Thornton Bridge Explained

Official Name:Thornton Bridge
Type:Civil parish
Country:England
Region:Yorkshire and the Humber
Static Image Name:Thornton Manor farm track - geograph.org.uk - 2408080.jpg
Static Image Alt:A dirt track leading off into the distance on the right; a green field with a wheat or corn crop on the left
Static Image Caption:Thornton Manor farm track
Os Grid Reference:SE415709
Coordinates:54.135°N -1.353°W
Post Town:YORK
Postcode Area:YO
Postcode District:YO61
Unitary England:North Yorkshire
Lieutenancy England:North Yorkshire

Thornton Bridge is a civil parish in North Yorkshire, England, situated between Boroughbridge to the south-west, and Thirsk to the north-east. The parish has no major settlements, just a few cottages clustered around the old manor of Thornton Bridge.

History

Thornton Bridge was a township in the parish of Brafferton, but became its own civil parish in 1866. It was historically in the wapentakes of either Hallikeld or Bulmer, and in the historic county of the North Riding of Yorkshire. Since 1974, it has been in North Yorkshire, and until 2023, was a part of Harrogate District.[1] The parish is north-east of Boroughbridge,[2] and 1miles north of Brafferton.[3] The Domesday Survey listed Thornton Bridge as being six carucates of land and belonging to Gospatric, however by the 13th century it was in the hands of the Mowbray family. In 1689, Roger Strickland was attainted and stripped of his estates after he was accused of accompanying James II to Ireland. Although accused of High Treason, he was exiled rather than executed as the evidence was weak.

Thornton Bridge, the structure over the River Swale at the east end of the parish, is an iron bridge which Pevsner described as a "handsome arched bridge of cast iron..".[4] Previously the river was crossed by a stone bridge of three arches, which Leland described as "the depe and swift stream of Swale." The newer iron bridge dates back to 1865 and stretches in a single span of over the river.[5] The structure was grade II listed in 1987. The bridge over the Swale lends its name to the parish, which was recorded as Torentone in the Domesday Book, and Thorenton on Swale in 1275. Thornton, like others in the region, derives from the Old English tūn (town) where the thorn bushes grow.[6]

Thornton Bridge Hall was a manor-house in the area being the home of various noble families (Courtenay, Nevil, Tancard and Strickland), which was largely renovated in 1804.[7]

Governance

Details for the population of the parish are within the neighbouring parish of Humberton (to the south), which listed a total population of 11 people. In 2015, North Yorkshire County Council estimated the population to be 50.[8] The parish is part of the Skipton and Ripon Constituency at Westminster,[9] and part of the Bishop Monkton and Newby Ward in the former Borough of Harrogate.[10]

Population of Thornton Bridge 1801–2015[11] [12] !1801!1811!1821!1831!1841!1851!1861!1871!1881!1891!1901!1911!1921!1931!1951!1961!1971!2011!2015
3623183784074273713603595555486674705653405050

References

Sources

Notes and References

  1. News: Minting . Stuart . Day one of the 'huge new local unitary council' . The Yorkshire Post . 1 April 2023 . 6. 0963-1496.
  2. Web site: Thornton Bridge North Riding . visionofbritain.org.uk . 10 July 2023.
  3. Book: Gill . Thomas . Vallis Eboracensis : Comprising the history and antiquities of Easingwold and its neighbourhood . 1852 . Simpkin Marshall . London . 379.
  4. Book: Pevsner . Nikolaus . Yorkshire: the North Riding . 1992 . Penguin Books . London . 0140710299 . 369.
  5. Book: Rennison . R. W. . Civil engineering heritage. nort: Northern England / ed. by R. W. Rennison . 1996 . Telford . London . 0-7277-2518-1 . 152 . 2..
  6. Book: Ekwall . Eilert . Eilert Ekwall . The concise Oxford dictionary of English place-names . 1960 . Oxford University Press . Oxford . 0-19-869103-3 . 468, 482 . 4.
  7. Book: Gill . Thomas . Vallis Eboracensis : Comprising the history and antiquities of Easingwold and its neighbourhood . 1852 . Simpkin Marshall . London . 380.
  8. Web site: 2015 Population Estimates Parishes . northyorks.gov.uk . 9 July 2023. 13 . December 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20220604015709/https://www.northyorks.gov.uk/sites/default/files/fileroot/About%20the%20council/North%20Yorkshire%20statistics/Parish_mid-year_population_estimates_2015.pdf. 4 June 2022. dead.
  9. Web site: Election Maps . ordnancesurvey.co.uk . 20 July 2023 . On the left of the screen is the "Boundary" tab; click this and activate either civil parishes or Westminster Constituencies (or both), however, only two functions can be active at any one time..
  10. Web site: Electoral Review of Harrogate . hub.datanorthyorkshire.org . 20 July 2023.
  11. Book: Census 1971 England and Wales County Report Yorkshire the North Riding part 1 . 1973 . HMSO . London . 0-11-690379-1 . 13.
  12. Web site: Administrative unit Thornton Bridge CP/Tn Parish-level Unit . visionofbritain.org.uk . 10 July 2023.