchyard.

Leisure

Stepping stones at Gargrave

Gargrave is a popular destination for hikers and cyclists; it is on the edge of the Yorkshire Dales National Park and the Pennine Way National Trail passes through the village.

It has a village hall that hosts art exhibitions, tea dances, snooker, lectures, indoor bowls and pantomimes.

Sport

Gargrave AFC, the village football club, had an A and a B team playing in the Premier Division and Division 1 of the Craven League until 2016, when they withdrew from the league.

The cricket club has first and second team playing in the Craven and District Cricket League.

There is also a snooker club and a bowling club in the village, as well as the Craven Lawn Tennis Club.

Since the turn of the century, there has been a golf society run from the Masons Arms public house in the village.

Notable people

  • St Robert of Newminster (c.1100–1159), priest and abbot, was born in Gargrave.
  • Adam Osgodby (died 1316), English lawyer and parson of Gargrave.
  • Robert Shute (died April 1590), English judge and politician, was born in Gargrave.
  • Robert Story (1795–1860), known as "the Craven Poet", lived in Gargrave.
  • The Rt Hon Iain Macleod (1913–1970), British politician and government minister, is buried in Gargrave churchyard.
  • The Rt Rev'd Ian Harland (1932–2008), former Bishop of Lancaster and Carlisle, retired to Gargrave in 2000.
  • Julian Sands, actor, spent his childhood in Gargrave.

References

References

  1. link. (13 June 2011 Retrieved 18 September 2009.)
  2. "Gargrave Parish".
  3. "History of Gargrave, in Craven and West Riding".
  4. Copley, Gordon J.. (1968). "English place names and their origins". Kelley.
  5. Morris, R. W.. (1982). "Yorkshire through place names". David and Charles.
  6. (1910). "Publications Of The Thorseby Society". The Society.
  7. (1891). "Handbook for Tourists in Yorkshire and Complete History of the Country, Volume 2". R Jackson.
  8. (1999). "Beiträge Zur Namenforschung". C Winter.
  9. {{National Heritage List for England
  10. (1822). "History, Directory & Gazeteer, of the County of York: Vol. I. – West Riding".
  11. {{NHLE
  12. {{NHLE
  13. "Keighley and Craven CAMRA Pub Of The Season". Keighley and Craven CAMRA.
  14. "Gargrave and Malhamdale 2011 Census Ward".
  15. . ["The North Yorkshire (Structural Changes) Order 2022"](https://www.legislation.gov.uk/ukdsi/2022/9780348231380). *legislation.gov.uk*.
  16. Mason, Viv. (17 November 2006). "End of the road for A65 bypass". Craven Herald.
  17. (2 June 2024). "Timetables and engineering information for travel with Northern". Northern Railway.
  18. (2024). "Gargrave Bus Services". Bus Times.
  19. {{NHLE
  20. "The Church Building". St Andrew's Church Gargrave.
  21. "Gargrave AP/CP through time". GB Historical GIS / University of Portsmouth.
  22. McNulty, Joseph. (2013). "The Chartulary of the Cistercian Abbey of St Mary of Sallay in Craven". Cambridge University Press.
  23. (3 August 2016). "Team withdrawn......". Gargrave AFC.
  24. "Gargrave CC".
  25. "Craven Lawn Tennis Club".
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