In the autumn of 2002 Oswaldkirk is a
lively and pleasant village in which to live. Almost every household
has a car and buses pass daily through the village to the local
towns and to the city of York. One hundred and eighty five adults
live in the parish the oldest of whom is Gretel Greenfield who is
proud to be 90 years old and feels that she has not yet retired. The
youngest is newly arrived one year old Rebecca Fram whose
grandfather designed St. Aidan's church. There are thirty four young
people of sixteen and under as well as numerous dogs, cats, sheep,
geese, hens and one donkey. In total there are ninety seven houses
including two working farms, one pub, two churches but no shop or
post office.
Helen Goodman.
Young people
speaking:

Neil
Thompson
The Thompson family moved to Oswaldkirk
two years ago and last year Neil decided that he would take on the
milk round when Betty and Derrick Watson retired. He delivers milk,
eggs and newspapers at top speed to many houses in Oswaldkirk,
Hovingham, Cawton and Gilling. The residents are all very pleased to
have deliveries on the doorstep.
Twenty two year old Neil plays cricket at
Hovingham and generously helps to cut the churchyard grass at
St.Oswald's church. He says what he likes best about the village is
the warm and friendly community spirit. The only disadvantage is the
lack of a shop but that does not worry him as he has a car and
can borrow his fatherĂs motorbike.

Tabitha
Grove
Sixteen year old Tabitha's main interest
is Drama which she is studying at York Sixth Form College having
taken her G.C.S.Es last summer. She has loved acting all her life
and parts such as Little Red Riding Hood, Alice in Alice in
Wonderland and the Dame in Puss in Boots have come her way. She is
currently working behind the scenes at the 1812 Youth Theatre in the
Helmsley Arts Centre and has a small part in the production of
Twelfth Night. Recently she passed her Senior Gold Medal for Acting
and won the Judi Dench Award for the highest marks in this
examination in the Yorkshire area.
Although she is isolated from city
activities Tabitha finds the peace and quiet of the village
refreshing. After school she wants to travel and then on to
study all aspects of working in the theatre.

Ed Collinson
Ed's all consuming passion is BMX biking.
It is a hobby that started when his grandparents bought him a bike
five years ago. He rides more or less every day and is constantly
improving and rebuilding his machine which has now become quite
valuable. He travels all over the country to attend different race
tracks and skate parks but dirt riding is what he enjoys most. On
Hall Farm, where he lives, he has built mud jumps in the wood and
practises hard, polishing up daring and complicated tricks of riding
on one wheel or turning the bike underneath himself as he jumps. So
far he has broken his collar bone, an arm and several ribs and as he
says it is not something for the fainthearted. He finds it scary but
enjoys the excitement.
Ed is at Malton School, in Year 11;
Art, and Design and Technology are his favourite subjects. He
wants to go to college next year and hopes to do an Arts and
Graphics course.
The disadvantage of living in an isolated
place is that he is a long way from friends, shops and the rest of
civilisation. What he does like is the space and the view and he
finds it exhilarating to be exposed to the elements on the top of
the hill. And yes he does help on the farm but would rather be
riding his bike.
The Playground

Through the initiative of many people:
Sarah Stow, Doreen Roberts and Mary Thomas and their committee,
money has been raised to create a new playground for the young
people of our village. It uses the ground that was originally the
village tennis court and has adventure climbing equipment, a springy
horse, swings and an area for football. Generous gifts were received
from a dozen groups to start the project off including Ł1000
from North Yorkshire County Council and Ł500 from Persimmon Homes.
Ł1000 is raised most years by organising a Street Fair and this year
in addition there was a Barn Dance and Hog Roast to help celebrate
the QueenĂs Golden Jubilee. As a result the committee hopes to erect
a grand slide to enhance the facilities.
The Village Hall
Many activities go on here including
weekly table tennis, St. Simeon Singers practise regularly,
monthly Parish information mornings happen and various
meetings, exhibitions, and parties take place.
Dancing
For many years Oswaldkirk village hall has
had a reputation for social dancing. Energetic

Cajun
Dancing.
Cajun dancing is taught by Glyn Roberts,
of Swiss Cottage West. This sort of dancing comes from Louisiana,
U.S.A, with French and Canadian connections. It is about
enjoying

Scottish
Dancing.
music, learning dances: one step, two
steps, waltzes and the whirling jitterbug, and making new friends.
‘Laissez les Bons Temps RoulerĂ - ‘Let the Good Times
RollĂ.
For the last fifteen years Scottish
dancing has been enjoyed in the hall. The lively music inspires
everyone to do graceful leaps and turns in complex movements for
reels, jigs and strathspeys. A group of younger dancers are rapidly
becoming competent and however tired people feel at the beginning of
the evening by the end they are rejuvenated and relaxed. Parties are
held in the summer and at Christmas, and haggis and whiskey are
consumed on BurnsĂ night. The dancing is taught by Moira Wood
and Helen Goodman. Also Glyn and Christine Price from Bridge Farm
Barns practise the spirited Argentinian Tango every
week.
The Pantomime
A report from the Malton Gazette, in
December 2001, written by Flora Daly:
On Saturday evening December 1st. in the
Village Hall a version of 'Snow White and the 4 DwarfsĂ
was hugely enjoyed. Can ever a small village have produced so much
talent, and can ever an audience have participated with so much
enthusiasm? We all arrived up to thirty minutes before the
performance began, and we were seated round small tables with a
glass of wine, served by a team of 'French' waiters with white
aprons and black moustaches. As we already mostly knew each other,
there was soon a good party atmosphere. The Conductor and
Tambourine, Sue Elm, then took the audience through all the songs,
because we were to sing as well.

Snow
White in the Tower.

Pantomime
audience.
Most of we older ones knew the tunes, for they were music hall
tunes from our youth. An excellent and sensitive piano accompaniment
was provided by Jean Beadle. The pantomime had been written by
Philip Entwistle, with considerable input from the cast, and was
based on the Snow White story with intrusions of characters from
other pantomimes, and it was very funny. The producer was Doreen
Roberts, who was also the originator of the whole idea and the cast
were Ursula Webb, Selwyn Collinson, Glyn Roberts, Doreen Roberts,
Ian Henley, Rosie Wilkinson, Philip Entwistle and Caroline O'Neill.
The sets and costumes produced by young people and adults from the
village were simple and effective, with just the right atmosphere of
fairy-story-land. We had been asked to bring our own supper, to eat
during the interval with another glass of wine. This made an
opportunity to move around and speak or wave to other people. Then
when the cast joined us at the end we were still one big happy
party, and I think most of us were still laughing several hours
afterwards.
The Millennium Mosaic and
Footpath
To mark the start of the new Millennium, a
Village Mosaic, was designed and produced with the help of
Margaret Murphy from Rural Arts, North Yorkshire. More than twenty
five people, led by Mark Clook and including eight children, enjoyed
learning the techniques involved. It was great fun to work on it
and much creative talent emerged. It now stands at the
entrance to the Village Hall and depicts the Oswaldkirk Millennium
Trail. The project was started late in 1999 and finished in the
spring of 2002. Funding of Ł1500 was raised from the North Yorkshire
Millennium and Small Project Funds, together with Lottery Grants for
Local Groups, Awards for All scheme. The project also included
small mosaics to act as waymarkers on the trail.

Millennium
Mosaic.
The Millennium Trail itself was created
after many years of discussion to divert an old footpath to pass on
a more convenient route along the top of the village bank.
Particular thanks are due to the Ampleforth Abbey Trustees and the
National Park Authority for the creation of a new section of
path and steps down through the Hag beyond Oswaldkirk
Hall.
As well as the trail and the mosaics, a
leaflet has been produced which includes a brief guide and
history of the village. Also a Yew tree, twenty centimetres
high, grown from a tree two thousand years old has been planted just
inside the church gate.
Neighbourhood Watch
Several people have been looking after
this village for over six years as a neighbourhood watch team and we
are grateful for their care. The village is divided into eight
groups and the police send out messages which alert residents to
possible dangers. During the Millennium Bonfire Party the
neighbourhood watch people took it in turns to walk round the
village to ensure that it was safe. They work quietly and
effectively and on one occasion were responsible for helping the
police find an intruder red handed.
The Malt Shovel
Peter and Debbie now run the pub which is
owned by Sam Smiths of Tadcaster. Special events are put on every
month or so: a brass band, a singer, pool knock-out competitions,
raffles and also weekly quizzes have been enjoyed. They are open
seven days a week, serving home cooked meals and they much
appreciate the support of the local
community.
Churches Together
There are weekly services in both churches
and in the spirit of the Ampleforth Covenant -

Wednesday
Tea Time Club visiting Hovingham Church.
'we rejoice in the growing
partnership between our churches at national, regional and local
levels'. The young people of St. OswaldĂs church meet at the
Wednesday Tea Time Club for christian teaching with music, drama and
games. People from both churches take part in joint Lent Groups,
there is a Procession of Witness on Good Friday along the main
street, and also they join together at Harvest and Christmas time.
Two well attended ‘Songs of PraiseĂ have taken place in the village
hall with moving contributions from various members of the
community.
And So .....
Winston Churchill, speaking about the
first victories in North Africa during the Second World War,
said:
'This is not the
beginning of the end, but the end of the beginning.'
We hope that this brief social history is
not the end of anything, but the beginning of a continuing process
of collecting pictures, objects, original sources and memoirs to be
added to a growing archive of the history of
Oswaldkirk.