Introduction
Life in Oswaldkirk has reflected most of
the changes in the outside world during the 1900s and, being a small
community of around 100 families, these changes have probably been
more personal than in the country at large.
The Church in the early 1900s
In 1900, St Oswald's church had just been
restored and decorated in the High Anglican style under the care of
The Revd Henry Temple, who was also Chancellor of York
Minster. He died in 1904 after 23 years as Rector and was
followed by The Revd John Bennett until 1919. The stained glass on
the South side was put in in BennettÌs time.

St Oswald's Church
before 1885.

St Oswald's Church
in the 1920s.
Colonel Benson's Kingdom
In 1907, all the land and buildings in the
village to south of the ridge, except the Church, the Rectory and
four small houses along the Terrace, were owned by Col Benson who
lived at Oswaldkirk Hall. He also owned most of the land to the
south of the village. The land beyond the top of the hill was part
of the Feversham Estate, and to the east was Leysthorpe, a separate
parish and a Îlost villageÌ now linked to Stonegrave. The building
and maintenance work was based in the 'Estate Yard', opposite the
Old Post Office. The Estate Yard later evolved into a saw mill, and
then a garage. Since then Rosegarth, Kirkstone Cottage, Hollygarth
and Little Paddocks have been built on the site.
The
Village School
There was a village school, which had its
beginnings in the 18th century as can be seen in charity bequests
for educating some poor children of the parish, for repairs to the
school and payment of a school master.

The old Village
School now Southlands.
By the 20th century the school was
situated in what is now Southlands with the schoolmaster, John
Rushton, living in the end house, now Laurel
Cottage. The school playground and swing were across the
Terrace in what is now the upper lawn and garden of Ledbrooke House.
Rushton was also the village registrar and his wife Elizabeth played
the harmonium in St OswaldÌs church for 14 years. The window
opposite the Harmonium Chamber was dedicated in her memory in
1909.
In the first few years of the century a
school inspector reported that the school was not doing very well
and the sanitation was not up to the standards of the day - in the
absence of main drainage that must have been quite a problem. In
1908 a dispute between the managers and Col. Benson, who owned the
building, led to the school's closure. The children then walked to
Gilling school each day. The path they took led across the fields
and through Spring Wood where it joined the Gilling road. This
continued until the late 1940s when school buses first
appeared.
The
Post Office and Shop

Post Office and shop
in the 1920s.
In 1910, 'The Colonel' completed a village
shop and Post Office, which served the village well until the rise
of the Car Age in the 1960s, which transformed village life in many
ways. The Gatenby family were shopkeepers and postpeople until the
1950s. Before the new Post Office was built, there had been one in
Ivy Cottage, next door. An even earlier post office is marked on the
1834 survey - on the Bank, just above what is now School
House.
In the 1930s the Gatenbys opened the
'Bide-a-wee Cafe'. This flourished mainly in the summer
months and took the form of a marquee in the present yard. The
guy rope fastenings are still in place.
Village Population and Houses
The population of the village was very
similar at the beginning of the 19th century to what it is today,
but with fewer buildings. Many of the older buildings were multiple
houses. Weigelia and Bramleys were both double cottages - one up,
one down with a ladder instead of a staircase. East Cottage was
three houses - two until the 1950s. The east end of Manor Farm
was a separate house, Well Cottage, with a gate by the present post
box. Bank Cottage was two houses until the First World War and
Rigg Cottage was also two houses, with the Dales and Mrs Skilbeck in
the east part, and the Beecrofts in the west.
The
New Village Hall
Col. Benson's next venture was building
the New Village Hall in 1913. This was a huge building for a
village of this size, with a maple floor, 44x35ft,
suspended on coil springs to add to the pleasure of the
dancers. One of the popular dances of the 20s was the ÎPalais
GlideÌ, in which every couple swung together to one side of the hall
and then to the other. 'The Colonel' banned this as it made the
floor move violently on its springs. He did not allow country
dancing either, which had to be one in the loft of the Malt Shovel
barn beside the village hall, with access by ladder.

The Village Hall
(south end).
Col. Benson was unmarried, but lived with
a formidable housekeeper called Mrs Horner. They used to preside at
village dances from a balcony over the main entrance. Working boots
were forbidden in case they damaged the floor. There were ÎproperÌ
toilets, a billiard room, committee rooms and a kitchen.
The
Village Blacksmith
The Village Blacksmith and Joiner,
William Stabler, lived in what is now East Cottage and worked
in what is now the garage and the various sheds which still exist
behind it up the hill.
George Skilbeck, the village joiner, was
the son of Dick Skilbeck, who was joiner at Gilling village
and a keen cricketer. George married Amy Rounthwaite, who
worked at Grimston Manor, and they moved into the old Oswaldkirk
school building. Daughter Mona was born in 1915 and son Dick in
1916.
William's son Jim took over the business
in the early 1900s and moved to Sunnyside, (now St Gregory's), which
had more space and a well. Jim continued to work there until the
early 1940s, by which time horses were beginning to be replaced by
tractors. The Stablers were succeeded by Martin Makin,
the joiner and his wife Mary, who had a small draper's shop just inside the
front door.
The
Great War
Twenty three of the ladies of the village
formed a 'Working Party' in the village hall to provide warm
clothing for the soldiers and sailors Îat the FrontÌ . The group was
led by Mrs Ellison Horner, as recorded on the plaque in the present
village hall.
There was still no mains water supply and
although many houses had their own wells, the Terrace houses
drew water from a hand pump on the well down the Gilling Road, now
at the entrance to Holly Tree House.
George Skilbeck marched away from the Bank
Top to join the 'War to end all wars' and was killed near Rouen in
1918. Three other village families suffered a similar
tragedy.
When George went off to France, The
Colonel moved Mrs Skilbeck and family into Laurel Cottage. This move
was so that Amy would not have to negotiate the steps of the
School with two small children and a pram. It also gave her a
house with a garden in which she could dispose of the household
waste. Earlier this had to carried up the bank to the garden
opposite the police house, now Sunnybank.
The
1920s
A more normal life resumed after the war.
Col. Benson built Cliff House in 1919 and Cragg Cottage in 1922.
Both were in the sites of old quarries. The Bungalow was built at
about the same time.
Many families kept a cow and a few pigs
and some of the old sheds can still be seen. The cows were grazed
on the relatively flat land at the top of the bank above the village
to the south of the Bank Top fields and wall. The cows were
driven down in the evening, for watering and milking, along
the footpath behind The Mount quarry to the pond at the entrance to
Birch Bank field.
The roads at the Bank Top did not follow
the existing lines, and there was a grass triangle with a signpost
in the middle of the junction. Round the signpost was a seat on
which, the mostly male, residents used to sit and smoke and put the
world to rights. The triangle was only removed in the 1960s in the
interests of road safety.
The old Police House on the hill, now
Sunnybank, was built in the mid 1800s and had three lock up cells -
mainly used for the Drunk & Disorderly.

The Village
lock-up.
The
Water Supply
Col. Benson's next major project was to
improve the rather basic water supply system which existed before
the 1914 -1918 War. The first artesian well was just to the north of
the road beyond the Hall. The back wall of the shed can still be
seen. The pressure and flow were not great.
The water collected in one of two large
underground tanks across the road from which it ran by gravity to
the Hall and a few other houses. The other tank was for ÎsoftÌ or
surface water used for washing as the ground water was very hard.
Both types of water were pumped by hand to tanks for use on the
upper floors of the Hall and Rectory.

Artesian well.
A new well was drilled in the 1920s
near the quarry by Hag Cottage (this was originally two
cottages). The pressure from the well shot a jet of water high
into the air. The village blacksmith, Jim Stabler, was there.
This high pressure water was then piped along the village to the end
of the Terrace and up to Cliff House and the Bungalow in about
1924.
Harry Maynard lived at the Police House at
that time and had to carry his water up from the tap in the road
side where the Cliff House drive is now (this tap was only removed
in the 1970s).
Water for Bank Top Farm was taken from the
tap at Sunnyside (now St Gregory's) in a horse drawn tank, or else
by yoke and buckets from the roadside tap. The Artesian Well
is still operating and has sufficient pressure to deliver water to
the new Hall Farm on the top of the hill.
The water itself came from a considerable
depth and contained a high level of iron sulphides, which gave it a
smell of rotten eggs and a red/brown deposit anywhere it was allowed
to stand in contact with the air. It was actually very healthy to
drink, but visitors did not always appreciate this.
Col. Benson began to build another house
up the track beyond 'The Mount'. The back wall and water tap
can still be seen, but this project was an early victim of planning
regulations, and was never completed.
The
Electricity Supply
Colonel Benson's last major contribution
to the village was the Electricity Supply, which was one of
the first in the area. He thought that wooden poles were unsightly
and installed the steel poles which are still in use. The pole by
the church is particularly slim and unobtrusive. Electricity came to
most for the winter of 1932. It was generally welcomed, but 'Nap'
Hugill, who lived in Swiss Cottage West, refused to have it
installed as 'it would take too many matches to light'.
Up till then, oil lamps and candles had
been the only source of light at night and cooking was done on oil.
There were some paraffin street lamps and the bottom two feet of one
can be seen on the terrace opposite the Old School House. This was
last lit in 1939. The top was broken off and sent away to be melted
down for the War effort - as were the cast iron fences
from some of the graves in the churchyard.
Outsiders arrive - the first commuters
One of the last innovations of Col.
BensonÌs reign was the letting of two houses to total foreigners,
from London and Northamptonshire. They came to the area at the
beginning of the expansion of Ampleforth College under the
leadership of Fr Paul Nevill, and the introduction of laymasters to
help with the teaching. After an interview to ensure that they were
neither Socialists nor Roman Catholics, Horry and Kath Perry
moved into the old school building, then called Dormer Cottage
and now Southlands. Dick and Dorothy Goodman came directly from
their wedding to live in the Bungalow in April 1929.
The
End of an Era - The Estate is sold

Cover of Bensons
Sale Brochure.
Colonel Benson died on May 18th, 1932 and
the medieval world vanished. One big problem emerged when no
heir could be found and the whole village was placed in the hands of
Jackson Stops and Staff to sell on behalf of the Inland Revenue. The
faithful Mrs Horner, the Colonel's Housekeeper, vanished from the
scene without the expected inheritance. The contents of the Hall
were auctioned and many residents acquired souvenirs. Nearly all the
houses were sold, often to their occupants, on August 24th, 1933.
The farms were sold also.
Some of the Colonel's more peculiar
possessions, like the Village Hall, were not sold in 1933 and these
were auctioned in July 1946. This sale also included
Sunnybank, the old police house which still had water from
'Standpipe nearby', meaning 50 yards down the hill at Cliff
House. The Village Hall had been rented by the Village Hall
Committee, who had sub-let to the military during the war and
accumulated enough cash as a charitable trust to buy the hall from
the administrators. The Trust was set up by Major Philip Gatty
Smith, who had bought Oswaldkirk Hall, and Richard Goodman and it is
still in operation.
The
Drains
Until the mid 1930s there was only a
partial sewage system in the village. It included The Hall,
Rose Cottage, The Manor House, the Post Office, Ivy Cottage, The
Malt Shovel , the Village Hall, The Bungalow, Cliff House and Cragg
Cottage. Some other houses had water closets, presumably using
a septic tank, others had earth closets or ash pits. By the end of
the 1930s the District Council had extended the sewer along the
Terrace and most of the village houses were connected to it
and to the settling ponds in the valley, below Manor Farm, which are
still in use.
Another ancient method of waste disposal
which was in use until the 1930s is the pig trough. Many households
kept a pig in a sty with a chute from the outside leading to a
trough on the inside. Edible domestic waste was dropped through for
the pigs, who recycled it into bacon.
The
1930s
The playing field that went with the old
school became a Tennis Court in the 1920s and the village Tennis
Club was a major focus of village activities until the 1950s. The
court was moved down to the site of the present Children's
Playground, which had been part of the land attached to the Red
House but was given to the village by the Trustees of the Goodings
family. Miss Goodings, who lived there at the time, was a keen
tennis player, and had the then fashionable style of underarm
service.
The new court was levelled with barrow and
spade by another local character known as 'Mac', who was given to
sleeping under hedges. The mowing was done with a small push mower,
upgraded a bit in the 1940s when the cricket club closed down. The
tennis club flourished until the 1950s, when better courts became
available in the area and as car transport became more
normal.
The field below Pavilion House on the
Terrace had been levelled as the Village Cricket ground in Col.
Benson's time, but it was a rather small. There was a wooden
pavilion at the west side part of which can still be seen on the
remains of the concrete foundations. The field was bought by
Gordon Foster of Leysthorpe Hall at the sale and he built the
two houses, Greycot and Sunnyholme on part of the site. The Cricket
Club moved down to a more spacious field beside the Gilling Road,
but closed with the dawn of the TV age. The most recent public use
of the old Cricket Ground was as the venue for the Silver Jubilee
Games in 1977.
The early 1930s were the beginning of what
might be termed the 'professionalising' of the village. Mainly at
first by laymasters employed by 'The College' and their
families. Most of the other residents worked on the
village farms, or were employed at the larger houses, or were
connected with those who did. The forestry was another major
employer, particularly in the 1940s and beyond. Plantations of
Norway Spruce covered many of the local hillsides, and they were
felled mainly to be used as pit props in the Yorkshire
coalfields.
The first cars began to appear after the
First World war, but the Colonel and his housekeeper still toured
their estates in a Landau. The road to York, opened as the
Oswaldkirk-York Turnpike in 1768, had too many sharp corners
for the new vehicles and the village street was particularly narrow
between the church and the large wall which had retained the
PickeringÌs Manor House in the Middle Ages. There were three
stone carved coats of Arms in the wall, and a large buttress which
further reduced the width of the road. Beside the buttress was a set
of mounting steps - quite a common roadside feature (another
survives opposite Golden Square Farm). At the east end of the wall
was a set of steps going up into what is now the White House lower
lawn, and up again to the upper garden, which was an orchard before
the house was built in 1937.
Road
Improvements

Pickering Lion.
The Gilling road was widened and the bank
corner improved in the late 1920s and the village street
widened in 1937/38. The Pickering wall was taken down and
rebuilt about ten feet further north, together with a new wall to
retain the access track to the buildings above the wall - now the
drive for the White House. Sadly the stones of the Pickering Shields
and Coats of Arms were damaged in the process, but one is
recorded in the Victoria County History. Several new houses were
built in the mid to late 30s, including The White House, Ledbrooke
House, and Martins.

View from the
Gilling road in the 1920s.

Road widening team
on the Gilling road about 1930.
Steam
Engine, Threshing Machine and Corn Mill
The yard above the wall by the church was
used by Harold Wood, of Abbey House, to store his Steam Traction
engine and threshing machine. He also had a corn mill in the one
barn and a workshop in another - now demolished. The mill was driven
with a belt drive from the traction engine which went through a slit
in the wall to the engine which stood in the yard. Getting up the
drive was quite an undertaking. The steam engine went up first and
the threshing machines were winched up afterwards.

Harold Wood's
Traction Engine `Clarabelle'.
The
Hag
The village landscape is dominated by 'the
bank', which is a geological fault line dating from the great Ice
Age. As a result we have a line of cliffs and quarries above lower
levels of limestone rubble and clay. This mixture is very fertile,
the slopes of the hill drain well and are good for trees, the lower
levels are heavy soil, with a line of springs along which many of
the houses are built. The bank to the west of the village is called
'The Hag'. The word means a wooded slope and is related to
ÎhedgeÌ and the Dutch 'Hague'.
The Hag was quite wild until the late
1930s, when it was felled and coppiced. The result in the short term
was about three quarters of a mile of scrub and brambles which were
very well picked in the war years. The Reliance bus had a special
stop for Bramble pickers. In the 1980s the slope was brought under
better control and is now a middle aged wood full of wild garlic and
bluebells in season.

Bluebells in the
Hag.
Until the late 1940s, the slope of the
hill came down to the wall at the edge of the road, and stones and
other debris tended to fall onto the road. The present terrace was
cut from the bank to avoid this problem. The Hag ended quite clearly
at the White House rookery and the bank behind the rest of the
houses on the Main Street and the Terrace was mostly orchard and
gardens. Since that time new trees have become established and the
rooks have moved down the village. The whole effect is that the Hag
seems to have crept along the bank, which is now much more heavily
wooded than in the early part of the century. There was a line of
trees along the south edge of the bank top fields, from Thirklewood
to above the Rectory.
Hitler's War
HitlerÌs War bought all developments to an
abrupt halt and many changes to the village. Nissen huts
appeared in the Manor Farm top field to accommodate the
military. The King's Royal Rifles came fresh from the evacuation of
Dunkirk and The Grenadier Guards came shortly after them. The
foundations of one of the huts can still be seen above 'The Steps'
beside the church. The Village Hall was rented out as a recreation
hall and sergeant's mess. The Officers used part of Oswaldkirk Hall
as their Mess, as guests of Major Gatty Smith and family. Some of
them were billeted with village families.
Several young men from the village were
called up to active service. Bill Osborne, who lived with his wife
and small son in The Old School House, was killed when his ship was
sunk in the Adriatic. His next door neighbour, Coz. Watson, fought
in the North African desert and returned after the war to teach
biology at The College. George Stabler fought in the European
battles at the end of the war. Mona DaleÌs brother Dick and Alf
Hugill also went to war. Many of the men of the village were not
called for active service as they were in ÎReservedÌ occupations,
such as forestry or farming, or had other skills that were needed
for the ÎHome FrontÌ, such as an understanding of chemical warfare
and protection against it. The village population was also enlivened
by the arrival of ÎLandgirlsÌ who came to help work on the farms.
Most people had some kind of war duties such as First Aid or Air
Raid Warden, and the Home Guard was a major activity.
With the 'Blitz' at its height many school
children came from Middlesbrough as evacuees and went to the local
schools. They lived with families in the village. Some enjoyed the
country life, but most could not wait to get back to their home
towns, which they did as soon as the Battle of Britain had been won,
and the German bombers went elsewhere.
We were lucky in not having air raids, but
one bomb did hit the chapel at Gilling Castle, with little damage.
The night sky to the south was lit up at times when Hull or Leeds
was attacked.
The local lanes, such as Stockings Lane,
which had been mainly surfaced with crushed limestone up till then,
were tarmacadamed to help the military to move around. Tanks
exercised in Duncombe Park and arrived in transporters which foundthe bank corner a bit tricky. The bank corner was also restricted by
a stone barricade jutting out from both sides and leaving a small
gap which could be closed with a few girders. Each barricade had a
small room inside and holes from which to shoot at the enemy. The
foundations of the barricades still cause occasional
subsidence holes in the road.
As the fear of invasion subsided, the
whole area became a storage and training ground for the invasion of
Europe. The road sides were filled with small open ended corrugated
iron sheds filled with ammunition of all kinds - land mines, rifle
bullets, gas shells, fortunately never used, and hand grenades. Some
of the College boys used to collect specimens for dismantling, and
this was discouraged.
Several houses built air raid shelters and
at least one ÎAnderson ShelterÌ survives at Ledbrooke House as a
garden shed. Other more elaborate underground shelters tended to
fill up with water and most people decided they would rather just
sit under the table in their homes.
Many new airfields were built, including
the one at Wombleton. The local quarries did good business supplying
stone for the runways, and the Stone Lorries were a frequent, free
and reliable addition to the bus service. Later in the war, the main
air activity was our bombers collecting together to attack Germany,
and the lucky ones returning in the morning. Wombleton was
used mainly for training, but the trainees used to fly over the Bank
Top with very little spare height.
An
International Development
The first troops to live in the village
were fresh from Dunkirk. These were replaced by training units and
later by the Free Polish Army. The Poles brightened the social scene
considerably and eventually left for D Day. Many were killed
at the battle of the Falaise Gap. The village next became a prisoner
of war camp, except that the Italians had surrendered, and were more
like our guests waiting to return home. They entered fully into
village life, made skis out of floor boards and taught us to use
them on Birch Bank. They made toys and introduced us to the flavours
of the local edible fungi.

Parrot made by
Italian prisoners of war.
They also did invaluable work in the farms and gardens
of the neighbourhood. One, Eugene Coccimiglio, stayed on, looking
after the chickens at the Hall, and another married a nubile village
maiden and they went to live in Rome. The Italians were followed by
the Germans, some of whom obviously thought that the wrong side had
won, but many of whom made good friends in the village. One, Herr
Wegener, became a strong anglophile, despite what the local bombers
had done to his home city of Hamburg. He and his family bought a
bungalow in the village in the 1970s.
After
Hitler's War
The late 1940s was not a good period, with
no electricity in the afternoons, and shortages of just about
everything, including money. The village responded by continuing to
grow much of its own food, all kinds of vegetables, and keeping hensfor eggs, pigs and geese, much as they had during the war and making
much of its own entertainment, with village dances of all sorts.
English Country Dancing was particularly popular, with a wind up
gramophone for music. Dorothy Goodman was one of the local leaders
in this. Tractors were still a rarity and fields were still
hoed by hand.
Mrs Perry, at the White House, set up a
small school in the house in this period. It lourished and peaked
in the 1950s with about 20 pupils of primary age.

Mrs Perry's School
in 1954.
An unexpected feature of the 1950s was the
establishment of an Eastern Orthodox community in the Manor House,
which had been bought by Ampleforth Abbey to accommodate boys who
had escaped from StalinÌs rule in Eastern Europe. The community was
led by Vladimir Rodzianko, whose father had been leader of the Dumas
under the last Tsar. They converted a large caravan into a chapel,
complete with Onion Dome and Icons. Several other Orthodox priests
served in the house over the years.
Another international dimension started a
little earlier with a group of Polish boys who lived at what became
St Gregory's House, which had been the blacksmithÌs workshop under
the Stablers. The Poles were looked after by Col. and Mrs Dudzinsky
who had boys at Ampleforth College at that time.
The village was enriched in the late 1940s
by the arrival of a lady called Miss Rugg, who had gone out to China
before the First World War, as a missionary, to work with the China
Inland Mission. She had been in China during all those troubled
years and spent her final years there as a prisoner of the
Japanese. Her story was quite similar to that of Gladys Aylward,
recorded in the book 'The Small Woman'. She came to live at
Southlands with a cat called Kim, who she took on her various
travels in a string bag. She grew raspberries which she took to York
on the bus to sell to some friends who had a fruit shop. The
spiritual life of the village was greatly strengthened by her
presence, and the Bible Studies which she held.
Petrol
Pumps and Garages
The Gatenbys at the Post Office had set up
a two pump petrol station in the 1930s, across the road from the
'Estate Yard' which was by now a timber business, run by Percy
Hugill. The pumps were of the Îwind by handÌ variety situated on the
ground which is now the front of Albro House. This was also the bus
stop and a bit of a illage meeting place, for instance in the 1945
general election. In the 1950s, the timber yard was sold to
Ike White, who came to the village from Middlesbrough and started a
garage with two electric pumps - a distinct advantage. The business
grew with the growth in the use and availability of cars, tractors,
and vans of all kinds. There was also a show room and a
workshop. Ike married Rene Stockdale and lived with Rene's aunt, Mrs
Stockdale, in Pavilion House. They went on to build what is now
Rimbaley on the Gilling road.
The
coming of the Motor Car and the end of the Shop and Post
Office
Until the 1940s, there were only about
three cars in the village, and the shop was an essential part of
village life, along with visiting tradesmen such as Thompson from
Ampleforth. The Reliance buses provided a good service to York and
Helmsley, and the United to Malton and Easingwold. Tal Benson of
Ampleforth provided a taxi service. The coming of the car gradually
put the village shop out of business. The Post Office continued a
little longer and used the Village Hall for a time. The last
Postmaster to run the Old Post Office was John Pullan, who retired
in 1970. The office then continued to be operated in private
houses, first by Sylvia Stephenson at the Bank Top and finally by
the Deans, in South View, who were unable to find a successor when
they left the village in 1977.
The
Post War Baby Boom
In 1953, the village lost its resident
Rector and became linked to Ampleforth. The Rectory was sold to one
of the many prolific Roman Catholic families of that period, mainly
associated with the staff of Ampleforth College. There were at one
time forty children between four families.
New
Family at The Hall
The Heathcote-Amorys came to live in the
Hall in 1957 and Roddy contributed greatly to village life, as
churchwarden and chairman of the Village Meeting and in many other
ways. He added the eagles to the yard gate. His brother was
Chancellor f the Exchequer for a time, and his son David is in
Parliament at the time of writing.
The
Feversham Estate
The Feversham Estate sold the farms in the
Newton Grange township in the 1940s and 1950s, mainly to other
landlords at first, but the farms gradually came into the
ownership of the occupying tenants.
New
Building
Several new houses were built in the early
50s: Holly Tree House, Thirklewood, and The Steps. These were all
built to the maximum permitted size limit in the post-war period,
but have been extended later. Four new council houses were also
built next to Broad Farm, followed by four more at the top of
the bank and a detached Police House. This was the beginning of the
major evolution of the village from a largely agricultural community
to a mixed and increasingly professional population. This process
was given a major boost by the local entrepreneurial uilding
fraternity. The first was Jack Bradley of Gilling, who was a major
feature of the national building scene. He bought the field
belonging to Manor Farm below the Manor House, but unfortunately
went out of business before the development could be progressed. The
land was then bought by Norman Lilley who had just set up Sketchmead
Homes, which evolved into part of Persimmon Homes today. He built
the 'New Estate', which increased the number of houses in the
village by nearly 25%. Surprisingly the population remained at about
180 adults, as it had been in the 1834 Census, but increased
prosperity required more living space. Cheaper private travel made
commuting more common. Whereas only a few years earlier the
ownership of a car was seen as a definition of a prosperous middle
class family, it was now almost essential to all.

Jubilee games 1977
on the old cricket ground.
The
1977 Silver Jubilee
The village held a great sports day for
the QueenÌs Silver Jubilee, on the old cricket ground followed by a
supper with music from local talent in the Village Hall.
The
New ÎNewÌ Village Hall
During the 1980s, it was apparent that the
old 'New Village Hall' was becoming a liability and was no longer
suitable for the type of functions that now took place. The main
hall was so high that it was almost impossible to keep warm and
people now expected a more comfortable place to meet. The Committee,
headed by Mary Ogram, decided to sell most of the site for building
and build a totally new hall which would be smaller and
accommodate village events. After a good deal of negotiation with
the Charity Commission, the County and District Councils and the
Yorkshire Rural Communities Council, sufficient funds were obtained
and the present hall opened in 1988. The stone from the front of the
old hall was used for the new houses and the front of the new New
Hall, and some of the old lime wood flooring was used
for the main room - but without the old
springs.
New
Village Playground
One significant development in the 1990s
was the conversion of the derelict tennis court below the Red House
into a Children's Playground with much local fund-raising and
generous grants. The original village school playground had been
converted to a tennis court in the 1920s, so a circle was
completed.
The
Parish Meeting and Churches Together
Amongst other changes in the 1980s and 90s
has been the emergence of the Parish Meeting as a well attended
forum for taking decisions on local matters, and the increasing use
of local lay people to conduct the worship in St OswaldÌs church.
Our Rector now also covers Ampleforth, Gilling and Stonegrave and
local leadership became essential if the church bell is to be
rung and God worshipped at St OswaldÌs each week. This
system was set up by the Revd David Newton and the rest of the York
Diocese came to discover that such a development is not only
necessary, but desirable. A further development has been the growing
co-operation between the Christian traditions in the village. This
began in the 1960s with a joint Good Friday procession through the
village and has grown with a packed house for the Christmas Eve
carols, led by a largely professional orchestra. Joint study groups
are held during Lent, and so far, two 'Songs of Praise' events in
the Village Hall which have been supported by around a quarter of
the village.
******
In conclusion, Oswaldkirk has remained a
small community of around 180-200 people since at least the early
1800s. Many other villages have been transformed by expansion
in the 20th century. Oswaldkirk has escaped this particular change,
although the standard of housing has been improved substantially. A
village of our size has a special quality in which we can all know
each other. If anything needs doing, everyone who wishes can be
involved. Colonel Benson and Major Gatty Smith provided leadership
in the first half of the century, followed by Brigadier
Heathcote-Amory. Today we have an active Parish Meeting which fills
this role.