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Tunstall, East Riding of Yorkshire

Village in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England

Tunstall, East Riding of Yorkshire

Village in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
static_image_nameAll Saints Parish Church, Tunstall - geograph.org.uk - 45860.jpg
static_image_captionTunstall Village : All Saints' Church, Manor Farm, and Manor Farm barn outbuilding
coordinates
official_nameTunstall
civil_parishRoos
unitary_englandEast Riding of Yorkshire
regionYorkshire and the Humber
lieutenancy_englandEast Riding of Yorkshire
constituency_westminsterBeverley and Holderness
post_townHULL
postcode_districtHU12
postcode_areaHU
dial_code01964
os_grid_referenceTA305319
london_distance_mi155
london_directionS

Tunstall is a village in the civil parish of Roos, in Holderness, in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England, close to the North Sea coast. It is situated approximately 3 mi north-west of the town of Withernsea, and less than 0.6 mi from the North Sea coast, at a height of 10 to above sea level, and close to the Prime Meridian at its northernmost point on land anywhere in the world.

Geography

Cliffs and beach at Tunstall beach

The coast at Tunstall is eroding at an average rate of 1.1 to a year.

To the south-east of Tunstall is a 126 acre, 550 pitch caravan holiday park, Sand le Mere Holiday Village.

History

The name Tunstall derives from the Old English tūnstall meaning 'farmstead'.

Tunstall was recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as "Tunestal", within the manor of Withernsea. The church of All Saints was originally of Norman construction, with many later alterations in the 13th and 14th centuries, primarily of beach cobble with stone dressings; a tower was added in the 15th century.

| use_new_UK-LEG = | UK-LEG_title = A number of buildings in the village date to the early 18th century, including the cobble-built Town Farmhouse, Manor Farmhouse and nearby barn. The brick-built Hall Farmhouse was constructed in the later 18th century,There is a barn to the rear of a bus shelter, which is 17th century or early 18th in date.

An inclosure act for the land around the village was passed in 1777, the Tunstall in Holderness Inclosure Act 1777 (17 Geo. 3. c. 30 Pr.). The Kings Arms public house dates back to at least the 1850s.

In 1823 inhabitants in the village numbered 163. Occupations included eight farmers, two shopkeepers, a tailor, a corn factor, and the landlady of the Cock public house. A carrier operated between the village and Hull on Tuesdays. Tunstall was close to the coastal Sand le Mar, an area frequented by neighbouring village inhabitants collecting sand and pebbles for the repair of roads.

During the anti-invasion preparations of the Second World War a number of fortifications were constructed near Tunstall, including: a minefield north of the village, a weapons pit, several coastal pillboxes,

  • and tank traps.

After the end of the Second World War, one of the pillbox structures was re-used as a nuclear explosion monitoring post (Royal Observer Corps Monitoring Post) during the Cold War period.

In 2016, a 'Golf-Ball' style weather station was installed near the village to monitor weather conditions around the Westermost Rough Wind Farm. The inhabitants of Tunstall would like to see its removal as they believe its radar has been the cause of a number of rare cancers in the villagers. A report by East Riding County Council determined the radar extended a 60° beam outwards across the sea and the nearest homes were outside the field of this beam. Ørsted, the Westermost Rough wind farm operating company, have stated that the radar is within international guidelines and applied to extend the life of the station to 2019.

Greenwich meridian

The Trig Point in 2002, since destroyed

At a point on Tunstall beach, near Sand-le-Mere, the Greenwich Meridian makes its first landfall at 0° longitude as it runs from the North Pole to the South Pole through the Royal Greenwich Observatory, London separating the Western hemisphere from the Eastern hemisphere.

The Greenwich meridian was not marked at the site until 1999, when it was decided to mark it in deference to the upcoming new millennium. A trig point that was about to fall into the sea further along the coast was rescued and repurposed as a meridian marker at Tunstall. It has never been formally replaced. As of February 2021, the meridian was marked by a traffic cone lined up with a breeze block on the beach.

To coincide with the 125th anniversary of the Greenwich Meridian in 2009, a Greenwich Meridian Trail walking route was inaugurated by amateur walkers Hilda and Graham Heap which links the point at which the meridian makes landfall at Tunstall with the point at which it exits mainland Britain at the Meridian Monument in Peacehaven, East Sussex.

Governance

Tunstall forms part of the civil parish of Roos and is represented locally by Roos Parish Council while at county level is in the South East Holderness ward of the East Riding of Yorkshire Council. At a parliamentary level it is part of the Beverley and Holderness constituency which is currently represented (as of 2024) by Graham Stuart of the Conservative Party.

In 1931 the parish had a population of 102. On 1 April 1935 the parish was abolished and merged with Roos.

References

Sources

References

  1. (2010). "I never knew that about Yorkshire". Ebury.
  2. "Erosion & Flooding in the Parish of Roos". www.hull.ac.uk.
  3. (15 October 2010). "We'll tow our caravan park to the top!: New owners have plans for seaside site". This is Hull and East Riding.
  4. link. "About Sand le Mere Holiday Village, East Yorkshire". www.sand-le-mere.co.uk
  5. "Tunstall". The Institute for Name-Studies.
  6. {{OpenDomesday
  7. {{NHLE
  8. (17 March 1777). "Tunstall Enclosure Bill". Journals of the House of Lords.
  9. {{cite PastScape
  10. Baines, Edward. (2013). "History, Directory & Gazetteer of the County of York".
  11. Stacey, Andrew. "Holderness : Tunstall".
  12. {{cite PastScape
  13. (12 December 2017). "Village fears weather station causes cancer". The Yorkshire Post.
  14. "East Yorkshire coastal erosion: Tunstall / Sand le Mere".
  15. Wood, Alexandra. (1 July 2020). "The spot near Withernsea where you can straddle two hemispheres".
  16. Grubb, Penny. (16 September 2021). "Why Is One End Of The Meridian Trail A Poor Relation To The Other?".
  17. Dolan, Graham. "The Greenwich Meridian : Tunstal". www.thegreenwichmeridian.org.
  18. "Parish Description". Roos Parish Council.
  19. (2006). "Gazetteer — A–Z of Towns Villages and Hamlets". East Riding of Yorkshire Council.
  20. "Population statistics Tunstall AP/CP through time". [[A Vision of Britain through Time]].
  21. "Relationships and changes Tunstall AP/CP through time". A Vision of Britain through Time.
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