NORTH SKIRLAUGH AND ROWTON
THE part of Swine parish which lay in the north
division of Holderness comprised North Skirlaugh township and some of Arnold, the rest of
which township belonged to the ancient parishes
of Long Riston and Rise. (fn. 92) North Skirlaugh, c.
4 km. north of Swine village, was formerly the
head of Skirlaugh union and remains a centre of
local government. (fn. 93) The name Skirlaugh is an
Anglo-Scandinavian hybrid, meaning 'bright
clearing'; Skirlaugh comprised settlements on
either side of Lambwath stream which were distinguished from the 13th century by the prefixes
North and South. A settlement called Rowton
lay ½ km. west of North Skirlaugh; its name
is Anglian and means 'rough enclosure'. (fn. 94) A
stream flowing southwards from Rise to Lambwath stream probably formed the boundary
between the two settlements.
In the mid 19th century there were 534 a. (216
ha.) in North Skirlaugh and 671 a. (272 ha.)
in Swine parish's part of Arnold township. All
1,680 a. (680 ha.) of Arnold (fn. 95) was added in 1885
to North Skirlaugh to form the civil parish later
called North Skirlaugh, Rowton, and Arnold, (fn. 96)
and in 1935 that parish was combined with Long
Riston as Riston civil parish. (fn. 97) North Skirlaugh
and part of Arnold were later transferred to
Skirlaugh civil parish. (fn. 98) In 1377 there were 132
poll-tax payers at North Skirlaugh, Rowton, and
Arnold, (fn. 99) and in 1672 the same settlements had
42 houses assessed for hearth tax. (fn. 1) The population of North Skirlaugh with Rowton and
Swine parish's part of Arnold township rose
from 192 in 1811 to 260 in 1821, but had fallen
to 210 by 1831. The union workhouse was later
built in North Skirlaugh, (fn. 2) and 48 inmates
contributed to the total population of 279 in
1841; the institution's population was still c. 50
in the 1880s. (fn. 3) Overall, numbers increased to 339
in 1871, before falling to 284 in 1881 and,
despite the addition of the rest of Arnold with
c. 80 people in 1885, to 247 in 1911. There were
292 inhabitants in 1931. (fn. 4)

North Skirlaugh 1782
NORTH SKIRLAUGH hamlet. In 1782 the
dozen houses of North Skirlaugh mostly stood
along both sides of a street which continued
northwards to Rise, and at its southern end
crossed Lambwath stream into South Skirlaugh.
A farmhouse, later North Skirlaugh Grange,
then stood to the east of the street amid closes,
and there were one or two houses alongside
Lambwath stream, in a short side lane which
was extended before 1852 to meet the South
Skirlaugh to Long Riston road, later part of the
main Hull-Bridlington road. At Rowton there
were four houses, on either side of the road to
Long Riston. One of the farmhouses, later
Rowton Farm, had been rebuilt away from the
road by the 1850s, when only one other remained there. By then the union workhouse
stood beside the road at Rowton, (fn. 5) and in 1862 a
terrace of cottages and in 1869-70 a vicarage
house were also added, (fn. 6) in the lane at North
Skirlaugh, later Vicarage Lane. There has been
further development along Vicarage Lane and
the main road in the 20th century, and there
is now little, apart from the stream, separating
North Skirlaugh from its larger, southern neighbour. The older buildings include Springfield
House (fn. 7) and Ivy Cottage, a house with rusticated
quoins and window surrounds put up c. 1900 by
the Bethells, (fn. 8) and the newer ones 14 mid 20thcentury council houses, built on land earlier
used for allotment gardens, (fn. 9) and a telephone
exchange. (fn. 10) A wooden Church hall put up in
Vicarage Lane by the 1930s was demolished c.
1970. (fn. 11)
Skirlaugh union workhouse was built in
1838-9 to serve parishes in mid Holderness. (fn. 12)
Following the removal to Beverley of the children in 1915 and of the few remaining inmates
in 1916, the workhouse became a military hospital. (fn. 13) The rural sanitary authority for Skirlaugh
union met in the workhouse from 1872 until
1894 and its successor, Skirlaugh rural district
council, from then until 1916, when use by the
military authorities caused meetings to be
moved to Hull, where they long remained. (fn. 14) In
1922 the council bought the redundant workhouse and adjoining land. (fn. 15) Parts of the building
were later occupied as cottages called Rowton
Villas; the rest, and eventually all of the building, served as offices for the council and its
successors, Holderness rural district council,
Holderness Borough council, and the East
Riding council. Designed by J. B. and William
Atkinson of York, the former workhouse is of
brick with stucco dressings; the two-storeyed
front elevation comprises a main block of seven
bays with lower, recessed side wings. Prominent
pediments crown the larger end bays of the main
block, which has another pediment over the central doorway and a mixture of round-headed and
rectangular windows. Ranges extending back
from the side wings were truncated and the
other buildings enclosing the exercise yards removed c. 1975, and between 1988 and 1991
offices and a council chamber were built on the
site. A large garage and depot occupies the
adjacent land. (fn. 16)
MANORS AND OTHER ESTATES
In the
Domesday Survey the name 'Skirlaugh' was
used without any further distinction, and the
land there mentioned cannot thus be identified
with later estates in North and South Skirlaugh.
In 1066 Skirlaugh comprised 5 carucates and 6
bovates, of which Ulf held 4 carucates as sokeland and 1 carucate as a berewick of his manor
of Aldbrough, and Morkar held 6 bovates as
soke of his manor of Hornsea. Also soke of
Aldbrough were the 2 carucates of Rowton. All
of those lands had passed to Drew de Bevrère
by 1086, (fn. 17) and later were part of the Aumale fee.
Much of the land, lying at Rowton and North
Skirlaugh, was held by the Fauconbergs. The
first recorded tenant, Peter de Fauconberg, (fn. 18) was
evidently succeeded by William de Fauconberg,
who in the mid 13th century held all 2 carucates
at Rowton and 2 carucates at North Skirlaugh,
besides land at 'Skirlaugh', later recorded as 2
bovates at South Skirlaugh. (fn. 19) The holding descended to Walter de Fauconberg (d. 1304), Lord
Fauconberg, (fn. 20) and later, as a member of Rise
manor, to the Nevilles. (fn. 21) The Fauconbergs'
demesne estate at Rowton, North Skirlaugh, and
Arnold was said in the 1290s to comprise only
c. 1 carucate, (fn. 22) and in 1349 all 2 carucates at
North Skirlaugh were held of John de Fauconberg, Lord Fauconberg, by freeholders. (fn. 23) The
estate continued to descend as part of Rise
manor, farms in Rowton and North Skirlaugh
being held by Roger Bethell (d. 1626), assignee
of the Crown's lease of the manor, and then
divided among his heirs, one of whom Hugh,
later Sir Hugh, Bethell (d. 1679) bought the
freehold and reunited the shares. (fn. 24) An estate in
North Skirlaugh belonging to Hugh's brother
John (d. 1651 or 1652) probably also descended
later with the rest of the Bethells' estate there. (fn. 25)
In 1831 Richard Bethell was said to have 478 a.
at North Skirlaugh and Rowton, (fn. 26) and his nephew
and later heir, W. F. Bethell, apparently also had
82 a. in the township in 1848. (fn. 27) William Bethell's
estate at North Skirlaugh and Rowton comprised c. 520 a. in 1915. (fn. 28) Land was later sold,
but the Bethells still had c. 450 a. in North
Skirlaugh and Rowton in 1995. (fn. 29)
Springfield House, or an earlier house on the
site, existed by 1782. (fn. 30) In 1892 it was occupied
by William Bethell's land agent. (fn. 31) It was sold by
the Bethells after 1967. (fn. 32)
Two carucates at Rowton, Arnold, and North
Skirlaugh were held, presumably under the
Fauconbergs, by Simon de Rupella c. 1240,
when Meaux abbey acquired his estate. Simon's
tenant was then (Sir) Richard of Rowton, whose
son Matthew exchanged his holding with the
abbey for lands at Riston in 1269 or 1270.
Matthew's cousin, Maud of Rowton, had earlier
given the abbey 2 bovates at Rowton, and by the
1290s it had 3 carucates and 2 bovates in the
three vills, 6 bovates at Rowton held in demesne
and the rest of the land occupied by the abbey's
tenants. The estate in Rowton, variously called
ROWTON manor (fn. 33) or Rowton grange (fn. 34) in the
13th and 14th centuries, was later reckoned part
of Meaux abbey's manor of Arnold, and descended with that after the Dissolution to Joseph
Micklethwaite and his son John. (fn. 35) In 1653 the
Micklethwaites exchanged c. 1 carucate with
John Dalton, who in 1656 granted that estate,
lying in Arnold, Rowton, and North Skirlaugh,
to John Anlaby and others. (fn. 36) The estate has not
been traced further.
The Hildyard family held land belonging to
Rise manor in North and South Skirlaugh in the
16th century. (fn. 37)
A house, 1 bovate, and other land at North
Skirlaugh were sold as former possessions of
Swine priory by the Crown in 1609. (fn. 38)
The rectorial tithes of North Skirlaugh, Rowton, and the part of Arnold in Swine parish were
bought in 1737 by Hugh Bethell (d. 1752). (fn. 39)
Those at Arnold were commuted in 1778. (fn. 40) At
North Skirlaugh and Rowton most had been
merged in Richard Bethell's estate by 1848,
when he was awarded a rent charge of £18 4s.
8d. for the rest. (fn. 41)
ECONOMIC HISTORY
OPEN FIELDS AND INCLOSURE. North Skirlaugh and Rowton may
have had separate open fields.
North Skirlaugh. North Skirlaugh was inclosed
in 1623 under an Exchequer commission of
1622. Some 195 a. was then allotted to eight
tenants of the Crown's manor of Rise, mostly
from East field, where a 68-a. close remained
undivided in 1782. All of North field, comprising c. 45 a. and butts, and a small area in West
field, or West field 'of Rowton', were also
awarded. (fn. 42)
Rowton. The tillage at Rowton lay in North,
South, and East fields in the mid 17th century.
In 1658 Hugh, later Sir Hugh, Bethell and the
one or two other proprietors at Rowton
exchanged more than 80 a. there and at North
Skirlaugh, evidently as a preliminary to the
inclosure of Rowton. (fn. 43) Land from the former
North and South fields presumably lay respectively in the 29-a. Rowton Field close and West
Field close, of 22 a., in 1782. Many of the closes
made in both vills in the 17th century reflected
the earlier open-field divisions in their long
sinuous shapes. Intake closes recorded in 1782
suggest that there was also some piecemeal
inclosure before the 17th century. (fn. 44)
COMMONABLE GRASSLAND AND INCLOSURE.Common meadows and pastures in Arnold
township were intercommoned by the farmers
of North Skirlaugh, Rowton, and Arnold. Sir
Walter de Fauconberg and others overcharged
the 200-300 a. of marshland called Arnold and
Ryhill carrs in the 1290s, when the capacity of
the pasture was put at 8 cattle or horses, 20
sheep, 4 pigs, 5 geese, besides offspring, for each
bovate in the vills. (fn. 45) The carrs and ings were
reached by a way made or confirmed in the 17th
century which led westwards from the road at
Rowton into Wood House Lane. (fn. 46) They were
inclosed in 1778. (fn. 47)
Another common pasture was Mill Holme. In
the earlier 13th century freemen of North
Skirlaugh and Rowton had given Swine priory
land, including 'Milnehol', and meadow, with
power to inclose but reserving certain pasturage
rights, (fn. 48) and in 1577, after the priory's dissolution, farmers of North Skirlaugh and Rowton
successfully defended their right to common
pasturage for cattle between August and March
in Mill Holme against the tenants of that land. (fn. 49)
It was then claimed, however, and later accepted, that the land was a detached part of
South Skirlaugh, and in 1885 the c. 35 a. (14
ha.) were transferred to Benningholme. (fn. 50) In
1657 Hugh Bethell bought Mill Holme close,
which evidently comprised North Holmes,
adjoining Rowton, South Holmes, next to
Benningholme, and a lane called Outgangs. By
exchange and lease Bethell obtained common
rights in the Holmes and Outgangs in 1658, and
the area probably ceased to be commonable soon
afterwards. (fn. 51)
FARMS. Meaux abbey's grange at Rowton,
including a few acres in Benningholme ings,
comprised c. 200 a., or 9½ bovates. The abbey
had withdrawn from direct exploitation of the
grange by the late 14th century, when it was
recorded as let for £3 5s. a year, though scarcely
worth £1 10s. in an average year. (fn. 52)
The Bethells' estate at North Skirlaugh and
Rowton comprised most of the township in 1782
and was then occupied as 14 holdings; one farm
comprised 161 a., five others c. 40-70 a. each,
one 27 a., and two 14 a. each; the other holdings
were of an acre or two. (fn. 53) By 1852 the 12 holdings
in the township included two farms with c.
150 a. each there, two others, one mostly in
Riston and Arnold, with c. 60 a. in the township,
and three with some 10-24 a. each. (fn. 54) In 1915
Rowton farm comprised 297 a., of which 57 a.
were in Arnold and Benningholme, and North
Skirlaugh Grange 154 a.; 68 a. more in the township were held with a Rise farm and there were
nine other holdings, all of 25 a. or less. (fn. 55) In the
earlier 20th century the farms at North
Skirlaugh and Rowton included one or two
dairy units. (fn. 56)
MILL AND FISHERY. Swine priory's mill at
Rowton, recorded in 1241, and its water mill
at North Skirlaugh in 1536 (fn. 57) were probably the
same; the water mill evidently stood on Lambwath stream close to Water Mill bridge. (fn. 58) The
stream was probably also used for the priory's
fishery at North Skirlaugh. (fn. 59)
TRADES. Weavers worked at North Skirlaugh in the mid 19th century, (fn. 60) and a building
firm operated there in 1994.
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
Tenants of Rise
manor owed suit to its court, the rights of which
in North Skirlaugh, Rowton, and Arnold were
said to have been infringed in the early 17th
century by officers of the wapentake court. (fn. 61)
A poorhouse was maintained at North Skirlaugh. (fn. 62) In North Skirlaugh, Rowton, and part
of Arnold together 3-5 people were relieved permanently in the early 19th century, and 4-7
were given occasional relief between 1812 and
1815. (fn. 63) North Skirlaugh joined Skirlaugh poorlaw union in 1837, (fn. 64) and the township, later civil
parish, remained in Skirlaugh rural district until
1935. As part of Riston and later of Skirlaugh
civil parish, it was included in the new
Holderness rural district in 1935 and at reorganization in 1974 was taken into the Holderness
district of Humberside. (fn. 65) In 1996 Skirlaugh
parish became part of a new East Riding unitary area. (fn. 66)
EDUCATION
Arnold and North Skirlaugh
together had two schools in 1833, possibly one
in each place. One of the schools had been begun
in 1829 and each was attended by a dozen boys
and girls, all of whom, except for a few girls sent
by Mrs. Bethell, were paid for by their parents. (fn. 67)
CHARITY FOR THE POOR
The poor of
North Skirlaugh and Rowton shared in the
eleemosynary charity of Marmaduke Langdale
(d. 1611). (fn. 68)