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10 Best place to visit in North Ferriby United Kingdom

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Places to see in ( Hessle - UK )

Places to see in ( Hessle - UK )

Hessle is a town, civil parish and electoral ward in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England, five miles west of Kingston upon Hull city centre. Geographically it is part of a larger urban area consisting of the city of Kingston upon Hull, the town of Hessle and a number of other villages but is not part of the city. It is on the north bank of the Humber Estuary where the Humber Bridge crosses.

The centre of Hessle is the Square. There are many shops and a small bus station, which was refitted in 2007. Hessle All Saints' Church is located just off the Square and was designated a Grade I listed building in 1967 and is now recorded in the National Heritage List for England, maintained by Historic England. Hessle Town Hall was built in 1897 and is situated at the top of South Lane. Hessle Police Station is next door to the town hall at the top of South Lane and the corner of Ferriby Road.

Hessle is home to the world-famous Humber Bridge, which was opened by Queen Elizabeth II in 1981. At the time of its opening, the Humber Bridge was the world's longest single span suspension bridge. It links Hessle to the town of Barton-upon-Humber on the opposite side of the river Humber. In July 2017 the bridge was granted Grade I listed status.

In more modern times, it has been a centre for shipbuilding. Before 1897, there was a shipyard building wooden boats, but it was then bought by Henry Scarr who moved there from Beverley, where he had previously been in partnership with his brother Joseph. Scarr produced iron and steel ships until 1932, when the yard was taken over by Richard Dunston. It was the largest shipyard in Hessle, building vessels such as Loch Riddon, a roll-on/roll-off ferry launched in 1986, and one of four built for Caledonian MacBrayne for use in the Hebrides.

The company went into liquidation in 1987 and was bought by Damen Shipyards Group in the same year. Dunston's was closed down in 1994. The location is now used as offices, car sales buildings and a dock for scrap metal and other materials for dispatch to other areas, or to be recycled. Richard Dunston's ship repairs still exists further east along the Humber Estuary, with activity remaining high. Hessle is surrounded by the neighbouring villages of Willerby, Anlaby, Kirk Ella, West Ella, North Ferriby and Swanland. Hessle is surrounded by the neighbouring villages of Willerby, Anlaby, Kirk Ella, West Ella, North Ferriby and Swanland.

Chalk-quarrying was a major industry at Hessle into the 20th century and quarries can still be seen in the west of the town, the largest being the Humber Bridge Country Park, which is a popular tourist attraction. Part of it is known as Little Switzerland (Little Switz or Switzy for short).

The Humber Bridge Country Park Local Nature Reserve was formerly a chalk quarry and was developed as a country park following the construction of the Humber Bridge. It consists of mixed species of woodland, wild flowers, a spring-fed pond and herb-rich grassland. The park can be explored on several well-signed walking routes.

Hessle is twinned with the French town of Bourg-de-Thizy. Transport to and from Hessle is convenient, with good access to main roads such as the A15, A63 and M62 (via the A63). It also has a railway station with hourly services to and from Hull and to destinations such as Doncaster and York. Hessle is at the start of the Yorkshire Wolds Way, a long-distance footpath and designated National Trail, which crosses the Yorkshire Wolds and ends at Filey on the Holderness Coast.

( Hessle - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Hessle . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Hessle - UK

Join us for more :






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HESSLE: East Riding of Yorkshire Parish #42 of 172

Twinned with the French town of Bourg-de-Thizy, this is town in its own right, and should not be considered part of the city of Hull. It was an important place for shipbuilding. Before 1897, there was a shipyard building wooden boats, but it was then bought by Henry Scarr who then produced iron and steel ships until 1932, when the yard was taken over by Richard Dunston.

Chalk-quarrying was a major industry into the 20th century and quarries can still be seen in the West of the town, the largest being the Humber Bridge Country Park, which is a popular tourist attraction. Part of it is known as Little Switzerland and the site of the town's secondary school on Heads Lane is centred on a building donated to the Education Authority by a survivor of the Titanic – Algernon Henry Barkworth.

The Humber Bridge was opened by Queen Elizabeth II in 1981. At the time of its opening, it was the world's longest single-span suspension bridge. These days it’s no longer the longest but its length was was not surpassed until 1998, with the completion of the Akashi Kaikyō Bridge. It is now the world’s eleventh-longest.

Before the bridge, commuters crossed the Humber on the Humber Ferry from Corporation Pier at Hull and New Holland Pier at New Holland, Lincolnshire or by road via the M62, M18 and M180 motorways. Both sides of the bridge were in the non-metropolitan county of Humberside until its dissolution in 1996.

On the foreshore, in the shadow of the north tower of the Humber Bridge, stands a whiting mill, and that together with the bridge, makes this one well worth a visit. This is HESSLE.


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My name is Andy. I am armed with a car, a GoPro and an unhealthy amount of time on my hands.

Join me as I try to visit every single parish in the district of the East Riding. There are 172. Here's the FORTY-SECOND one - Hessle.

#Hessle #HumberBridge, #Humber, #Barkworth, #Hull, #EastRiding, #Yorkshire, #Foreshore, #Larkin, #Tranby, #WhitingMill, #Parish,

Jean’s Walk:


Demographics:


Zoopla:


Humber Rescue:


Whiting Mill:



Little Switzerland:


Hull Cycle Speedway:


All Saints Church:


Tower Hill:


Hessle Centre:


Bustimes:


Hessle Community Centre:


Our Lady of Lourdes:


The Country Park Inn:


King George V Playing Field:


Hessle High School:


Cemetery:


Tranby Park Care Home:


Tranby House:


Hessle Feast:


Chalk image:


Humber Bridge at Night:


Some of the following music tracks may appear in this video:
Brendan Perkins - “Foxsnow” (B. Perkins)

Brendan Perkins - “Mickey's House” (B. Perkins)

The Keyhouse - Voices (H. Flunder)

The Keyhouse - Circles (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - Sun (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “Angels” (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “C Song” (H. Flunder)


I have me a Facebook page too!


And now an INSTAGRAM - @andythevillageidiot

Come and join The Village People! (Subscribers only!)


Please consider buying me a coffee to support the channel! The more I get the faster I'll get to your parish!
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Places to see in ( Barton upon Humber - UK )

Places to see in ( Barton upon Humber - UK )

Barton-upon-Humber or Barton is a town and civil parish in North Lincolnshire, England. The population at the 2011 census was 11,066. It is situated on the south bank of the Humber Estuary at the southern end of the Humber Bridge. It is 46 miles (74 km) east of Leeds, 6 miles (10 km) south-west of Hull and 31 miles (50 km) north north-east of the county town of Lincoln. Other nearby towns include Scunthorpe to the south-west and Grimsby to the south-east.

The Barton – Cleethorpes Branch Line (opened 1849) via Grimsby terminates at Barton-on-Humber railway station. The A15 passes to the west of the town cutting through Beacon Hill, and has a junction with the A1077 Ferriby Road to South Ferriby. The B1218 passes north-south through the town, and leads to Barton Waterside. Kimberly-Clark had a factory on Falkland Way close to the railway, known the Barton Plant; this area is known as the Humber Bridge Industrial Estate. Barton is on the south bank of the Humber estuary and is at the southern end of the Humber Bridge. The Viking Way starts near the bridge.

St Peter's Church has a Saxon tower. An Anglo-Saxon inhumation cemetery at Castledyke South, in use from the late 5th or early 6th century until the late 7th century, was investigated and partially excavated 1975–90: the skeletal remains of 227 individuals were identified, including one who had undergone (and survived) trepanning. The church was reopened in May 2007 as a resource for medical research into the development of diseases, and ossuary, containing the bones and skeletons of some 2,750 people whose remains were removed between 1978 and 1984 from the 1,000-year-old burial site, after the Church of England made the church redundant in 1972.

There are two churches in Barton-upon-Humber, St Peter's and St Mary's, located only about 170 yards apart. St Peter's is a large, mostly Anglo-Saxon church and predates St Mary's — which may have originated as a chapel on the original market place, enlarged and increasing in importance as the town's trade thrived in the 12th and 13th centuries.

( Barton upon Humber - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Barton upon Humber . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Barton upon Humber - UK

Join us for more :






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A (4K) Drivers Eye View Hull to Gilberdyke. Under the Humber Bridge.

This Video is for entertainment purposes only. Welcome to our trip across from Hull to Stockport via Gilberdyke - Selby - Leeds - Huddersfield and Stalybridge on board an English Electric Type 3 Class 37 locomotive. This is from Hull - Gilberdyke under the Humber Bridge. Should anyone question why this is uploaded in parts like this, it is due to the file sizes when editing, rendering and uploading video to YouTube, If you have done this then you will know exactly what we are on about. Hope you enjoy our little trip in these Covid second wave Tier 3 plus lockdown times.
In cab sounds were recorded at both ends as Drivers were under instruction so a lot of talking was taking place in the lead cab. That is why there are some bits without AWS etc. We hope you enjoy this video. Many thanks to LSL TOC LTD for affording us access with our camera. Apologies for the bits and bobs of dirt on the windscreen and the fact it is shot straight into the Sun. Couldn't do much about that!


Locomotive Services LTD operate trains for







Creating these videos, editing, rendering and uploading these videos takes time and effort and if you wish to support the continued work please feel free to support via Paypal at


I have just switched over to the Go Pro 8 Camera and as you have seen the footage is awesome.
Go Pro 8

Other equipment I use.
Garmin Virb Ultra Camera:
Mount:
Adobe Premier Pro:
Adobe Creative Cloud:
Camera Backpack:
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HORKSTOW: North Lincolnshire Parish #10 of 56

This is one of the five “Low Villages” between Brigg and the River Humber, so-called because of their position below the Northern edge of the Lincolnshire Wolds. Itwas previously part of Glanford administrative district, and before that, the North Lindsey division of Lindsey, Lincolnshire. According to A Dictionary of British Place Names, its name probably means shelter for animals or people

There are three listed buildings of particular historic note. One of those gave its name to a traditional Lincolnshire folk tune. In 1937 Percy Grainger used it as part of his Lincolnshire Posy suite. Historically there’s a bit here. A 4th century Roman mosaic - a tessellated pavement depicting Greek mythological figures – was found and was taken to the British Museum in 1927 on permanent loan, but was transferred to the Hull and East Riding Museum in 1974

The parish church is dedicated to St Maurice, and is Grade I listed. It was built supposedly by The Knights Templar in the early 12th century, though in fact they had nothing to do with the church. Within the church is an oval, marble tablet to Catherine Ayers dating to 1759, and at the East end of the nave, one to Rear Admiral Thomas Shirley – the leader of Shirley's Gold Coast expedition, dated to 1814

A suspension bridge is not something you’d expect to see in a village this small, but here we find the only suspension bridge designed by Sir John Rennie. The ironwork was supplied by Messrs John and Edward Walker of Gospel Oak Ironworks, in Tipton, Staffordshire, and the bridge was completed in 1836. It links the village to Winterton. A ferry had previously connected the villages, and it is believed a bridge had occupied the site from the 18th century, providing access to the brick-making kilns located on the Winterton side.

To finish this one off, I found a fabulous rendition of that aforementioned folk tune and was granted permission by the amazing Kirsty Hannah to use it in this video. Here’s HORKSTOW.

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My name is Andy. I am armed with a car, a GoPro and an unhealthy amount of time on my hands.

Join me as I try to visit every single parish in the district of North Lincolnshire. There are 56. Here's the TENTH one - Horkstow.

#Horkstow, #Bridge, #Ancholme, #BartonUponHumber, #SouthFerriby, #KirstyHannah, #HorkstowHall, #NorthLincolnshire, #Scunthorpe, #LowVillages, #StMaurice, #SirJohnRennie, #HorkstowGrange, #Lincolnshire, #Parish,

Kirsty Hannah:



Demographics:


Zoopla:


Bustimes:


Images at the end of the video:













Some of the following music tracks may appear in this video:
Brendan Perkins - “Foxsnow” (B. Perkins)

Brendan Perkins - “Mickey's House” (B. Perkins)

The Keyhouse - Voices (H. Flunder)

The Keyhouse - Circles (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - Sun (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “Angels” (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “C Song” (H. Flunder)


I have me a Facebook page too!


And now an INSTAGRAM - @andythevillageidiot

Come and join The Village People! (Subscribers only!)


Please consider buying me a coffee to support the channel! The more I get the faster I'll get to your parish!

NORTH CAVE: East Riding of Yorkshire Parish #72 of 172

EAST RIDING OF YORKSHIRE PARISH #72: NORTH CAVE

Welcome to the first of the Cave twins in the East Riding of Yorkshire – North Cave. This is situated 15 miles to the West of Hull city centre principally on the B1230

Its neighbour, South Cave is approximately 2 miles to the Southeast. The parish is formed by the village of North Cave and the hamlet of Everthorpe.

Little is known about the early social or economic development of the village but North Cave as a settlement appears to have been growing since the 13th century.

There were at least five examples of the open field system here by the 17th century. It’s mentioned in the Domesday Book and the Metham family from Howden were large landowners here

In later centuries, North Cave had many tradesmen, including a draper in 1521 and a weaver in 1618. A malt kiln is mentioned in 1729, which may have stood in Westgate

There was also a rope-walk in Church Street in the 19th century, but the village’s main industry was based around its mills – two of which we’ll see on todays route

It’s a place that really needs more recognition. It’s a place lots of people drive through and don’t really explore. In my opinion I reckon North Cave is more interesting than South Cave

Controversial maybe, but come with me, and lets see if that’s an accurate statement

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#NorthCave, #EastRidingofyorkshire, #Brough, #Yorkshire,

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8acre Lake:


Old Parsonage:


Little Wold Away Glamping:


North Cave AFC:


North Cave Sports and Social Club:


GENUKI:


Nordham Cottages:


War Memorial:


Everthorpe Hall:


North Cave Station:


North Cave Parish Council:


Paper Mill:


Bowling Centre:


North Cave Interchange:


Primitive Chapel:


North Cave Wetlands:



Demographics:


Zoopla:


Some of the following music tracks may appear in this video:
Brendan Perkins - “Foxsnow” (B. Perkins)

Brendan Perkins - “Mickey's House” (B. Perkins)

The Keyhouse - Voices (H. Flunder)

The Keyhouse - Circles (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - Sun (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “Angels” (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “C Song” (H. Flunder)


I have me a Facebook page too!


And now an INSTAGRAM - @andythevillageidiot

Come and join The Village People! (Subscribers only!)


Please consider buying me a coffee to support the channel! The more I get the faster I'll get to your parish!

Sailing our motorboat 'Seadog' around the South coast of England.

This video is about our previous boat, 'Seadog'. She was a steel Dutch built trawler yacht, built by Pedro in Zuidbroek in Holland. Motorboating around England's South coast from the Thames valley, through the London River and round the South coast as far west as Dorset.
00:00 Previous boats
01:14 Pedro Donky 33 'Seadog'
02:11 Refitting a steel boat
03:42 Relaunched and back to sea

BARROW UPON HUMBER: North Lincolnshire Parish #39 of 56

NORTH LINCOLNSHIRE PARISH #39: BARROW UPON HUMBER

Barrow upon Humber is a village, civil parish, and like Ulceby it’s own post town. It’s situated in North Lincolnshire not far away from the River Humber and 3 miles away from Barton

Barrow upon Humber is often shortened to Barrow, and can so easily be mistaken for Barton upon Humber, their names being extremely similar to each other

Barrow has way more history than you might think. This was the site of an Anglo Saxon priory, and although its location is now built over, the road adjacent to it still makes reference to it

Heavily associated with the place is a man we’ve spoken about before in Wakefield. A certain John Harrison, who you may recall solved a major nautical problem

This is another slice of North Lincolnshire which was important for brickmaking. There was also a quarry too, and the limestone under the ground here aids the formation of natural blow wells

Also part of the parish is Barrow Haven, one and half miles to the North, located on the railway line between Cleethorpes and Barton.

Like New Holland, Barrow Haven has a wharf which handles timber from the Baltics, but it’s also got a whole heap of historical interest, all of which this one video simply cannot cover

Let’s get walking and get a feel for what Barrow is all about!

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#BarrowUponHumber, #Lincolnshire, #NorthLincolnshire, #BartonUponHumber,

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Barrow Bowls Club:


Goosemans Growers:


Barrow Hall:


The Mount:


Methodist Chapel:


Foresters Hall:


Joseph Bentley Works (David Wright):



The Old Shop:


Humberside Clock Works:


Sargeants:


Congregationalist Chapel:


Six Bells (David Wright):



Midby Park:


Preschool:


Blow Wells Nature Reserve:

By David Wright, CC BY-SA 2.0,
Down Hall:
By David Wright, CC BY-SA 2.0,

Demographics:


Zoopla:


Pastdays:


Some of the following music tracks may appear in this video:
Brendan Perkins - “Foxsnow” (B. Perkins)

Brendan Perkins - “Mickey's House” (B. Perkins)

The Keyhouse - Voices (H. Flunder)

The Keyhouse - Circles (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - Sun (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “Angels” (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “C Song” (H. Flunder)


I have me a Facebook page too!


And now an INSTAGRAM - @andythevillageidiot

Come and join The Village People! (Subscribers only!)


Please consider buying me a coffee to support the channel! The more I get the faster I'll get to your parish!

Top England Hotel - Hallmark Hotel North Ferriby near Hull Yorkshire England

Top England Hotel - Hallmark Hotel North Ferriby near Hull Yorkshire England

NORTH FERRIBY: East Riding of Yorkshire Parish #71 of 172

EAST RIDING OF YORKSHIRE PARISH #71: NORTH FERRIBY

Welcome to North Ferriby, another village on the banks of the River Humber, located in the Haltemprice area of the East Riding of Yorkshire

North Ferriby is approximately 8 miles West of Hull city centre. To the North up a hill, is Swanland and South Ferriby is directly opposite the village on the South bank of the Humber.

North Ferriby is generally referred to as Ferriby by locals on the North bank, something which can be seen at the local railway station, which is called Ferriby as opposed to North Ferriby

The village was once significant for Ferriby Priory, which was here in or around the year 1160 and was founded by Lord Eustace Broomfleet de Vesci in the reign of King John

It was dissolved along with the lesser monasteries, in the 1500s thanks to Henry VIII. The site of this priory is said to have been in the possession of 100 different persons

Through time, the village has been in the possession of the Mortimer, Pole and the Bacon families. It once had several elegant mansions, some of which still stand today

These were evident from around 1750 onwards as wealthy Hull merchants started to build large houses here. We’ll see one at least one of those houses on our route

Time for a wander then around this historic place. It’s got lots to talk about!

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#NorthFerriby, #EastRidingofYorkshire, #Hull, #Yorkshire,

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Godfrey Robinson House:


North Ferriby United Logo:


North Ferriby Ladies Choir:


George Witty:


Ferriby Boats:



Cricket Club:


Anne Turner Allotments:


Tom Harland:


Social Club:


Ferriby’s:


Duke of Cumberland/Athletics Club:


Co Op:


War Memorial:


Ferriby House/Manor House/Ferriby Hall:


Village Hall:


Ferriby Interchange:


Parish Hall:


Methodist Church:


Hull Humber View:


RDA:


All Saints Church:


Demographics:


Zoopla:


Some of the following music tracks may appear in this video:
Brendan Perkins - “Foxsnow” (B. Perkins)

Brendan Perkins - “Mickey's House” (B. Perkins)

The Keyhouse - Voices (H. Flunder)

The Keyhouse - Circles (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - Sun (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “Angels” (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “C Song” (H. Flunder)


I have me a Facebook page too!


And now an INSTAGRAM - @andythevillageidiot

Come and join The Village People! (Subscribers only!)


Please consider buying me a coffee to support the channel! The more I get the faster I'll get to your parish!
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SOUTH FERRIBY: North Lincolnshire Parish #9 of 56

At the point where the Lincolnshire Wolds meet the Humber Estuary was the Southern end of an ancient ferry over the Humber. The entry in the Domesday Book records two ferries. In order to sustain two ferries that suggests that a prosperous trading community must have been flourishing at the time. Transport here is still pretty good. By road it’s close to the A15. That’s the road that crosses the River Humber to connect to the A63 to Hull and the M62 motorway.

There is a certain boat-y theme here. Three Bronze-Age British sewn plank-built boats were discovered in the Humber here. Only a small number of boats of a similar period have been found in Britain and the Ferriby examples are the earliest known sewn-plank boats found in Europe. Both the Romans and the Saxon occupied this area, before the Vikings came along in 870AD. It’s they who are responsible for the village’s name. In much more recent times, the Nelthorpe family were prominent local landowners. Sir Henry Nelthorpe was the man who endowed the village’s first free school in 1822

The village was one of the first to have piped water with houses plumbing into the supply which was put down to supply steam ships, and here you’ll find an unusual landmark - an overhead conveyor belt that passes to the South of the village just outside the school. We’ll see where that goes to in this very video.

There’s a sluice which crosses the River Ancholme, a tributary of the Humber. The river has been used by humans since at least 800 BC, confirmed by the excavation of a planked boat at Brigg. Major changes to the Ancholme occurred in 1635, when a new straight channel was constructed, and most of the water flows via the “New” River Ancholme. The old course is mostly reduced to a drain.

I loved this village. I’d never been here before. There are beautiful views across the Humber in places and the fact that part of it is on a rather steep hill only helps in showing off the amazing SOUTH FERRIBY.

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My name is Andy. I am armed with a car, a GoPro and an unhealthy amount of time on my hands.

Join me as I try to visit every single parish in the district of North Lincolnshire. There are 56. Here's the NINTH one - South Ferriby.

#SouthFerriby, #Sluice, #Ancholme, #BartonUponHumber, #Horkstow, #Humber, #ConveyorBelt, #NorthLincolnshire, #Scunthorpe, #LowVillages, #HorsePond, #Fairies, #Cliffs, #Lincolnshire, #Parish,

Zoopla:


Demographics:


Nev Cole Way:


Methodist Chapel:


Humber Keel and Sloops:


Reads Island:


Beach:


South Ferriby Cliff:


Marina:


Some of the following music tracks may appear in this video:
Brendan Perkins - “Foxsnow” (B. Perkins)

Brendan Perkins - “Mickey's House” (B. Perkins)

The Keyhouse - Voices (H. Flunder)

The Keyhouse - Circles (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - Sun (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “Angels” (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “C Song” (H. Flunder)


I have me a Facebook page too!


And now an INSTAGRAM - @andythevillageidiot

Come and join The Village People! (Subscribers only!)


Please consider buying me a coffee to support the channel! The more I get the faster I'll get to your parish!

Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire UK Travel Video

I am for two lovely days in Hull (Kingston upon Hull).
I visit City Center, Old Town, Art Museum, Museum Quarter, Marina Museum and I also visit Old Town and Sculcoates area.
I came there by train from London for 13.50 GBP each way. Train service was not good enough because my train from London to Hull was cancelled 40 min before departure and I was needed to go to Peterborough and then by coach to Hull and I still wait for refund.
Please visit all my UK videos here -

Ferriby Station 10/9/18

Join me as we visit the stations around Sheffield and Hull on a two day period, just to catch the pacers working before they are withdraw for good, the weather wasn’t on my side again but I did stay dryer then I did when up in Newcastle.

b&b north yorkshire - yorkshire inns - inn at hawnby

b&b North Yorkshire



Relax and unwind in one the country's top 10 inns. The Inn at Hawnby is quite a famous B&B North Yorkshire as it is a multi-award winning inn, pub and restaurant.

Step into the Inn and experience a world of stunning local ales, fresh locally reared produce and flawless service hard to match

The Inn at Hawnby is your perfect base from which to explore this stunning area

High quality, freshly prepared meals created by our Head Chef can be enjoyed daily in our restaurant which is the best among the Yorkshire inns.

Inn at Hawnby
Hawnby, Nr. Helmsley,
North Yorkshire, YO62 5QS
Telephone 01439 798202

You need a place to unwind and relax? Visit us at

Subscribe to our channel and stay tuned for more videos

All 21 East Riding of Yorkshire Railway Stations (visiting EVERY station)

Every East Riding of Yorkshire railway station. All 21 National Rail stations in the county of East Yorkshire, England (UK). Northern, TransPennine Express, London North Eastern Railway and Hull Trains serve the stations of East Yorkshire.

The stations in East Yorkshire along with the operator that manages the station and the date I last visited the station:
Arram (Northern) (17/09/2021)
Bempton (Northern) (12/03/2022)
Beverley (Northern) (17/09/2021)
Bridlington (Northern) (17/09/2021)
Broomfleet (Northern) (02/04/2022)
Brough (TransPennine Express) (10/02/2020)
Cottingham (Northern) (17/09/2021)
Driffield (Northern) (17/09/2021)
Eastrington (Northern) (02/04/2022)
Ferriby (Northern) (02/04/2022)
Gilberdyke (Northern) (02/04/2022)
Goole (Northern) (20/05/2022)
Hessle (Northern) (02/04/2022)
Howden (Northern) (09/04/2022)
Hull (TransPennine Express) (02/04/2022)
Hutton Cranswick (Northern) (17/09/2021)
Nafferton (Northern) (17/09/2021)
Rawcliffe (Northern) (20/05/2022)
Saltmarshe (Northern) (17/09/2021)
Snaith (Northern) (22/08/2022)
Wressle (Northern) (09/04/2022)

Each station within the video is shown with station name and the 3 letter station code. Note that only National Rail stations are included.

This video includes all the stations in East Riding of Yorkshire in February 2023.

All 21 East Riding of Yorkshire stations: 00:00
Arram 00:05
Bempton 00:09
Beverley 00:13
Bridlington 00:17
Broomfleet 00:21
Brough 00:25
Cottingham 00:29
Driffield 00:33
Eastrington 00:37
Ferriby 00:41
Gilberdyke 00:45
Goole 00:49
Hessle 00:53
Howden 00:57
Hull 01:01
Hutton Cranswick 01:05
Nafferton 01:09
Rawcliffe 01:13
Saltmarshe 01:17
Snaith 01:21
Wressle 01:25
Endscreen 01:29

#EastYorkshire
#Railway
#Station
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Hallmark Hotel, North Ferriby, Timelapse

Timelapse taken as snow clouds pass over the humber bridge early on March 11 2013, from the Hallmark Hotel, North Ferriby (near Hull, Yorkshire, England)

Hull Humber View Hotel, BW Signature Collection, Hull, United Kingdom

Hull Humber View Hotel, BW Signature Collection, Hull, United Kingdom
About Property:
Enjoying an enviable location on the outskirts of Hull, the 4-star Hull Humber View Hotel, Signature Collection By Best Western features panoramic views over the Humber Estuary. Less than 3.2 km from Ferriby Train Station, this award-winning boutique hotel offers free WiFi and free parking.
The hotel features 95 stylish en suite bedrooms with views across the River Humber, a 32-inch flat-screen TV, and tea/coffee making facilities.
The relax...
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Booking or More Details:
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Property Type: Hotel
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Address: Ferriby High Road, Hull, HU14 3LG, United Kingdom
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Track Title: Reasons To Hope
Artist: Reed Mathis
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20/Apr/2020. Walk: Brough - Ferriby.

Seeing as Cottingley had a direct through service to/from Hull for a while I thought I’d take advantage of it and do this walk. The weather played ball too and I had a very enjoyable day.

WALKERINGHAM: Bassetlaw Parish #59 of 66

Here we have a settlement that appears in the Domesday survey under two names. Both of these are “Wacheringeham”, except they are spelt a little differently, one with an e and one without.

The place-name seems to contain an Old English personal name, that being “Walhhere”. Ing or ingas is Old English, meaning “the people of”, whilst Ham means village. It possibly means therefore, the village of the people of a man called Walhhere

Housing stocks were extended here in the mid-1960s to accommodate the workers of West Burton Power Station but industry wise historically, bricks were made here in no less than four distinct brickworks.

The major 2007 flooding in the North of England damaged much of the village. That said, improvements to drainage are constantly being made in the area as a whole to prevent such occurrences again

There's an old station, a fabulous community garden and some friendly locals in WALKERINGHAM.

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My name is Andy. I am armed with a car, a GoPro and an unhealthy amount of time on my hands.

Join me as I try to visit every single parish in the district of Bassetlaw. There are 66. Here's the FIFTY-NINTH one – Walkeringham.

#Walkeringham, #Misterton, #Brickworks, #Priory, #Worksop, #Station, #ChesterfieldCanal, #SouthMoorLodge, #Nottinghamshire, #Pavilion, #FoxandHounds, #Bassetlaw, #Parish, #CrossShaft,

North Notts Lions:


The Fox and Hounds:


GENUKI Entry:


The Manor House:


Community Garden:


Methodist Chapel:


Nature Reserve:


Bustimes:


Zoopla:


Misterton PSD:


St Mary Magdalene:


Cross Shaft:


Brickworks:


Station:


Hawthorne Hideaway:


Demographics:


Village Hall:


Fountain Hill Bridge:


South Moor Lodge:


The Three Horseshoes:


Signalbox:


Some of the following music tracks may appear in this video:
Brendan Perkins - “Foxsnow” (B. Perkins)

Brendan Perkins - “Mickey's House” (B. Perkins)

The Keyhouse - Voices (H. Flunder)

The Keyhouse - Circles (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - Sun (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “Angels” (H. Flunder)

Helen Flunder - “C Song” (H. Flunder)


I have me a Facebook page too!


And now an INSTAGRAM - @andythevillageidiot

Come and join The Village People! (Subscribers only!)


Please consider buying me a coffee to support the channel! The more I get the faster I'll get to your parish!

Places to see in ( Margate - UK )

Places to see in ( Margate - UK )

Margate is a seaside town in the district of Thanet in Kent, England. It lies 38.1 miles east-north-east of Maidstone, on the coast along the North Foreland and contains the areas of Cliftonville, Garlinge, Palm Bay and Westbrook.

For at least 250 years, Margate has been a leading seaside resort in the UK, drawing Londoners to its beaches, Margate Sands. The bathing machines in use at Margate were described in 1805 as four-wheeled carriages, covered with canvas, and having at one end of them an umbrella of the same materials which is let down to the surface of the water, so that the bather descending from the machine by a few steps is concealed from the public view, whereby the most refined female is enabled to enjoy the advantages of the sea with the strictest delicacy.

The Dreamland Amusement Park (featured in The Jolly Boys' Outing extended episode of the television series Only Fools and Horses) is situated in the centre of Margate. It reopened in 2015, having been closed since 2006 following a lengthy campaign by the group Save Dreamland Campaign. The Scenic Railway roller coaster at Dreamland, which opened in 1920, is Grade II* Listed and the second oldest in the world, was severely damaged in a fire on 7 April 2008 but has now been fully restored and reopened to the public in October 2015. Today the Dreamland roller coaster is one of only two early-20th century scenic railways still remaining in the UK; the only other surviving UK scenic railway is in Great Yarmouth and was built in 1932. The Margate roller coaster is an ACE Coaster Classic. Cliftonville, next to Margate, has a classic British Arnold Palmer seaside mini golf course.

There are two notable theatres, the Theatre Royal in Addington Street – the second oldest theatre in the country – and the Tom Thumb Theatre, the second smallest in the country, in addition to the Winter Gardens. The Theatre Royal was built in 1787, burned down in 1829 and was remodelled in 1879 giving Margate more national publicity. The exterior is largely from the 19th century.[15] From 1885 to 1899 actor-manager Sarah Thorne ran a school for acting at the Theatre Royal which is widely regarded as Britain's first formal drama school. Actors who received their initial theatrical training there include Harley Granville-Barker, Evelyn Millard, Louis Calvert, George Thorne, Janet Achurch, Adelaide Neilson and Irene and Violet Vanbrugh, among others. An annual jazz festival takes place on a weekend in June.

Margate Museum in Market Place explores the town's seaside heritage in a range of exhibits and displays, and is now opened at weekends by a team of volunteers. First discovered in 1798, the Margate Caves (also known as the Vortigern Caves) are situated at the bottom of Northdown Road. They are currently closed to the public.

The Shell Grotto, which has walls and roof covered in elaborate decorations of over four million shells covering 2,000 square feet (190 m2) in complex patterns, was rediscovered in 1835, but is of unknown age and origin. It has been designated as a Grade I listed building. There is a 16th-century 2-storey timber-framed Tudor house built on a flint plinth in King Street. Margate's Jubilee Clock Tower was built to commemorate Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee in 1887, although not completed until 1889. It had a Time Ball mechanism, mounted on a mast atop the tower, which was raised a few minutes before 1pm each day and dropped at precisely 1pm, thereby allowing residents, visitors and ships to know the exact time. This was, of course, in the days before wireless transmission of time signals.

Alot to see in ( Margate - UK ) such as :

Dreamland Margate
Shell Grotto, Margate
Turner Contemporary
Draper's Mill, Margate
Scenic Railway
Hartsdown Park
Botany Bay, Kent
Quex Park
Margate Beach
RAF Manston Spitfire & Hurricane Memorial Museum
Margate Museum
Margate Harbour Arm
Genting Casino Margate
Saint Mildred's Bay
St Peter's Church
Kingsgate Bay
Pegwell Bay
Monkton Nature Reserve
Margate Clocktower
Sunken Gardens
Dane Park

( Margate - UK ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting the city of Margate . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Margate - UK

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