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Giggleswick

Village in North Yorkshire, England

Giggleswick

Summary

Village in North Yorkshire, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
official_nameGiggleswick
coordinates
population1,270
population_ref(2011 census)
unitary_englandNorth Yorkshire
lieutenancy_englandNorth Yorkshireregion = Yorkshire and the Humber
static_image_nameGiggleswick Village in snow.jpg
static_image_captionGiggleswick in snow
constituency_westminsterSkipton and Ripon
post_townSettle
postcode_districtBD24
postcode_areaBD
dial_code01729
os_grid_referenceSD809647
london_distance_mi205
london_directionsouth-east
St Alkelda

Giggleswick, a village and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England, lies on the B6480 road, less than 1 mi north-west of the town of Settle and divided from it by the River Ribble. It is the site of Giggleswick School.

Until 1974 it was part of the West Riding of Yorkshire. From 1974 to 2023 it was part of the district of Craven, it is now administered by the unitary North Yorkshire Council.

Toponymy

A Dictionary of British Place Names (2011) contains the entry:

:Giggleswick N. Yorks. Ghigeleswic 1086 (DB). "Dwelling or (dairy) farm of a man called Gikel or Gichel. OE or ME pers. name (probably a short form of the biblical name Judichael) + wīc."

Railway station

Main article: Giggleswick railway station

The village is served by Giggleswick railway station, which provides services to Leeds and to Lancaster and Morecambe. There are five trains a day in each direction, operated by Northern.

Close to the station and opposite the Craven Arms Hotel (formerly the Old Station Inn) is the Plague Stone. This has a shallow trough, which in times of plague was filled with vinegar to sterilize the coins that were left by townspeople as payment for food brought from surrounding farms. The stone was moved a short distance from its original site when the Settle bypass was built.

Church of St Alkelda

The parish church is dedicated to St Alkelda, an obscure Anglo-Saxon saint associated with the North Yorkshire town of Middleham. The building dates mostly from the 15th century, but carved stones discovered during the restoration of 1890–1892 showed that a building existed on the site before the Norman Conquest. It has been classed by English Heritage as a Grade I listed building. The restoration, carried out by the Lancaster architects Paley, Austin and Paley, included replacing the roof, removing the gallery, rebuilding the vestry, and reseating, replastering and reflooring the church.

Notable people

  • Richard Whiteley of Channel 4's Countdown was a pupil at Giggleswick School. In his will he left the school £500,000, which was used to build a new theatre named after him.
  • Russell Harty was an English teacher at the same time as Whiteley was a pupil.
  • The operatic soprano Sarah Fox was born in the village and attended Giggleswick School.
  • The Star Wars actor Anthony Daniels also attended Giggleswick School.
  • The film and stage actor Clarence Blakiston (1864–1943) was born in Giggleswick, as was Henry Maudsley, the pioneering British psychiatrist, at a farm outside Giggleswick in 1835.
  • The Victorian-era actor Sir John Hare was born in the town in 1844.
  • Professor Sir Nevill Francis Mott, who won the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1977, was born in Leeds and brought up in Giggleswick.
  • Television chef Susan Brookes is a former resident of the village, having resided there in the 1980s.

Tourist attractions

Giggleswick is notable amongst rock climbers for a limestone crag, retro-bolted with many sports routes during 2005 and 2006. The crag is opposite Settle Golf Club on the B6480, north of Giggleswick.

Cave Ha, hollowed out of the massive cliff of Great Scar limestone, is a large rock shelter. Together with Sewell's Cave, it has produced a large amount of archaeological material, including bones which are 5,600 years old.

In the media

An episode of the radio comedy The Shuttleworths was set in Giggleswick. Comedy writers Ray Galton and Alan Simpson used the town as their emblem of a travelling actor's date with obscurity in Hancock's Half Hour, "The Train Journey" episode, broadcast on 23 October 1959. Les Dawson did the same in 1975, in Dawson's Weekly. In 1989, the TV series Capstick's Law, focusing on a family law firm in the 1950s, used Russell Harty's old cottage as a venue. The TV series 24seven was filmed at Giggleswick School.

1927 eclipse

Among few observers of a 24-second solar eclipse in 1927 were members of the Astronomer Royal's expedition to Giggleswick.

References

References

  1. "Giggleswick Parish".
  2. "History of Giggleswick, in Craven and West Riding {{!}} Map and description".
  3. (2011). "A Dictionary of British Place-Names". Oxford University Press.
  4. (1960). "The concise Oxford dictionary of English place-names". Oxford University Press.
  5. (June 2024). "Settle Church, Giggleswick Vicars and Their Times".
  6. (1892). "Craven and the north west Yorkshire highlands". E Stock.
  7. (9 May 2008). "The Ancient Parish of Giggleswick". Halton and Co..
  8. {{NHLE
  9. (2012). "The Architecture of Sharpe, Paley and Austin". [[English Heritage]].
  10. (27 June 2005). "Richard Whiteley". The Guardian.
  11. (27 June 2008). "Star's £500,000 theatre boost". Bradford Telegraph and Argus.
  12. (27 May 2016). "Top soprano Sarah Fox helps give Craven a voice as part of new community initiative". Craven Herald.
  13. "Giggleswick".
  14. (2010). "The little book of Yorkshire". History Press.
  15. (1986-08-22). "Ready to sort out Perth gardeners' problems". The Perthshire Advertiser, etc..
  16. Hughes, T. McKenny. (1874). "Exploration of Cave Ha, Near Giggleswick, Settle, Yorkshire.". The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland.
  17. "The Caves of Giggleswick Scar – Dales Rocks".
  18. Oldfield, Stephen. "A Three Peaks Up and Under".
  19. "Mini-Break in Giggleswick, Series 1, The Shuttleworths – BBC Radio 4 Extra".
  20. (23 October 1959). "The Train Journey, Hancock's Half Hour".
  21. (2012). "On the slow train again". Arrow.
  22. "Dawson's Weekly".
  23. (11 August 1998). "Craven through the years". Bradford Telegraph and Argus.
  24. (1 March 2012). "From the archives". Craven Herald.
  25. (10 September 1927). "Wonders of the Great Eclipse". The Winnipeg Tribune.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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