Sleights Village
Contents:
Local Amenities
Accommodation in Sleights
Local Sights
Community Groups
Heritage (History, Geology & Archaeology)
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The name Sleights means 'flat land near water'.
This must refer to an old location for Sleights, as presently
the majority of the village is located on hillsides on either
side of the River Esk. The houses in Sleights are more modern
than the houses in other villages in Eskdale, probably because
Sleights was still growing at quite a pace, even late into
the twentieth century.
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Local Amenities
Sleights boasts some fine public houses and
a hotel, it is quite close to Whitby making it an ideal place
for the visitor to stay if they wish to be between the town
of Whitby and the moors.
Sleights is a lovely village, amenities available include:
- public house
- public phone box
- post office
- post box
- public conveniences
- shops
- places of worship - English Martyrs Catholic Church and St John C of E
- garage
- village hall
- Sleights Station on the Middlesbrough to Whitby main line
The prefix of the Post Code for Sleights is YO22-5.
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Accommodation in Sleights
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Local Sights
Sleights is a picturesque village on the banks of the River Esk.
The river here is broader and more easier
flowing than further up in the dale. The bridge spanning the
Esk is a magnificent stone and steel structure that spans
not only the river, but also the Railway Station.
The road that the bridge supports heads south through the
village past the post office, butcher, general store, fish
& chip shop, Antiques shop, and a public house before it starts
climbing a steep gradient up on to the moor.
This hill is known as Blue Bank, and drivers of heavy vehicles
should be wary as many lorries have come to grief here. As
you head south along this road, look to the left and you will
see the dale known as Littlebeck. This is a very beautiful
little hamlet that has a custom every August of crowning a
local girl as the 'Rose Queen' and floating her down the river
on a raft.
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Community Groups
The following is are details of local none profit making Community Service Group or Registered Charitable Organisation, serving this community.
There are many community groups serving the area and it our intention to bring you details of their activities, if you are an organiser or member of a group or organisation and would like to see your details here, please contact us on enquiries@eskvalley.com
Whitby District/Esk valley youth club. Providing Youth Events and activities for the area, with past events including - Games and nonalcoholic cocktail bar in Sleights village hall, Gospel concert in Whitby, skating at Billingham Forum and Sailing. For details contact Whitby District youth worker. Gaynor.hunt@care4free.net
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Heritage
Research is currently being carried out to bring you further details of Sleights heritage
If you head north from Sleights you will
meet the main Whitby to Guisborough road (A171). At this point
there is a memorial to the first German aeroplane shot down
in World War Two. It was detected by the radar at RAF Danby
Beacon and shot down by Peter Townsend, who in later life
as Group Captain Peter Townsend had an ill fated affair with
the Queen's sister, Princess Margaret.
Sleights has two Churches, one Anglican and
one Roman Catholic. In times gone by it had a chapel about
one and a half miles upstream, which was was described as
far back as 1762 as a 'poor mean structure covered in thatch
situated in a damp place near the River Esk'. This Chapel
was the source of one of Whitby's oldest customs, the planting
of the Penny Hedge.
On the 16th of October 1159 three local men were hunting wild
boar and were chasing an animal through the woods. The Wild
Boar saw the Chapel and took refuge in it, not knowing that
it was the home of a hermit monk. The monk hid the boar in
one of his cells and refused to let the hunters in to kill
the animal. The hunters were so enraged that they beat the
monk severely with their boar staves.
The monk was so badly injured that he later died from his
injuries, but not before telling the tale to the Abbot of
Whitby and begging for the men not to be prosecuted for their
crime on condition that they and their successors paid a penance
for their sins. The penance was that on sunrise on the eve
of Ascension Day every year these men or their successors
should collect some short staves from Eskdaleside, the price
of which should not exceed one penny.
They should personally carry them to Whitby and arrive before
nine o'clock that same morning. At nine o' clock they had
to plant the staves in the mud in the harbour and weave a
small hedge that was strong enough to withstand three tides.
If the hedge failed before three tides had come and gone then
all the lands belonging to these three men or their successors
would be forfeited to the Abbott of Whitby or his successors.
There was a clause in the penance which said that if ever
the tide prevented the planting of the 'Penny hedge' then
the penance should cease. This ceremony was performed for
over eight hundred years without the hedge giving way
before three tides until in 1981 the site was covered by eight
feet of sea water and the descendants of the three men were
released from their penance.
The ceremony still carries on but if the hedge should fail
then the descendants lands are now safe !
Picture of the Penny Hedge ceremony
provided by the Whitby Literary & Philosophical Society,
to who we offer our thanks for their permission to use it.
If you have any knowledge or have information about local History, Folklore, Geology & Archaeology which you think would be of interest to other please contact us.
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