Review issue 160
Review issue 160, published in Autumn 2022 – Regeneration
Cover Art (& Page 13), Lucia Smith 1; Village Action 3; News 4; Letters 5; Cash Injection Sparks Rural Revival, Helen Keep 6; Piecing Together a Diverse Landscape 7; Bringing Wool Back into the Fold 8-9; Wild Flowers & Road Verges, Natty Grey 9; Snaizeholme: A Glimpse of the Future 10-11; Eyes on the Bog 12-13; Book Review – The Flow: Rivers, Water and Wildness 13; The View From Here, Philippa Troutman 14-15; Lordships, Freehold Estates, Roods, Poles and Cattle Gaits, John Cuthbert 16-17; Blueprint for Future of National Park 18; A Great Walk Above Two Lovely Dales 18-19; Yorkshire Dales Society 20; Treasurer’s Report 2021/22 21; Book Review 22; Film Review 22; Events 23
Feedback: A member of Friends of the Dales has written in with more details of ‘Thomas Chamberlain’ – see ‘Freehold Estates, Roods, Poles and Cattle Gaits, John Cuthbert 16-17’. She says:
‘Rowley’s notes appear to say that Thomas Chamberlain of Skipton married the heiress to Dyneley and moved to Halton East and their only son, presumably another Thomas, assumed the name Dyneley from 1865 onwards. The Chamberlain family were wealthy traders in Skipton and way back in 1702 a Thomas Chamberlain had been ‘farmer’ of market tolls in Skipton, Gargrave and Appletreewick for the Earl of Thanet. Their town house fronted onto Sheep Street and according to Rowley the townhouse next door was at some stage occupied by a Dyneley, although there was also a large Dyneley House in Newmarket Street which has now been replaced by the doctor’s surgery of the same name’.
For more information, see: https://rowleycollection.co.uk/notebooks/page.asp?BookID=1&ID=86
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