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Cridling Stubbs

Civil parishes in North YorkshireNorth Yorkshire geography stubsSelby DistrictUse British English from March 2020Villages in North Yorkshire
Cridling Stubbs Community Centre geograph.org.uk 225087
Cridling Stubbs Community Centre geograph.org.uk 225087

Cridling Stubbs is a village and a civil parish in the Selby district, in the English county of North Yorkshire. It is near the town of Knottingley. Its population in 2011 was 152.The village was historically part of the West Riding of Yorkshire until 1974.A Romano-British hoard of 3,330 coins in a jar (the Cridling Stubbs Hoard) dating to the 4th century AD was found near the village in 1967.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Cridling Stubbs (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Cridling Stubbs
Cobcroft Lane,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 53.6872 ° E -1.2155 °
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Address

Cobcroft Lane

Cobcroft Lane
WF11 0AZ
England, United Kingdom
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Cridling Stubbs Community Centre geograph.org.uk 225087
Cridling Stubbs Community Centre geograph.org.uk 225087
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Nearby Places

Mary Towneley Loop
Mary Towneley Loop

The Mary Towneley Loop is a 47-mile (76 km) circular route that forms part of the Pennine Bridleway National Trail, along the borders of Lancashire and Yorkshire. The loop was opened in 2002, the first section of the Pennine Bridleway.It is named in memory of Mary, Lady Towneley, who drew attention to the poor state of England's bridleways and the need for a long-distance route for horse-riders by riding with two friends in September 1986 from Hexham in Northumberland to Ashbourne in Derbyshire. She died in 2001. The route joins the main Pennine Bridleway at two points, one near the village of Summit between Littleborough and Todmorden, and one just east of Worsthorne. Heading west from Summit the Loop climbs to Top of Leach at 474 metres (1,555 ft). The trail then passes through the town of Waterfoot in the Rossendale Valley and follows new tracks via Lumb before entering the Cliviger Gorge and then climbing up to the Long Causeway. It then heads north to rejoin the main Pennine Bridleway just east of Worsthorne. The Loop then follows the main route to enter West Yorkshire at Widdop, crosses Heptonstall Moor and drops down to cross the Calder Valley just west of the town of Hebden Bridge. The trail passes the villages of Mankinholes and Bottomley to return to Summit. An annual relay race, organized by Rossendale Harriers, took place in late January or early February until 2011. Teams consisting of five pairs of runners race over five relay legs completed the entire 47 miles and 6,400 feet of ascent of the loop, clockwise from Fearns Sports College in Stacksteads. The last race in 2011 took place on 30 January and hosted 109 teams, 1,090 individual runners from clubs across the north of England, and was won by Salford Harriers.

Stapleton Park
Stapleton Park

Stapleton Park is a country estate in Stapleton, a village near Selby in North Yorkshire, in England. The manor of Stapleton was recorded in the Domesday Book and passed through numerous owners before Edward Lascelles purchased it in 1762. He commissioned John Carr to design a new house, and Richard Woods to lay out a park and gardens. In 1782, Capability Brown was commissioned to undertake further design work in the park, followed in 1783 and 1784 by Thomas White; it is unknown how much influence either had on the landscape. The house was partly dismantled in 1921. In 1937, the West Riding Mental Hospital Board purchased the estate, with the intention of converting the house into housing for patients, but finding it unsuitable, it instead demolished the house. It sold the estate in 1958, and much of the estate was converted into farmland, with some areas of woodland retained. The former coach house and stables, built around the same time as the house, survives. The building is grade II* listed. It is constructed of magnesian limestone on a plinth, with a hipped stone slate roof. It forms an almost square plan with four ranges around a courtyard. The main north range has five bays, the middle three bays projecting, with two storeys and a pediment, and the outer bays have one storey. In the centre is a round-arched coach entrance with a moulded surround. On the outer bays are stable doors with fanlights and voussoir arches, and the windows are sashes with voussoir arches. There is a continuous impost band, and a moulded cornice. On the roof is an ornamental cupola, with a clock, an arcaded top, and a domed roof with a dated weathervane. The other ranges have a single storey, the side ranges have seven bays, and the south range, which is open, has three bays.