- History of Pocklington
The town of
Pocklington inEast Yorkshire ,England has a recorded written history that goes back around 1,500 years, and archeological evidence shows settlement at the site as long as 2,500 years ago. This gives it a longer history of settlement than larger contemporary settlements int he region and country such asYork and evenLondon . During this time, it has experienced plague, several invasions, the loss of its railway, and its marginalisation to a backwater under the Romans. Nevertheless, Pocklington has prospered where other market towns have failed. It has always been the commercial and civic centre for the district and was at one point the second largest settlement in Yorkshire [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline/details-result.asp?Edoc_Id=7582863&queryType=1&resultcount=98] . It is the focal point of an area which has seen significant events through the centuries, many influencing English history.Pocklington gets its name via the Old English "Poclintun" from the
Anglian settlement of Pocel's (or Pocela's) people and the Old English word "tun" meaning farm or settlement [A D Mills, "The Popular Dictionary of English Place-Names"] , but though the town's name can only be traced back to around 650 AD, the inhabitation of Pocklington as a site is thought to extend back a further 1000 years or more to the Bronze Age.Historical timeline
Prehistoric Pocklington
There is no evidence of any habitation at Pocklington prior to the
Bronze Age . There can have been no settled habitation anywhere in the region until at least 10,000BC when theDimlington stadial (seeIce Age ), which is thought to have driven humans south out of Britain altogether, receded. There is no archeological evidence of permanent human settlement (as opposed to shifting hunter-gatherer communities) anywhere in Yorkshire until at least 7500 BC, and none at all for habitation in Pocklington during this period. For habitation in the Pocklington area prior to the Bronze Age, see the genericPrehistoric Britain article instead.Bronze Age Pocklington
It is not known exactly when there was first a settlement at Pocklington - archaeologists have found
Iron Age remains in and around the town but it is probable that there was settlement as far back as theBronze Age (2100 to 700 BC). ManyBronze Age burials and other finds have been discovered in the neighbourhood, although nothing earlier than lateIron Age has yet been discovered within the confines of Pocklington town itself.In 1937, wooden planks belonging to an ancient boat were discovered by a local man in nearby Ferriby. Originally estimated to date from 1300 BC, newer estimates using radiocarbon dating have placed the boats between the years 1890 BC to 1700 BC.
Certainly the
Wolds area as a whole was a very attractive location for settlements to ancient man, who preferred to stay clear of the poorly drained and often flooded neighbouring vales - prior to the draining of a lot of land in the medieval era the flat land to the west and south of Pocklington was very marshy.Archaeologists have experienced problems in recovering early remains and artifacts from the area intact because of the damage and disruption caused by centuries of arable land use - one skeleton discovered in 2005 was intact apart from its skull, which had been sheared off and crushed by a plough [http://archive.thisisyork.co.uk/2004/9/11/238927.html] .
Iron Age Pocklington
Ptolemy relates that the Parisii, an ancient Briton tribe (with branches inFrance , and after whichParis itself is named) inhabited a large part of what is now theEast Riding of Yorkshire in the lateIron Age (50 BC) [Ptolemy, "Geography"] . They were probably displaced to Britain by population movements on the continent. It is possible that Pocklington was settled by the Parisii as early as the 5th century BC, but certainly by the time the Parisii participated in the general rising ofVercingetorix againstJulius Caesar in 52 B.C there is strong evidence that their regional capital was based at Pocklington itself.Archeology has also discovered a substantial late
Iron Age settlement ofroundhouses in nearby Hayton [http://www.britarch.ac.uk/BA/ba30/ba30news.html] .Romano-British Pocklington
It is during the era of the Roman occupation that Pocklington suffered something of a reversal in its development. It was eclipsed by
York as the prominent settlement within theYorkshire region, with the City ofYork effectively beginning its life during this era and swiftly eclipsing Pocklignton in size and importance. Despite Pocklington's existing status and size at the time,York was favoured as the site of the Roman cityEboracum in around AD 71. It is thought to have been selected, whilst Pocklington was ignored, because of its better water access (River Ouse, accessible viaHumber estuary ) and because it was a naturally crossing point on a plain of routes from all directions.Despite
Ermine Street (the primary Roman arterial road north from London) running close by Pocklington, the town was not garrisoned by Roman forces. A legionary barracks and important Roman town were constructed in York, which was for several years the home of the Roman Imperial Court and effectively the centre of administration for theRoman Empire , but Pocklington likely remained a Roman-influenced but little alteredIron Age settlement. There is archeological evidence for some signs ofRomanization (cultural) in Pocklington, including a Roman-style bath-house [http://www.britarch.ac.uk/cba/press97.html] .The Roman name for Pocklington is not known but it is thought that Pocklington might be the presently unlocated "Delgovicia", meaning "out of the way place" or, literally, backwater. However, Millington and Malton are competing candidates for this place-name also. By the time
Ptolemy wrote his "Geography" in approximately 140 AD, he made no mention of Pocklington but instead referred to the capital of the Romano-British Parisi as being located in "Petuaria", near modern day Brough. Given that the Parisi themselves were non-literate andPtolemy was writing at some remove, it is difficult now to know whether their capital shifted from Pocklington to Brough, or whether it was always at Pocklington, or always at Brough.Around this time, the Roman authorities raised an irregular auxiliary unit from the area, known as the
Company of Newcomers [Collingwood & Wright, "The Roman Inscriptions of Britain"] .There is also evidence of a
Roman villa just outside Pocklington [http://www.hull.ac.uk/history/staff/academic/halkonpeter.htm] , and although it is not known who occupied it, is suspected to have been aRomano-British chief.In 2004 diggers excavating the site near Pocklington unearthed fragments of a human skeleton which almost certainly dated back to Roman times. A quantity of Roman era pottery dating back to between AD70 and AD410 has also been uncovered scattered across the same field [http://archive.thisisyork.co.uk/2004/9/11/238927.html] .
It is known that at least as early as the 4th century large tracts of land in the Pocklington area and the Wolds were granted to Germanic "
Foederati " - continental warlords (possibly of theAlemanni ) who were given areas of farmland in return for military service. It is not known to what extent this influx replaced or mingled with the earlier inhabitants.Anglo-Saxon and Viking Pocklington
It is some time prior to AD 650 that Pocklington gained its current name, meaning "farmstead belonging to Pocela's people". It is not know what name Pocklington was known by prior to this date.
It is reputed the ancient kingdom of Deira has its capital nearby. It is likely that the missionary
Paulinus established the first Christian Church in Pocklington on his way fromGoodmanham to foundYork Minster . Certainly, the Sotheby Cross dating from the late 1300s in the churchyard at All Saints' Church has the inscription "Paulinus here preached and celebrated AD627".The
Great Heathen Army of theVikings captured much of the area in 866, and, in 876, their remnants settled permanently in parts of theYorkshire countryside.Viking kings ruled this area, known to historians as "TheViking Kingdom ofJorvik ", for almost a century. In 954 the lastViking king ,Eric Bloodaxe , was expelled and his kingdom was incorporated in the newly consolidated Anglo-Saxon state.High Middle Ages in Pocklington
Many English towns are able to find mention of themselves in the
Domesday Book ,William the Conqueror 's catalogue of the country. Even prior to theNorman Conquest , however, records of Pocklington are found in taxation census' of Anglo Saxon kings.Pocklington steadily evolved from Anglo Saxon times as the centre of the surrounding agricultural area. Before the Norman conquest, when King Harold's brother-in-law
Earl Morcar was Lord of the Manor, it was a prosperous settlement.Late Middle Ages - Medieval Pocklington
The
Battle of Stamford Bridge was fought just 4 miles from Pocklington, and was the first of two major battles in that year for control of the country (the other being theBattle of Hastings . The former marked the end ofViking rule inEngland and the latter ushered in a period of Norman rule.After the
Norman conquest the manor at Pocklington became a royal manor - with the Percy family as the King's overlords - and under this royal patronage, Pocklington continued to prosper. Pocklington was recorded in theDomesday Book as "Poclinton" [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/documentsonline/details-result.asp?Edoc_Id=7582863&queryType=1&resultcount=98] and, given its current size, it is surprising to note that at the time of Domesday (1086) it is recorded as being the second largest settlement inYorkshire afterYork itself, showing clearly that it had bounced back from its marginalisation in Roman Britain.Pocklington developed through the
Middle Ages while many similar places fell into dramatic decline. Pocklington owed much of its prosperity in theMiddle Ages to the fact it was a local centre for the trading ofwool and that it lay on the main road toYork , an important national centre for the export of wool to the Continent. Wool wasEngland ’s principal export in theMiddle Ages .A weekly market and regular fairs in the town were held by
Royal Charter in 1245. Regular fairs continued until the early 1900s.The town's All Saints' Church is the only survivor from the
Middle Ages . Known as the "Cathedral of the Wolds", it dates from the late 12th to early 15th centuries. Although containing some fragments of the earlier Norman church, its foundations go back further to the original Saxon era. The clerestory is 13th Century and the tower is 15th.Parish records show that the
Black Death (thebubonic plague ) struck Pocklington hard in 1350, a year after its first outbreak in London and the south coast.Pocklington School was originally founded in 1514 as the Guild of the Parish Church by senior churchmen and politicianJohn Dolman . His family became Lords of the Manor in the 14th Century.In 1400 Pocklington was one of 30
East Riding of Yorkshire settlements which could be termedmarket towns . By 1750 there were just 10 and Pocklington was one. Over the next 150 years the town trebled in size with a host of new trades joining existing agricultural, brewing and milling interests.Early Modern Period in Pocklington
Pocklington has one of the few
Cromwellian charters in the country. The town charter was granted on the 8 September 1656, one of the few duringOliver Cromwell 's 11 years.Pocklington also lays claim to being the last place in
England to hold a witch burning. In 1630 the parish register for that year records Old Wife Green burnt in Market for a witch.In 1848 a cache of more than 500 coins from 1500 to 1700 was found on the edge of town.
And 19 years later, the town's most notorious resident
Isabella Bilington aged 32 was sentenced to death at York Assizes for crucifying her mother at Pocklington. After the killing she burnt a calf and a cock as a sacrifice. Her husband too was hanged as an accomplice.Early Industrial Pocklington
William Wilberforce wrote his first public letter against the slave trade while atPocklington School from 1771-76 and went on to be the driving force behind theabolition of slavery in the early 19th Century. This is celebrated by the broken linked chain in the present town coat of arms.John Wesley , the founder ofMethodism , was a frequent visitor to Pocklington in the late 1700s, and is among several notable churchmen, bishops and titular archbishops, born or educated in the town. A WesleyanMethodist Church survives in use in Pocklington to this day.Entertainment also earned the town notoriety. The celebrated
Flying Man of Pocklington ,Thomas Pelling , attempted in 1733 to travel along a rope between the church and theStar Inn in the Market Square. He crashed to his death fracturing his skull against the wall of the church following a misunderstanding with men working the windlass. He is buried where he fell at the east end of the church where a plaque celebrates his memory.In 1759 a Pocklington brewer called Timothy Overland received a piece of land on the
York toBeverley road on the southern fringe of Pocklington and built the Pocklington New Inn. By 1778, the establishment was a prosperous Coach House at the height of the coaching era. The building is still in the same use today as the Pocklington Motel.By this time the seat of the Lord of the Manor had transferred to
Kilnwick Percy Hall . The present house was built in 1784 although there had been a hall there for many centuries. Unfortunately, a large section of it fell into disrepair and was pulled down during the 1940s. The remainder has (belatedly) been classed as aGrade II listed Georgian mansion.19th Century Pocklington
Steady further growth continued during the 19th century which saw much of the town completely rebuilt.
In 1814, an act of parliament was passed for making a navigable canal from East Cottingwith to Street Bridge (about a mile from Pocklington). An early draft of this Parliamentary act was recently discovered in the attic of a Pocklington house [http://www.pocklingtontoday.co.uk/ViewArticle2.aspx?SectionID=996&ArticleID=557007] . By 1818 the
Pocklington Canal linked Pocklington to the River Derwent. It fell into disuse with the decline of Britain's canals but has been continuously resurrected by the Pocklington Canal Amenity Society since 1971 and the old mill house is now classed as a Grade II listed water mill of historic interest: most of the mill mechanism still exists.In 1821, the entire parish contained 2,163 inhabitants, of which 1,962 were of the township of Pocklington itself. [http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/YKS/ERY/Pocklington/Pocklington29.html]
In 1868, Pocklington's inhabitants are described as being "for the most part employed in agricultural pursuits, and in ropemaking, brickmaking, brewing, and malting. There are besides corn mills, iron foundries, and agricultural implement manufactories which materially contribute to the industrial wealth of the town." [http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/eng/YKS/ERY/Pocklington/Pocklington68.html]
In 1890, extensive repairs and alterations were made to All Saints' Church and, in a foreshadowing of modern interest in "time capsules", a message detailing the work was sealed in a glass bottle along with an 1890 newspaper and buried underneath the plith of the medieval Sotheby Cross. Unearthed accidentally during repairs in 2005, the sealed message and a copy of the 1890 newspaper were re-buried in the same spot, along with a contemporary copy of the Pocklington Post [http://www.pocklingtontoday.co.uk/ViewArticle2.aspx?SectionID=996&ArticleID=1118527] .
20th Century Pocklington
The group of five airfields based in and around Pocklington played an active role in the
Second World War . Pocklington Airfield was completed in April 1941. The first operational unit to occupy Pocklington was the Canadian No. 405 Squadron with Wellington aircraft, but in 1942 the RAF's 102 (Ceylon) Squadron took over the airfield, flying night sorties to bomb targets in France. They still hold an annual reunion in Pocklington. It was disbanded on20 October 1954 .During
the second world war a few houses inPocklington were subject to bombing, after their street was mistaken for the airfield.Those serving on HMS "Volage" also keep close ties with the town that adopted them during the war, sending letters and parcels. The association with Pocklington continues with a new housing estate being named 'Volage Court' in recognition of the links with HMS "Volage" [http://www.pocklington.gov.uk/pocklingtons-connection-with-hms-volage.htm] .
Pocklington used to be served by a railway connection but this was closed in the
Beeching Report era of the1950s . Some existing lengths of trackway can be seen behind the old railway station (now used as a bus stop). There has been some talk of bringing the railway line back to Pocklington but there has been substantial development along the original line after the land was sold off and the original route is no longer practical. There are serious doubts also as to the financial feasibility of re-opening the line.Pocklington experienced a rapid expansion in the final two decades of the twentieth century, with large amounts of "green land" being ceded to new housing development to meet the demands of both lower housing occupancy rates (a trend common across the country) and also demand for commuter belt housing for the cities of York and Leeds.
Throughout its long history, Pocklington has faced difficult times like recession, wartime and the closing of the railway, but each time the town has overcome and gone on to develop further.
References
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