Linton, West Yorkshire

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Linton
Linton village hall.jpg
Linton village hall
Linton is located in West Yorkshire
Linton
Linton
 Linton shown within West Yorkshire
OS grid reference SE389468
Civil parish Collingham with Linton
Metropolitan borough City of Leeds
Metropolitan county West Yorkshire
Region Yorkshire and the Humber
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town WETHERBY
Postcode district LS22
Dialling code 01937
Police West Yorkshire
Fire West Yorkshire
Ambulance Yorkshire
EU Parliament Yorkshire and the Humber
UK Parliament Elmet and Rothwell
List of places
UK
England
Yorkshire

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File:Road sign with Grid Reference - geograph.org.uk - 244304.jpg
Road sign with Grid Reference. These old road signs make it easy to check exactly where you are.

Linton is a village 1.5 miles (2.4 km) south west of Wetherby, West Yorkshire, England in the parish of Collingham and the City of Leeds metropolitan borough. The village is situated between Wetherby and Sicklinghall, on the River Wharfe. Collingham lies immediately to the south on the other side of the river. There is no longer any appreciable break between Linton and the western edge of Wetherby.[citation needed]

History

Little is known of the early history of the village, but archaeologists have dated over 8000 local flints to between 10,000 and 2000 BC, and crop marks around the village point to ditched enclosures and field systems in the Iron Age and Roman period (800 BC – AD 410). Roman artifacts have also been found, and in 1936, a Roman burial site was identified to the north of the village. The village is mentioned in Domesday, where it is valued higher than Wetherby. The Anglo-Saxon place name means "flax farm". There was a now-vanished medieval chapel in the village, possibly founded by the Percy family, who once owned the village.[1]

A Topographical Dictionary of England (1848, ed. Samuel Lewis) calls it "a township, in the parish of Spofforth, Upper division of the wapentake of Claro, W. riding of York, 1¾ mile (W. by S.) from Wetherby; containing 169 inhabitants. The township comprises by computation 1030 acres. The village is situated on the north side of the vale of the Wharfe. A rent-charge of £257. 10. has been awarded as a commutation for the tithes. There is a place of worship for Wesleyans."[2] A correspondent writing in the Leeds Mercury on 8 September 1874 notes, "On the opposite side of the Wharfe [from Collingham], perched on the hillside, is the picturesque village of Linton, the most conspicuous object being a neat Wesleyan chapel."[3] According to Kelly's Directory of 1893, Linton had four farms, a school (founded about 1859, later a church and now a dwelling house), a manor house (c. 1650 but much altered), and a public house (The Windmill Inn). The population of Linton in the 1920s was only 130.

The golf course on Linton Ings was opened in 1910. The architect William Alban Jones was responsible for several new houses built in the Arts and Crafts Movement style around the old hub of the village in the 1920s, and also for the small Memorial Hall (1947).[4]

Facilities

The village has one pub - the Windmill Inn on Main Street, which has a restaurant.[5] There is no shop or school. Wetherby golf club is situated in Linton. The historic Wood Hall Hotel and Spa (Hand Picked Hotels) is situated on the outskirts of the village; this has function rooms and health club facilities.[6] There is a guest house called Linton Close overlooking Linton Ings.[7] The Memorial Hall has a car park and tennis courts.[citation needed]

Worship

The village no longer has a place of worship. It forms part of the Anglican ecclesiastical parish of Wetherby with Linton, served by St James's Church in Wetherby.[8] There is a community of Carmelite nuns in a modern house near Wood Hall.[9]

Notable people

  • Geoffrey Appleyard (1916–1943), an army officer of commandos much decorated in World War II, was brought up in Linton.[10]
  • Ian Appleyard (1923–1998), brother of Geoffrey, was a rally driver and ornithologist.[11]
  • Owen Lattimore (1900-1989), eminent American scholar of Mongolia and China, and Central Asia generally, lived in the village for a time during the 1960s while he was the first Professor of Chinese at the University of Leeds. Even in his sixties he often cycled the twelve hilly miles to the University.

References

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External links