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Loftus, North Yorkshire
Town and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England
Town and civil parish in North Yorkshire, England
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| type | Town |
| official_name | Loftus |
| static_image_name | Village Post Office - Loftus - geograph.org.uk - 1990948.jpg |
| static_image_caption | Loftus Town Hall (on the right) and Parish Church (on the left) |
| coordinates | |
| population | 7,988 |
| population_ref | (2011 census) |
| unitary_england | Redcar and Cleveland |
| lieutenancy_england | North Yorkshire |
| region | North East England |
| country | England |
| constituency_westminster | Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland |
| post_town | SALTBURN-BY-THE-SEA |
| postcode_district | TS13 |
| postcode_area | TS |
| dial_code | 01287 |
| os_grid_reference | NZ716185 |
| london_distance_mi | 210 |
| london_direction | S |
| website |
Loftus is a market town and civil parish in the Redcar and Cleveland borough of North Yorkshire, England. The town is located north of the North York Moors and sits between Whitby and Skelton-in-Cleveland. The parish includes the villages of Carlin How, Easington, Liverton, Liverton Mines and Skinningrove. It is near Brotton and Saltburn.
The town was formerly known as Lofthouse.
Demographics
Main article: Demographics of Tees Valley
The town's built-up area, including Liverton Mines, had a population of 4,824 in the 2011 census, with the entire town's parish population being 7,988.
History
The Loftus area has been inhabited since at least the 7th century. A manor in the area was owned by Siward, Earl of Northumbria, who died in 1055. Loftus is recorded as "Lcotvsv" in the Domesday Book, from Laghthus meaning low houses.
Anglo-Saxon royal burial site
Main article: Street House Anglo-Saxon cemetery
The only known Anglo-Saxon royal burial site in north-east England is near Loftus.
Artefacts were discovered there from excavations which took place between 2005 and 2007. Finds include pieces associated with a rare bed burial in which a decorated female body is laid out on a decorated wooden bed accompanied by fine gold jewellery. The finds include a gold pendant, which would have belonged to a princess. as well as glass beads, pottery, iron knives, belt buckles and other objects. The finds, which date back nearly 1400 years were discovered by members of the Teesside Archeological Society, led by Dr Steve Sherlock, in a 109-grave site at Street House, Loftus. They are presently on show at the Kirkleatham Old Hall Museum.
Oddfellows Hall
The Oddfellows Hall, in Loftus, was built in 1874, as the offices and meeting place of the local Oddfellows society. Oddfellows were friendly or mutual societies, set up and organised by people from different guilds representing various trades. Other societies existed for single trades, but when there were not enough people from one trade, especially in smaller towns, societies would be formed from an "odd" mixture of people, so giving the name "Oddfellows". The Loftus Oddfellows would raise money for their members. The Oddfellows Hall was unused from the early 1990s. Tees Valley Housing Association has now taken over ownership of the building and converted it from a large meeting hall into eight self-contained flats.
Climate
Loftus has an oceanic climate (Köppen: Cfb).
Religion and education

The two main churches in the town are St Leonard's (Church of England), and St Joseph and St Cuthbert (Roman Catholic). The former United Reformed Church building is now an arts studio and venue.
There are three primary schools: St.Joseph's RCVA Primary School, Handale Primary School, and Hummersea.
Transport

The A174 is the town’s main road. Loftus railway station opened in 1875, and closed to passengers in 1960. The line still operates through the station site, with freight services for Boulby Mine, and occasional passenger 'specials' for rail enthusiasts. The nearest open station is at Saltburn.
Community and culture
Loftus parish includes the settlements of Boulby, Carlin How, Cowbar (in Staithes), Easington, Handale, Liverton Mines, Liverton, Loftus, Scaling and Skinningrove.
Loftus' facilities include the Loftus Swimming Baths, Loftus Youth Club, Loftus Army Cadets, Scouts, Cubs etc. The town also has its own dance studio - Triple Dee Dance Studio - which offers dance classes for children age two upwards. The studio started inside the town hall and later the company moved into their own studio on Zetland Road. It also has a fire station and part-time police station.
Loftus Town Hall was commissioned by Lawrence Dundas, 3rd Earl of Zetland, erected by a Thomas Dickinson of Saltburn, and was first opened in 1879.
Tees Valley Leisure Limited, which was established in 1999 as an industrial and provident society, provides a variety of leisure services on behalf of Redcar & Cleveland Borough Council operating for the benefit of the community as a non-profit distributing organisation. They took over the running of Loftus Leisure Centre, which had been opened in 1981 to provide the community with swimming facilities. The centre was improved with the addition of a sauna suite in 1985 and a fitness suite in 1998.
Sport
thumb|Row of houses in Loftus Loftus Cricket & Athletic Club is situated at the eastern end of Loftus on Whitby Road. The club have two senior teams: a Saturday 1st XI that compete in the Langbaurgh Cricket League and a Midweek Senior XI in the Esk Valley Evening League.
Notable people
Among notable people who were born in or lived in Loftus were geologist Lewis Hunton (1814–1838), actress Faye Marsay born in 1986 and table tennis player Paul Drinkhall born in 1990.
References
References
- "Loftus". Genuki.
- "Loftus Built-up area".
- "Loftus Parish".
- Page, William. (1923). "'Parishes: Loftus', in A History of the County of York North Riding". British History Online.
- (17 October 2012). "Loftus History". Communigate.
- (20 November 2007). "Dramatic ancient cemetery found". BBC News.
- (July 2011). "This is Redcar and Cleveland".
- (9 May 2011). "Kirkleatham Anglo Saxon Princess Treasure (Interview with Dr. Steve Sherlock)". YouTube: NorthNewsTV.
- "International demand for glimpse of Saxon princess treasure". Redcar and Cleveland News.
- (5 November 2010). "Saxon Princess Exhibition". Kirkleatham Museum.
- (13 January 2011). "Kirkleatham Museum – Royal Anglo Saxon finds". YouTube.
- "The Oddfellows Hall, Loftus". Redcar and Cleveland website.
- "Loftus (SAMOS) (Redcar and Cleveland) UK climate averages". Met Office.
- "Overview". Loftus Arts.
- "Redcar and Cleveland Families Guide: St Joseph's Primary School".
- "Redcar and Cleveland Families Guide: Handale Primary School".
- (26 September 2006). "Loftus Town Council". Redcar and Cleveland website.
- (4 July 2008). ["Cleveland Army Cadets]"](http://www.clevelandacf.co.uk).
- {{NHLE
- "Loftus – Tees Valley Business Advice".
- "Loftus CC website". Loftus Cricket Club.
- "Langbaurgh Cricket League". LCL.
- "Esk Valley Evening League".
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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