FYLINGDALES
Figclinge (xi cent.); Figelinge, Fielinge (xi-xii
cent.); ? Saxeby (xii cent.).
This parochial chapelry lies south of Whitby
parish and contains the villages of Robin Hood's Bay
and Thorpe, or Fyling Thorpe (Prestethorpe, xiii
cent.), (fn. 1) and the hamlets of Normanby, Parkgate,
Ramsdale, Raw (Fyling Rawe, xvi cent.), (fn. 2) and Stoupe
Brow. The area is 13,325 acres of land and inland
water (fn. 3) ; the foreshore, which extends at the foot of
Fylingdales Moor, common to the townships of
Fylingdales and Hawsker-cum-Stainsacre, (fn. 4) is 364
acres. (fn. 5) In Fylingdales township there are 1,924 acres
of arable land, 2,693 of permanent grass and 257 of
woods and plantations. (fn. 6) The soils of the cliffs are
Upper Lias shale capped by the Dogger and False
Bedded Sandstones and shales of the Lower Oolite.
Whitby Abbey had a lime-kiln here in 1394–5. (fn. 7)
Alum used to be worked at Stoupe Brow and Peak,
and it was stated in 1831 that a decrease of 167 in
the population was due to the extinction of this
industry. (fn. 8) There are brick and tile-works at High
Normanby and at Quarry Hill, Raw. The chief
crops raised are barley and oats; most of the land is
in pasture. The height varies from 75 ft. to 100 ft.
above ordnance datum on the cliffs to 775 ft. on the
moors.
The abbot's park is mentioned in 1404, (fn. 9) the
woods of Middlewood, Ramsdale and 'Marchescow' (fn. 10) in 1240, when the abbot granted Richard de
Fyling estover in the last two and pasture in the
first. (fn. 11) The mill of Fylingdales was granted to
Whitby Abbey by its founder, (fn. 12) and may have been
the mill of South Fyling mentioned in 1394. (fn. 13)
Fyling Old Hall in the township of Thorpe, not
far from Fyling Beck and Fyling station, was leased
by the abbey in 1539. (fn. 14) It is a sandstone building
with a new slated roof, mullioned windows and a
wide black oak staircase. Near it a sepulchral urn and
old hand-mills were excavated in 1830. (fn. 15) Sir Hugh
Cholmley sold Fyling Hall and demesnes in 1634 to
Sir John Hotham, (fn. 16) who shut the gates of Hull
against the king, but was executed with his eldest
son on suspicion of deserting the Parliamentary
cause. (fn. 17) The Hothams (fn. 18) held an estate here including
the hall and mill until the 18th century. (fn. 19)
Two miles north-east is Robin Hood's Bay, where
the manorial courts are now held. No mention of
the place under that name has been found until the
visit of Leland about 1538, when he described it as
'a fischer tounlet of 20 bootes caullid Robyn Huddes
Bay, a dok or bosom of a mile yn lenghth.' (fn. 20) It
appears in 1540 among the abbey lands, (fn. 21) as it must
always have been, inclosed as it is by them. Possibly
it was included in North Fyling (fn. 22) before it was
known by its present name. (fn. 23)
Robin Hood's Bay, like Whitby, Staithes and
other old fishing villages of this coast, is built in a
fissure between two steep cliffs and shows the same
sandstone cottages, sometimes whitewashed and usually
surmounted by red-tiled roofs, the same high flights
of steps from the street to the house, and narrow
passages leading from one street to another at a different
level. The main street, Station Road, descends from
the cliff, where stand the manor-house, the railway
station, many new houses and the new church of
St. Stephen, passes the Victoria Hotel, half-way down
to the village, passes through the village, crossing
King's Beck (called Thorpe Beck higher up), and as
New Road reaches the beach (composed entirely of
scars) by a cobbled exit known as the Way Foot.
An embankment protects the houses on the cliff for
a short distance on each side. A new hotel near the
Way Foot has replaced one washed away in 1843. (fn. 24)
King Street, parallel to New Road and nearer to the
sea, runs to this point from King's Beck. In it is the
Wesleyan Methodist chapel erected in 1779, (fn. 25) in
which John Wesley preached. There was already a
small body of Methodists here in
1747. (fn. 26) A Congregational society
was formed in 1840, when the present chapel, west of Station Road,
was commenced. (fn. 27) The Society of
Friends established a meeting-house
in 1690, and had many members,
who, however, all seceded on being
forbidden to serve in ships which
carried guns. (fn. 28) A public elementary
school was opened in 1896. Just
south of the Way Foot are Marnar
Dale Beck and Yaddow Mills.
About a mile west of Robin Hood's
Bay is Thorpe, or Fyling Thorpe, at
the junction of four cross-roads. Of
these, Thorpe Lane passes the Wesleyan Methodist chapel, built in
1892, the Grange and Lingers Mill
on Lingers Beck, (fn. 29) and then descends
directly east by the new church and
vicarage of Robin Hood's Bay to
Station Road; Church Lane ascends
northwards to the disused church of
St. Stephen; a third lane goes southwest past the Green and public elementary school, built in 1812, to
Park Gate, a farm-house at the foot
of the moor. Ascending the hill to
the south, Fyling (new) Hall, Park
Hill, the residence of Mr. John
Warren Barry, J.P., High Park Wood
and Ramsdale Wood and mill are
reached. Ramsdale water-mill was
stated in the 17th century to have
belonged to Whitby Abbey. (fn. 30) There
are three waterfalls here, the highest
about 14 ft. Ramsdale Beck rises on
Kirk Moor and as Leith Rigg Beck flows through
Leith Rigg Wood, then as Ramsdale Beck descends
through Ramsdale and Low Park Woods, to the
south of which are Fyling Park and the hamlet of
Ramsdale. From Thorpe Middlewood Lane goes
south past the old Middlewood Farm to Mill Beck,
which enters the sea south of Robin Hood's Bay and
has at its mouth a mill, rebuilt, according to the
inscription, in 1839. A lane halfway up Church
Lane leads through Raw (where are Guild House
Green, Quarry Hill and Skerry Hall) on to High
Normanby close to Beacon Hill (625 ft. above the
ordnance datum). On the moor is Rigg Hall.

The Bank, Robin Hood's Bay
South of Fyling Old Hall Stoupe Beck rises at
Hogarth Hill and receives Slape Stone Beck from
Howdale Wood. At Howdale (near which is
Brigholm's) (fn. 31) there is a Wesleyan chapel and a
public elementary school. The south-east tract of the
liberty from Howdale to the sea is known as Stoupe
Brow, (fn. 32) and is sloping ground which rapidly ascends
from 75 ft. at Stoupe Beck to numerous tumuli,
among which are Robin Hood's Butts, 775 ft. above
the ordnance datum. At the topmost point is Stoupe
Brow or Peak Beacon. Near is the ancient Greendyke. Old Peak on the coast is close to Blea Wyke
Point, the southern boundary of the liberty. On
the cliffs (400 ft. above the sea) stands Raven Hall;
Captain Child's workmen employed in building it
discovered in 1774 a stone now in the Whitby
Museum with a well-preserved Roman inscription. (fn. 33)
The railway company named Peak station, on the
Ravenscar estate, Ravenscar. In the old alum quarry
here are immense boulders, known as the Two Sisters.
Raven Hill Road goes past Peak Chapel to Peak
windmill. The moors are covered with tumuli,
among them Evan Howe, Biller Howe and Blea Hill
Howe, and there is 'a remarkable quadruple rampart
half a mile long.' (fn. 34) Blea Hill Beck divides Fylingdales
from Sneaton.
Thirteenth-century names in the chapelry are
Marleflatte, Godewynegate, Collecrofte, Ryggeflatte,
Wreckflatte (fn. 35) ; others are Thirnath or Thirnhowe
(Thorney Browe, xvi cent.), Wragby, (fn. 36) Helwathe
(xiv cent.), Agatwayt, Swalowe-hede, (fn. 37) Blakamoore,
Brosell-rigge, Haskar-rigge, St. Iles Close, Foulesike
alias Wawe-myres, Langthwayte Close, (fn. 38) and Spranghill (xvi cent.; Springhill, xvii cent.), Southwell or
Southwaite House (fn. 39) (xvii cent.).

Fylingdales Old Church from the South-west
Manors
The manor of FYLING, where
1 carucate of land was at geld, belonged
to Merewin before the Conquest. In
1086 it was held by William de Percy despite the
claim of Hugh Earl of Chester, who stated that it
was appurtenant to Whitby. (fn. 40) Fyling and North
Fyling were, however, in the soke of Whitby (q.v.)
at that time. Both these vills and Normanby came
into the possession of Tancred the Fleming, and
passed with Hawsker (fn. 41) to Whitby Abbey. (fn. 42)
The Aketon (Heicheton, Eichetun) family (fn. 43) must
have been under-tenants of the Percys in South
Fyling. (fn. 44) In about 1177–81 Robert son of William
de Aketon, with the assent of William his son, granted
South Fyling to Whitby Abbey, (fn. 45) Henry II confirming the grant. (fn. 46) A Robert de Aketon confirmed
the charter of his father William and grandfather
Robert. (fn. 47) Robert de Siclinghall granted to Abbot
Roger (1223–44) 1 mark yearly, which he used to
receive from the abbey for this vill. (fn. 48)
The abbey retained the manor until the Dissolution, (fn. 49) since which time it has descended with the
liberty. (fn. 50)
A family called Fyling and also Scarborough held
lands in North Fyling and Normanby in the 13th
century. (fn. 51)
John de Everley (fn. 52) remitted to the Abbot and
convent of Whitby in c. 1275–85 all his right in the
manor of MIDDLEWOOD and other lands in
Fylingdales. (fn. 53) This manor is mentioned in 1396, (fn. 54)
and the abbey had a hall here in the 16th century. (fn. 55)
NORMANBY (Northmanby, xii cent.) was granted
to the abbey by Tancred the
Fleming in the early 12th
century, (fn. 56) and was then given
in exchange by Abbot William
to Aschetin de Newholm. (fn. 57)
The manor was probably included in the tenements granted
to the abbey by Thomas de
Hawsker in 1251–2, (fn. 58) and
became absorbed like Middlewood after 1396 (fn. 59) in the
manor of Fylingdales. Sir
Hugh Cholmley before his
marriage in 1622 sold Higher
Normanby to — Newton. (fn. 60)
The services due to the abbey
from the villeinage tenants of
South Fyling, Stoupe, &c., included 'tol, tac and mercet.' (fn. 61)
Churches
The parish
of Fylingdales
contains two
churches, the older standing
isolated on the hill-side above
the town of Robin Hood's
Bay and the later in close proximity to the railway
station. Both buildings are, however, modern, the
ancient church of ST. STEPHEN having been pulled
down about the year 1821. It contained features of
considerable antiquity, the chancel arch being a
reputed work of the Saxon period. The church
which took its place is a semi-classical building with
plain pointed windows and flat plaster ceilings. It
consists of a nave of five bays, with galleries on the
north and west sides, a shallow quire, south porch
and wooden cupola over the west end of the nave.
The new church of ST. STEPHEN, built in 1870
from the designs of G. E. Street, is a handsome if
somewhat heavy Gothic building, consisting of a nave
with south aisle, quire and tower on the south side. The
quire terminates in a semicircular apse, with a ribbed
stone vault, and an arcade of four bays having octagonal
piers with foliated capitals separates the nave and
aisle. The clearstory above consists of two-light
windows alternating with quatrefoils. The circular
stone font, tapering towards the base, was rescued
from a local farm-yard. It has a moulded rim, and
apparently dates from the 13th century.
The plate is all of modern date.
The registers begin in 1653.
Advowson
The chapel of Fyling, appurtenant to the church of Whitby,
was granted to the abbey by the
founder. (fn. 62) There have been various disputes as to
its dependency. The sum of 7s. 6d. was wrongly
taken by the Archdeacon of Cleveland as procuration
fee in 1353; the abbey then proved that Fyling was
a daughter chapel, with no ecclesiastical goods nor
any perpetual minister. (fn. 63) It passed as a chapelry
with Whitby Church (q.v.) after the Dissolution, and
the advowson still belongs to the Archbishop of
York. The rectory was granted by the Crown to
Theophilus and Robert Adams and the heirs of
Theophilus in 1583. (fn. 64) James and Henry Conyers,
fishing grantees, shortly afterwards obtained a grant
of the same, but were sued by the Archbishop of
York in 1588. Witnesses for the Conyers declared
that Fyling was a distinct church lately called a chapel
and that the tithes were paid at Fyling; but there was
neither tithe barn, glebe lands nor incumbent, and
the abbey and afterwards the archbishop always
repaired the church. Fylingdales had, however, all
sacraments and other ecclesiastical rights. (fn. 65)
A witness in 1588 said that he had been at divine
service in St. Iles Chapel, and that there was a chapel
at Stoupe, but a second witness stated that for forty
years past no service had been performed except in
St. Stephen's Church, and that of the other chapels
named one was used as a hay-house, the other as a barn;
a third witness stated that one of these two chapels
was called Fyling Hall Chapel, adjoined the manorhouse, and by report was only used privately. (fn. 66)
Fyling Hall Chapel, however, made a third, in addition to St. Stephen's. (fn. 67) The name St. Ives in the
parish now commemorates St. Iles Chapel, and there
is also a field called Chapel Garth.
Charities
Distributive Charities.—In 1640
Edward Harrison, by his will, devised
£1 4s. a year for ever for the use of
the poor, charged on land called Storr Grounds.
Another rent-charge of 13s. 4d., known as William
Bland's charity, issuing out of Flask Farm, was also
given for the poor. The two sums are added to the
communion money, and the amount is distributed
in small doles.
In 1785 Coverdale Richardson, by will, left £200
for charitable purposes, augmented in 1821 by a
legacy of £20 by will of Thomas Huntrod. The
trust funds now consist of £293 London and North
Western Railway 3 per cent. debenture stock.
In 1814 Susan Watson by will left £100, the
income to be applied for the relief of poor widows
(being housekeepers) and orphan children. The sum
is invested in £105 consols.
In 1865 John Estill left £100 for the poor,
invested in £107 9s. 5d. consols.
The several sums of stock are held by the official
trustees, and the annual dividends, amounting to
£14 1s. 10d., are, together with the share of Alice
Galilee's charity (see under Whitby), distributed at
Christmas and Whitsuntide in the vestry of the parish
church. In 1907 fifty-eight widows participated
therein.
In 1898 Miss Dorothy Barry, by will proved at
York 26 July, bequeathed a sum to the minister and
churchwardens to be invested in the Government
funds, and the income to be applied in the same
manner as her annual subscription—namely, two-fifths
to the schools, one-fifth to widows, one-fifth to the
clothing club and one-fifth to the Society for the
Propagation of the Gospel. The legacy was invested
in £90 3s. 10d. consols with the official trustees, of
which £36 1s. 6d. consols has been set aside as the
Barry Educational Foundation.
Educational Charities.—It appears from a board in
the parish church that in 1825 Watson Farside gave
£50, in 1829 John Watson gave £25, and that in
1830 the sum of £180 4s. was received in respect of
a legacy of £300 by will of Thomas Strother, there
being an insufficiency of assets.
These amounts were invested in £280 7s. 8d.
consols, now held by the official trustees, and the
dividends, amounting to £7 a year, are, together
with 18s. a year received from Miss Barry's charity,
paid to the church schools.