Recent articles

  • VE-Day80 8 - 10 May 2025

    Our Memorial Hall was built to honour the fallen in two world wars and give thanks to those who returned. It is appropriate therefore that we play our full part in the national celebrations and village activities are planned for May 8th VE-Day and Saturday May 10th 2025
  • Jane Ridsdale

    JANE RIDSDALEAged 33 years, born at Hampsthwaite, near Harrogate, Yorkshire, her height is 31 ½ inches.She is remarkably chearfull & enjoys very good health.Published July 1st 1807 by Jane Ridstale, at Harrogate where purchasers of this Print will have the opportunity of seeing and conversing with her
  • The Execution of Hannah Whitley

    Arsenic Poisoning in Hampsthwaite - The Execution of Hannah Whitley In 1789, Hannah Whitley of Hampsthwaite used a pie as the delivery medium for a fatal dose of arsenic, with the poison concentrated in the crust. She claimed She had been coerced into the act of poisoning by her employer, a local linen weaver named Horseman, who was involved in an on-going feud with the intended victim.
  • Joshua Tetley

    Joshua Tetley was the founder of Tetley’s Brewery in Leeds, and he retired with his wife Hannah to Hollins Hall on the outskirts of Hampsthwaite (Hollins Hall Retirement Village).
  • Blind Peter Barker

    Remembering Hampsthwaite’s Blind Joiner - an article by Shaun WilsonLike the market town of Knaresborough, who had ‘Blind Jack’ – John Metcalf, the road builder of Yorkshire in the eighteenth century, the small rural village of Hampsthwaite had it’s blind hero also, almost a century later – Peter Barker who became known as ‘The Blind Joiner of Hampsthwaite.’ Though there are some similarities between John Metcalf and Peter Barker’s lives, these are purely co-incidental and each fulfilled a life, character and career in their own right.
  • Hampsthwaite Open Gardens

     Hampsthwaite Open Gardens - Sat 29th June 12.30am - 5.00pm - Entry £5.00 (accompanied under 15's FREE) Tickets on the day from Hampsthwaite Memorial Hall Plant sales - many named varieties of plants Delicious homemade refreshments Afternoon tea and cakes served from 12.30pm at the Memorial Hall
  • Scrubbers and Stones

    SCRUBBERS & STONES - Sat 29th June 10.30am - 2.30pm - Entry FREE! Explore the Memorials at St Thomas a'Becket Memorials Treasure Trail - for children if all ages Self-Service / Self-Checkout BBQ from 12 noon (inc. veg option) Food £2, Drink £1, Donations? - yes please! Hot & Cold Drinks Laptop & Screen to show Mapping Hampsthwaite’s Past Use a Bucket & Brush to help reveal Inscriptions on the older memorials . . . or just Sit & Enjoy CORPUS CHRISTI BRASS BAND . . . from 11.30am . . . followed by Afternoon Tea & Cakes at the Memorial Hall!
  • Genealogy Websites

    Free genealogy websites will help you start your family history research at no cost as listed by the 'Who Do You Think You Are' magazine.
  • Kitchen Refurbishment

    Memorial Hall kitchen is now completely, and expertly, refurbished by Neil,Batty Builders Ltd as a result of a grant awarded by the National Lottery's 'Reaching Communities' fund.See also the equivalent
  • Amy Woodforde-Finden

    A highly successful composer of the late Victorian and Edwardian eras, Amy Woodforde-Finden, together with her husband and step-son, is laid to rest in the churchyard of St Thomas à Becket Parish Church. Inside the church there is an impressive marble monument of her, created by the renowned sculptor George Edward  Wade. It was unveiled in 1923 and a few years later, Finden Gardens in Hampsthwaite was named in her honour.[Click on title or image to link to articles]
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Clarkson

Clarkson Name Meaning
English (Lancashire and Yorkshire): patronymic from Clark.
Source:
Dictionary of American Family Names 2nd edition, 2022
Similar surnames:
ClarkstonLarsonClarkinClaysonMarksonGladsonLampson
From:
https://www.ancestry.co.uk/learn/facts

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Barker

Barker Name Meaning
English: occupational name for a tanner of leather from Middle English barkere ‘tanner’ tree bark having been used as the tanning agent. English: occupational name for a shepherd from Middle English berker bercher (Old French berchier bercher berkier berker Late Latin berbicarius from berbex ‘ram’ genitive berbicis). With the change of -ar- to -er- in Middle English this became indistinguishable from the preceding name (see 1 above). Americanized form of German Berger or Barger.
Source:
Dictionary of American Family Names 2nd edition, 2022
Similar surnames:
MarkerBarberBankerBakerHarkerBackerParkerKarnerWalker
From: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/learn/facts
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Dixon

Dixon Name Meaning
English: variant of Dickson a patronymic from the personal name Dick .
Dickson Name Meaning
Scottish and northern English: patronymic from the Middle English personal name Dick + son.
Source:
Dictionary of American Family Names 2nd edition, 2022
Similar surnames:
WicksonDickinsonRicksonHicksonNicksonJacksonDicks
From: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/learn/facts

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Ellison

Ellison Name Meaning
English: from the Middle English personal name Ellis (Old Testament Elijah) + -son. In the US this surname (in any of the three possible senses; see also 2 and 3 below) is also established among African Americans. English: from the Middle English Old French female personal name Elissent Elisant ancient Germanic Elisind. Scottish: sometimes a post-medieval variant of Allison which is mainly concentrated in northern England and southwestern Scotland. There is a similar Scottish variation between Alison and Elison as female personal names. Americanized form of some original Jewish (Ashkenazic) surname (most likely based on Yiddish form of the Biblical personal name Elijah).
Source:
Dictionary of American Family Names 2nd edition, 2022
Similar surnames:
AllisonEllistonElisonJellisonEllicksonKellisonElkin
From:
https://www.ancestry.co.uk/learn/facts

 
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Kay

Kay Name Meaning
English: nickname from northern Middle English ka kae kay ‘jackdaw’ from Old Norse ká or Old English cā. See also Daw . English: nickname from Middle English cai kay kei ‘left-handed clumsy’. English: occasionally perhaps an occupational name from Middle English kai(e) kei(e) ‘key’ applied to a maker of keys (compare Kear ) or alluding to the office of keeper or bearer of keys but clear evidence for this is wanting. English: topographic name for someone living or working on or near a quay Middle English kay(e) key(e) keay Old French kay cay. English: from a Middle English personal name which figures in Arthurian legend. It is found in Old Welsh as Cai Middle Welsh Kei and is ultimately from the Latin personal name Gaius. Scottish Irish and Manx: shortened Anglicized form of Gaelic McKay .9: Shortened form of any of various names beginning with the letter K-.7: German Danish and Dutch: from the personal name Kay which is of uncertain origin most likely as a variant of Key a pet form of personal names like Gerard Gerhardt and Gerrit (see Gerrits ). This surname is also found in France (Alsace and Lorraine). Compare Kai .8: Dutch and North German: topographic name for someone living by a quayside from Dutch kaai ‘quay’ German Kai (which was borrowed from the Dutch).10: Chinese: variant Romanization of the surnames 紀 (see Ji ) and 祁 (see Qi ).1 Chinese: possibly from Cantonese form of some Chinese names 奇 (meaning ‘special’) 琦 (meaning ‘outstanding’) or 基 (meaning ‘base’) which were monosyllabic personal names or part of disyllabic personal names of some early Chinese immigrants in the US.
Source:
Dictionary of American Family Names 2nd edition, 2022

 
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Newall

Newall Name Meaning
Variant of Newhall or Newell .
Newhall Name Meaning
English: habitational name from Newhall in Northwich or Newhall near Nantwich (both in Cheshire) New Hall in Lancashire Newhall in Bradford (Yorkshire) Newhall in Staffordshire or from any of numerous other places in England with the common name Newhall or New Hall. The placenames derive from Middle English neue ‘new’ + halle ‘large residence hall’ (Old English nīwe hall).
Source:
The Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland, 2016
Dictionary of American Family Names 2nd edition, 2022
Similar surnames:
NewhallNewellNeallNewillSewallWallEwaldJewellNeal
From:
https://www.ancestry.co.uk/learn/facts

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Parker

Parker Name Meaning
English: occupational name from Middle English parker ‘park-keeper’ (Old French parquier parchier) an officer employed to look after deer and other game in a hunting park (see Park ). This surname is also very common among African Americans. It has also been recorded since medieval times in Ireland. Americanized form of French Paquet 2 or Americanized form of one or more similar (like-sounding) Jewish names.
Source:
Dictionary of American Family Names 2nd edition, 2022
Similar surnames:
MarkerPackerHarkerBarkerParlerBarberPaskerParkeHawker
F
rom: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/learn/facts
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Allen

Allen Name Meaning
English and Scottish: from the Middle English Old French personal name Alain Alein (Old Breton Alan) from a Celtic personal name of great antiquity and obscurity. In England the personal name is now usually spelled Alan the surname Allen; in Scotland the surname is more often Allan. From 1139 it was common in Scotland where the surname also derives from Gaelic Ailéne Ailín from ail ‘rock’. The present-day frequency of the surname Allen in England and Ireland is partly accounted for by the popularity of the personal name among Breton followers of William the Conqueror by whom it was imported first to Britain and then to Ireland. Saint Alan(us) was a 5th-century bishop of Quimper who was a cult figure in medieval Brittany. Another Saint Al(l)an was a Cornish or Breton saint of the 6th century to whom a church in Cornwall is dedicated. English: occasionally perhaps from the rare Middle English femaje personal name Aline (Old French Adaline Aaline) a pet form of ancient Germanic names in Adal- especially Adalheidis (see Allis ). French: variant of Allain a cognate of 1 above and in North America (also) an altered form of this.
Source:
Dictionary of American Family Names 2nd edition, 2022
Similar surnames:
AllanEllenAlmenAllynAldenAllmanAlleyKallenArlenF
From: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/learn/facts

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Annakin

Annakin Name Meaning
From the Middle English female personal name *Annikin a plausible but unrecorded pet form of Anis (compare Agnes Annis ).perhaps a variant of Hankin with loss of initial H- and insertion of the link vowel -i- or -a-.
Source:
The Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland, 2016
Similar surnames:
AnnanAnninHannafinHankinMakinMannanAnaniaAnnisAnsari
From: 
https://www.ancestry.co.uk/learn/facts

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Wright

Wright Name Meaning
English and Scottish: occupational name for a craftsman or maker of machinery mostly in wood of any of a wide range of kinds from Middle English and Older Scots wriht wright wricht writh write (Old English wyrhta wryhta) ‘craftsman’ especially ‘carpenter joiner’. The term is found in various combinations (for example Cartwright and Wainwright ) but when used in isolation it often referred to a builder of windmills or watermills. This surname is also very common among African Americans.
Source
Dictionary of American Family Names 2nd edition, 2022
Similar surnames:
BrightKnightWightSlightLightArkwrightHighUprightWicht
From:
https://www.ancestry.co.uk/learn/facts

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