Sleights

Sleights is a village in North Yorkshire, England. Located in the Esk Valley in the postal region of Whitby, the village is part of the civil parish of Eskdaleside cum Ugglebarnby and the borough of Scarborough. Sleights lies along the steep main A169 road that runs north to south between Whitby and Malton via Pickering across the North York Moors.

Sleights
Sleights Sports Ground (top right) with the village behind
Sleights is located in North Yorkshire
Sleights
Sleights
Location within North Yorkshire
OS grid referenceNZ868069
Civil parish
District
Shire county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townWHITBY
Postcode districtYO22
Dialling code01947
PoliceNorth Yorkshire
FireNorth Yorkshire
AmbulanceYorkshire
UK Parliament

At the bottom of the village, the road crosses the Esk Valley Railway, allowing access to Sleights railway station. The road crosses the River Esk on a high bridge, opened on 26 January 1937.[1] The road continues up the hill to reach the A171 Whitby to Middlesbrough trunk road. At the top of the village is Blue Bank. Due east of the village is the hamlet of Iburndale.

Due to road accidents, Blue Bank, with a gradient of 1 in 4 (25%), has an escape lane of soft sand.

The Horticultural & Industrial Society show has been held each year since 1880. Since 2006 the show has been held on the sports field, with classes for produce, fruit, flowers vegetables, crafts, cake decorating, photography, flower arranging etc. Additional attractions include a bouncy castle, face painting, tombola and a fun dog show. The infamous Victorian forger Edward Simpson was born here in 1815.

Amenities

There is a village shop, a branch of the Spar chain, a post office, tearoom, two public houses, a butchers, Botham’s bakers, a fish and chip restaurant and a hair dressers salon.

Sport

The village sports field, which is mainly used for cricket, has a new pavilion built in 2006. The money for the new build was collected through local fundraising.[2] Until 2018, the cricket team used to play in the Eskdale League on Saturdays. In June 2011, a new Sleights Football club was formed and joined the Scarborough and District Saturday League, with several players coming from Sleights, but training and playing at Caedmon School in Whitby. They were promoted from the league's Third Division to the First in the space of two seasons. They joined the Beckett Football League in 2017 and returned to play at Lowdale Lane in the village after a 20-year absence on Saturday 23 September 2018. Their first game back home was a 4–1 win over Kirkbymoorside Reserves, Joe Hugill scored the first goal.[3] There is also a bowls club which is used by people from Sleights and neighbouring towns and villages.

Education

The village contains only one school, Sleights Church of England primary school. The school has approximately 100 pupils and is graded as Good by Ofsted and SIAMS (2019). Students aged over 11 years old travel to nearby schools in Whitby.

Religion

St John's Church

There are three places of worship in the village, St John's Church of England Church, dedicated to St John the Evangelist, English Martyrs Roman Catholic Church, on Eskdaleside and, at the bottom of the village, the Briggswath and Sleights Methodist Chapel. The churchyard of St John's is the burial place for all denominations in the parish. The author Alfred J. Brown and his wife are buried there.[4]

Name

First found in a document from 1223 as Sleghtesc.[5] Like other place names in Yorkshire, the etymology of Sleights is Old Norse.[6][7] It means 'smooth or level fields'[8] from slétta[9] 'flat land, plain, prairie', like the Norman place name Eslettes (Esletis ab. 1040),[10][11] same etymology as many places in Denmark called Sletten.[12]

Notes

  1. "A169 Road". SABRE – Roaders Digest. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  2. "Perfect day for pavilion opening". Whitby Gazette. 8 September 2006. Retrieved 13 November 2015.
  3. "Sleights FC Eye Return Home". Yorkshire Coast Radio. 25 January 2018. Retrieved 13 February 2018.
  4. White, John A. Alfred John Brown – Walker, Writer and Passionate Yorkshire Man (Smith Settle, 2016) ISBN 978-1-5262-0511-7
  5. A. D. Mills, A Dictionary of British Place Names, Oxford University Press, 2011, ISBN 9780199609086 (read online)
  6. Mills
  7. François de Beaurepaire, Les Noms des communes et anciennes paroisses de la Seine-Maritime, A. et J. Picard, foreword Marianne Mulon, 1979, Paris, ISBN 2-7084-0040-1, oclc 6403150, p.70.
  8. Mills
  9. Mills
  10. Beaurepaire
  11. Ernest Nègre, Toponymie générale de la France (on line)
  12. Beaurepaire
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