Ramsdale Beck Explained

Ramsdale Beck
Name Etymology:Old English Garlic valley
Image Alt:A house with a large metal waterwheel projecting out on the left
Pushpin Map:North Yorkshire
Pushpin Map Alt:Relief map of North Yorkshire
Subdivision Type1:Village
Subdivision Name1:Fylingthorpe
Subdivision Type2:County
Subdivision Name2:North Yorkshire
Subdivision Type3:Country
Subdivision Name3:England
Source1 Location:Kirk Moor
Mouth Location:Boggle Hole

Ramsdale Beck is a small river that feeds directly into the North Sea between Robin Hood's Bay and Ravenscar on the North Yorkshire coast in England. The stream, which rises on Fylingdales Moor, has two waterfalls, and historically was used to power two corn mills. The beck flows through a small ravine known as Ramsdale Valley. There is another Ramsdale Beck in Scarborough which connects Scarborough Mere and Falsgrave to the sea.

Etymology

Ramsdale, which applies to the beck, the hamlet and the mill in the valley, was first recorded in 1210 as Ramesdale. The name shares similarities with Ramsey in Cambridgeshire and they have derived from the Old English hramse or ramese, meaning garlic.[1] Wild garlic, or ramson, is known to be prolific within the valley, even into the modern day. One of the derivations of the surname Ramsdale can be traced back to those who lived in the valley.[2] [3]

History and course

Ramsdale Beck begins on Kirk Moor as several streams, coming together just to the west of the A171 road as Kirk Moor Beck. It then heads due east through Leith Rigg, Ramsdale, then entering the North Sea at Boggle Hole as Mill Beck.[4] It drops from at source to just above sea level at Boggle Hole, which is about 1miles south of Robin Hood's Bay.[5] [6] [7]

The beck flows through a narrow ravine known as Ramsdale Valley, which is lined with woodland.[8] The bedrock underneath (and in places exposed by) the stream, is a mixture of grey limestone and ironstone deposits - the ironstone belonging to the Dogger formation known in the area.[9] The two types of rock near the surface have allowed the water to carve and erode away sections to provide the beck with two waterfalls; one at Ramsdale Mill and the other further upstream called Stevenson's Piece.[10]

The beck and the surrounding woods belonged to Whitby Abbey until the Dissolution, forming part of the great hunting ground known as Fyling Park (or Buck Park) which was used by royalty for hunting deer. The walls of the park and Demense Farm are visible on old maps.[11] The boggy nature of the narrow valley made the upkeep of the park difficult.[12] The source of the beck at Kirk Moor was also once the gathering point for fresh water for Robin Hood's Bay. Kirk Moor was historically known as Ramsdale Moor.[13]

There are five bridged crossings of the beck; (from west to east), the A171 road, Ramsdale Mill, Fyling Hall Road, the cinder track, and a footbridge at the mouth of the beck at Boggle Hole which carries the Cleveland Way.[10] [14]

Industry

The beck had two corn mills, one at Ramsdale hamlet (called Ramsdale Mill), and another at the mouth of the beck where it enters the North Sea (called Bay Mill), which is now the Boggle Hole Youth Hostel.[15] The old mill at Boggle Hole is of uncertain date being first recorded in 1666, but a sign indicates it was rebuilt in 1839.[16] [17] [18] The mill at Ramsdale hamlet was the property of Whitby Abbey (before the Dissolution) according to a 17th century document, and the mill part of the building was rebuilt between 1857 and 1859.[19] It is now a private dwelling with the 30feet waterwheel still in place.[20] [21] [22] Both mills were destroyed by extensive flooding on the beck in 1857.[23]

The redundant waterwheel at Ramsdale Mill was repaired into good working order in 1935 for the film Turn of the Tide, which was set in Robin Hood's Bay. In one scene, two of the main characters are shown attempting to catch migrating salmon in the beck.[24]

There is another Ramsdale Beck in the Borough of Scarborough (in Scarborough itself), which was the conduit from the Mere, to the sea via Falsgrave. Like its similarly named counterpart, it too was used for powering corn mills.[25] [26]

Flora and fauna

The beck has been noted for salmonoid migration and also for several sightings of otters.[27] [28] Salmon were known to travel upstream to a pool to spawn in the 1850s.[29] A naturalists examination of the area in 1933 noted large swathes of Tetrodontium brownianum on the sides of the beck.[30]

References

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Smith . A. H. . The Place Names of the North Riding of Yorkshire . 1979. 1928. 19714705. English Place Name Society. 117.
  2. Book: Reaney . Percy H. . Wilson . R. M. . A dictionary of English surnames . 1997 . 1958 . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 0198600925 . 372 . 3.
  3. Book: Hanks . Patrick . Hodges . Flavia . A dictionary of surnames . 1998 . 1988 . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 0192115928 . 442.
  4. Web site: Rivers quality survey 1993 . ea-lit.freshwaterlife.org. National Rivers Authority . 8 January 2023 . 61 . 1993.
  5. Web site: Kirk Moor, Scarborough . getoutside.ordnancesurvey.co.uk . 31 December 2022.
  6. Web site: Boggle Hole, Scarborough . getoutside.ordnancesurvey.co.uk . 31 December 2022.
  7. Book: Andrews . Robert . The rough guide to Britain . 2004 . Rough Guides . London . 1843533014 . 713 . 5.
  8. Web site: Ramsdale Beck, Scarborough . getoutside.ordnancesurvey.co.uk . 29 December 2022.
  9. Bate . R. H. . Middle Jurassic Ostracoda from the Grey Limestone Series, Yorkshire . Bulletin of the British Museum (Natural History). Geology . 1965 . 11 . 3 . 89 . British Museum . London . 0007-1471 . 1537337.
  10. North York Moors - Eastern area . OL27 . 2017. 1:25,000 . Explorer . Ordnance Survey . 978-0-319-24266-7 .
  11. Book: White . Andrew . A history of Whitby . 2019 . Philimore . Chichester . 978-0-7509-8987-9 . 77.
  12. Craven . Richard . Doran . Dr . Horngarth . Notes and Queries a Medium of Inter-Communication for Literary Men, Artists, Antiquaries, Genealogists, Etc . 19 February 1876 . 112 . 154 . London . 49760337.
  13. Book: Knox . Robert . Descriptions geological, topographical and antiquarian, in eastern Yorkshire, between the rivers Humber and Tees . 1855 . Knox . London . 155. 931190467.
  14. Book: Sampson . Ian . Cleveland Way . 2010 . Aurum . London . 9781845135201 . 118.
  15. Web site: YHA Boggle Hole . yha.org.uk . 29 December 2022.
  16. News: Just beachy . 8 January 2023 . The Northern Echo . 20 November 2012.
  17. Web site: National Trust Holdings on the North Yorkshire Coast . library.oxfordarchaeology.com . Oxford Archaeology North . 8 January 2023 . 32 . August 2007.
  18. Book: Pevsner . Nikolaus, Sir . Nikolaus Pevsner. Yorkshire, the North Riding . 2002 . 1966. Yale University Press . New Haven . 0300096658 . 308.
  19. Book: Page . William . The Victoria history of the county of York, North Riding . 1968 . Dawsons of Pall Mall for the University of London Institute of Historical Research . London . 0-7129-0310-0 . 535.
  20. Web site: Ramsdale Mill . www.heritagegateway.org.uk . 30 December 2022.
  21. News: Harness . Steven . Country walk at Fylingthorpe . 29 December 2022 . infoweb.newsbank.com . 18 March 2015. subscription.
  22. News: Wilkinson . George . Fylingthorpe . 30 December 2022 . York Press . 12 May 2007.
  23. Rutter . J. G. . Industrial archaeology in North East Yorkshire . Transactions of the Scarborough and District Archaeological Society . 1971 . 2 . 14 . 27 . Scarborough Archaeological and Historical Society . Scarborough . 1474-1229 . 2324885.
  24. Book: Earnshaw . Tony . Made in Yorkshire . 2008 . Guerilla . Isleworth . 978-0-9554943-1-4 . 25.
  25. News: Nostalgia: give us this day our daily bread . 1 January 2023 . The Scarborough News . 1 March 2016.
  26. Web site: Scarborough Maritime Heritage Centre History - 6 . www.scarboroughsmaritimeheritage.org.uk . 6 January 2023.
  27. Web site: River Basin Management Plan Humber River Basin District . assets.publishing.service.gov.uk . 29 December 2022 . 81 . 2009.
  28. Web site: Howes . Colin . Changes in the status and distribution of mammals of the order Carnivora in Yorkshire from 1600. County history of the fox, badger, otter, pine marten, stoat, weasel, polecat, American mink, wildcat and domestic cat . bradscholars.brad.ac.uk . 29 December 2022 . 10.
  29. Book: Knox . Robert . Hailstone . Edward . Descriptions geological, topographical and antiquarian, in eastern Yorkshire, between the rivers Humber and Tees . 1855 . Knox . London . 86. 931190467.
  30. News: Mann . Arthur . Arthur Henry Mann (journalist) . Easter outing of naturalists . The Yorkshire Post . 17 April 1933 . 8. 0963-1496.