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Upleatham

Village in North Yorkshire, England


Summary

Village in North Yorkshire, England

FieldValue
countryEngland
regionNorth East England
static_image_nameUpleathamChurch(HughMortimer)Dec2003.jpg
static_image_width
static_image_alt
static_image_captionThe very small church at Upleatham
area_total_sq_mi
population
population_ref
population_density
<!-- to convert /sq-km to /sq-mi, use {{pop density km2 to mi2(/sq-km value here)precision1abbr=yes}}. --
coordinates
post_town
postcode_area
postcode_district
dial_code
constituency_westminster
constituency_westminster1
civil_parishGuisborough
civil_parish1
civil_parish2
unitary_englandRedcar and Cleveland
lieutenancy_englandNorth Yorkshire

Upleatham is a village in the civil parish of Guisborough, in the unitary authority area of Redcar and Cleveland and the ceremonial county of North Yorkshire, England. The village was mentioned in the Domesday Book and the name derives from Old English and Old Norse as Upper Slope, in that it was further up the hill than Kirkleatham.

On 1 April 1974 the parish was abolished and merged with Guisborough.

An ironstone seam that was 13 ft thick was worked beneath the village which meant that some dwellings were lost to subsidence. The ironstone mine was constructed in 1861 and operated until 1924 with reserves of ironstone being estimated at a little over 36,000,000 tonne. The landowner of the time, the Earl of Zetland, allowed the mining company to extract the ironstone from underneath the village provided that the area around the church was left undisturbed. This is why the conservation area in the village is just a small selection of buildings clustered around the church.

It has a small grade II listed church, believed by some to be the smallest in England, although Bremilham Church in Wiltshire is actually slightly smaller. The village is located near New Marske, between Saltburn and Guisborough; there are a few rows of houses which are adjacent to Errington Woods.

Demographics

Main article: Demographics of Tees Valley

The arrival of the ironstone mine increased the population of the village from 204 in 1841 to 1,007 in 1861. Before it was abolished, the parish had declined to a population of 121 in 1951.

References

References

  1. Census, 2001
  2. "Upleatham {{!}} Domesday Book".
  3. (1960). "The concise Oxford dictionary of English place-names". Oxford University Press.
  4. "Cleveland Registration District". UKBMD.
  5. "History of Upleatham, in Redcar and Cleveland and North Riding {{!}} Map and description".
  6. "Durham Mining Museum - Upleatham (Ironstone)".
  7. (2011). "Upleatham Conservation Area Appraisal".
  8. {{National Heritage List for England
  9. "The old church of St Andrew, Upleatham". cumbrianchurches.blogspot.co.uk.
  10. "Upleatham Church (almost) the smallest in Britain.". Hidden Teesside.
  11. "Population statistics Upleatham Ch/CP through time". [[A Vision of Britain through Time]].
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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