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North Cave

North Cave maps

Historic maps of North Cave and the local area, hand-drawn by Ordnance Survey and Samuel Lewis.   View all North Cave maps

North Cave photos

We have no photos of North Cave, although we do have photos of these nearby places:

Hotham| South Cave| Newport| Brantingham| Gilberdyke| Elloughton| Brough| Welton| Little Weighton| Market Weighton| Holme-On-Spalding-Moor| North Ferriby

North Cave area books

Displaying 1 of 1 books about North Cave and the local area.   View all books for this area

North Cave books
View all 1 North Cave and North Humberside books

Memories of North Cave

North Cave memories
Read and share North Cave memories

Displaying a selection of personal memories of North Cave.
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Land Mine North Cave

Does anyone remember the land mine that landed behind the church in World War 11 and blew all the east wing windows in ?? I came to live in North Cave as a small boy of 5 years old in 1935 and have many wartime memories. I lived there until 1960 when I moved to London. I am a frequent visitor to North Cave and would be very interested to meet up with, or hear from anybody who may remember me or my family, especially Mrs Maureen Judge.

Nordham 1957

I started work for Mr and Mrs Judge at Nordham as a groom for Ballymore, a racehorse who had broken his leg. I spent a happy year riding this wonderful horse, many miles all over the East Riding. I also had a chestnut horse to exercise. At that time, Ruby was a cook in the big house. I lived in lodgings, with Mr and Mrs Mann. Also joined the youth club and started old time dancing with John Allison, son of the postmistress. We won bronze, silver, gold medals - also a Gold Bar. He then went of to Oxford University.

North Humberside memories

South Cave Market Place

My husband Bill and I married in Brantingham Church on a cold day in January 1959, the snow lay thickly on the ground. We moved into Holderness Cottage, adjoining Holderness House, the home of Mrs Dunn, an elderly lady of whom we became great friends. The cottage was right next to the Town Hall, Mr & Mrs Doug Thornham lived upstairs in the Hall. Every hour the clock on the Town Hall chimed out and vibrated in the cottage, but funnily enough we eventually got so used to the noise, if the clock ever stopped we seemed to notice immmediately! It was a very small cottage, two bedrooms and two small rooms downstairs with no proper bathroom. I had my 3 children there and we lived there until 1970 when we bought our own home in Wesley Close. We lived there until 1981 and then moved back to 66 Market Place, the home of my in-laws who had just recently then passed away within a short time of each... Read more

Church Cottage Brantingham East Yorkshire

My twin sister and I were born at Church Cottage in 1939. I am the youngest of 9 children born to the Medforth family, 6 of whom are still living. My mum and dad were the caretakers of Brantingham church for nearly 40 years. Dad was the local gravedigger for Brantingham, Elloughton and Ellerker, all done by hand in those days. He also mowed the grass in the churchyard, looked after the boiler in the church and any jobs which needed doing at the church. He also mowed the grasses around the village and kept the becksides mowed using a scythe, and cleaned the becks out with the help of some of the men in the village. He was also the local barber meeting his clients very often in the Triton, were most of the village men gathered for a chinwag and a singsong. Dad had a great voice and loved to get everyone joining in, especially after a few pints! The Triton was owned by the Watsons in those... Read more

The Cottages. Sandholme Road

Moved into Sandholme Road in 1954 from Howden. Father and grandfather bought The Cottages at auction and I lived there until going to college in 1970. My parents stayed there until 1983 when they moved into Laburnum Walk, where my mother still lives. Typical of many villages of the type, walk through it once and you have seen it twice. Living as I do now in Bedlington, Northumberland it is quite a way to visit but we get down when we can. I went to the old Gilberdyke primary as did my father and grandfather. (Ironically my father spent his last few years in the old school when it was turned into a nursing home). Passing the eleven plus meant I went to Goole Grammar School (thankfully before it went comprehensive. When I was young, the modern estates weren't built and rates were cheap. The aircraft works at Brough provided much of the work and gradually Gilberdyke became a dormitory village servicing Hull and Goole. I bought a BSA Bantam... Read more

Cooks Shop

The Village c1960
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The building on the left is Cooks shop and you are looking up towards the Main Road. On the right in the foreground is the entrance to the Gilberdyke Memorial Hall & playing fields. Behind the Morris oxford is where the new fish shop and post office is now built. About in the middle of the photo on the left of the road was Chippy Dolans shop, a little wooden building that served the best chips in the world!

Willow Garth

My Grandparents Arthur and Gladys Gossop lived at Willow Garth, opposite the White Horse Pub.  Grandad bought it with his Army money.  He built a workshop, and began a business which included Wheelwright, Joiner and Contractor.  He made coffins and walked in funeral processions with his best top hat on.  He put piped water, WCs and a bathroom into the house, and did the same in Dad's house in York.  He had a bakelite telephone and always a car - first a little black one with orange indicators which stuck out to the side between the doors (one day the rain was coming through the roof when we went to the foundry and I saw the smith pour liquid metal into a sand mould to make a drain cover).  Later he had a very swell green Humber Hawk with red leather seats and I got to sit on the armrest (no seatbelts of course).  His brother Bristow also lived with them and was employed in the business.  Bristow had one... Read more

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