Goathland

Goathland is a village and civil parish in the Scarborough district of North Yorkshire, England. Historically part of the North Riding of Yorkshire, it is in the North York Moors national park due north of Pickering, off the A169 to Whitby. It has a station on the steam-operated North Yorkshire Moors Railway line.

Goathland

Goathland village
Goathland
Location within North Yorkshire
Population438 (2011 census)[1]
OS grid referenceNZ831012
Civil parish
District
  • Scarborough
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townWHITBY
Postcode districtYO22
PoliceNorth Yorkshire
FireNorth Yorkshire
AmbulanceYorkshire
UK Parliament

According to the 2011 UK census, Goathland parish had a population of 438,[1] an increase on the 2001 UK census figure of 407.[3]

Goathland village is 500 feet above sea level and has a history extending from Viking times. The name Goathland is probably a corruption of 'good land'.[4] Alternatively, it may come from 'Goda's land', Goda being an Old English personal name.[4] In 1109, King Henry I granted land to Osmund the Priest and the brethren of the hermitage of Goathland, then called Godelandia, for the soul of his mother Queen Matilda, who had died in 1083. This is recorded in a charter held at Whitby Abbey.[5] The village was a spa town in the 19th century. There are many hotels and guest houses in the village. The largest, the Mallyan Spout Hotel, is named after a nearby waterfall. There is a caravan site, reached by driving along the track which is the site of the older railway route, 1835 to 1860.

Much of the surrounding land is owned by the Duchy of Lancaster. The Duchy's tenants have a common right extending for hundreds of years to graze their black faced sheep on the village green and surrounding moorland.

Heartbeat connection

The village was the setting of the fictional village of Aidensfield in the Heartbeat television series set in the 1960s. Many landmarks from the series are recognisable, including the stores, garage/funeral directors, the public house and the railway station. The pub is called the Goathland Hotel, but in the series is the Aidensfield Arms. After filming interior shots in the hotel for some years, a replica of it was built in Yorkshire TV's Leeds studio.[6]

North Yorkshire Moors Railway

Goathland railway station is on the North Yorkshire Moors Railway. The railway is run by a charitable trust with some paid staff but is mostly operated by volunteers, running nearly all the year including Christmas. It carries more than 250,000 passengers a year and is the second-longest preserved line in Britain. It links Grosmont in the north with Pickering in the south, along the route of the Whitby - Pickering line built by George Stephenson in 1835 and upgraded in 1865. From 2007 some trains on the railway were timetabled to run to Whitby and in March 2014 work began in Whitby station to replace a platform and allow more North Yorkshire Moors Railway services to be timetabled Whitby - Pickering.

Goathland railway station was used as the location for Hogsmeade railway station in the Harry Potter films, and the line filmed for Harry's journey.

Appearance in literature

As well as serving as the location for the fictional village of Aidensfield, Goathland features in its own right as an important setting in Dan Chapman's 2014 dystopian, futuristic novel Closed Circuit. Forming a setting for the denouement of the novel, it is explained that the antagonist owns the entire village, and the nearby MoD site serves as a base for his operations.[7] Goathland also features in "Ice", a novel by Australian writer Louis Nowra (Allen & Unwin, 2008).

Malcolm Saville's children's novel Mystery Mine[8] is set in an area south-west of Whitby on the north-east Yorkshire moors close to and around a village called Goathland. The book contains two maps showing the layout of a partly fictional geography of the area in which the book is set but Goathland, Wheeldale Moor and the Roman Road referred to in the book correspond to the real locations in this area south of Eskdale.

gollark: Apparently a light nanosecond is equal to a foot, to a few decimal places.
gollark: "GIF" should be pronounced as "gife", similarly to "life".
gollark: That's either a metre or a millihertzsecond.
gollark: mHzs
gollark: You can spice up any unit by adding Hz^0 to it.

References

  1. UK Census (2011). "Local Area Report – Goathland Parish (1170217340)". Nomis. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 8 March 2018.
  2. http://www.goathland-pc.parishes-online.org.uk/
  3. "2001 Census: Key Statistics: Parish Headcounts: Area: Goathland CP (Parish)". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. Retrieved 7 July 2008.
  4. Hanks, Patrick; Hodges, Flavia; Mills, A. D.; Room, Adrian (2002). The Oxford Names Companion. Oxford: the University Press. p. 1132. ISBN 0198605617.
  5. No. 396, Early Yorkshire Charters, William Farrer ed., 1914
  6. "Heartbeat". The Goathland Hotel. Retrieved 3 December 2015.
  7. Chapman, D. (2014). Closed Circuit. UK: Concept Press. ISBN 978-1499191615.
  8. Saville, Malcolm. 1968. Mystery Mine. The Hamlyn Publishing Group Ltd
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