Hutton Bonville
| Hutton Bonville | |
|---|---|
The gatepiers to the now-demolished Hutton Bonville Hall | |
Hutton Bonville Location within North Yorkshire | |
| OS grid reference | NZ336002 |
| Civil parish |
|
| Unitary authority | |
| Ceremonial county | |
| Region | |
| Country | England |
| Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
| Post town | NORTHALLERTON |
| Postcode district | DL7 |
| Police | North Yorkshire |
| Fire | North Yorkshire |
| Ambulance | Yorkshire |
Hutton Bonville is a hamlet and civil parish in the county of North Yorkshire, England.[1] The population of the civil parish as of the 2011 census was less than 100. Details are included in the civil parish of Danby Wiske with Lazenby. It is on its own road and near the A167, 6 miles (9.7 km) north of Northallerton.
History
The settlement is listed in the Domesday Book, although it does not record any population.[2] The name derives from Old English hōh (a spur of land by a hill) and tun (town), with the surname of Robert de Boneville, a local landowner during the reign of Henry III, providing the suffix.[3][4] In the Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (1870–72) John Marius Wilson described Hutton Bonville:
HUTTON-BONVILLE, a chapelry in Birkby parish, N. R. Yorkshire; on the river Wiske and the Northeastern railway, 3 miles SSE of Cowton r. station, and 4 NNW of Northallerton. It contains the village of Lovesome-Hill, and its post town is Northallerton. Acres, 1, 080. Rea property, £1, 776. Pop., 129. Houses, 22. Hutton-Bonville Hall is a chief residence. The place is a meet for the Bedale hounds. The living is a p. curacy in the diocese of York. Value, £53. Patron, Mrs. M. A. Pierse. The church is good, and has a bellturret.[5]
About 1785, the manor was sold to the Hammond family of Richmond, Yorkshire, and then in 1874 it was bought by the tenant, J. R. W. Hildyard, who altered the Hall to make it into a country seat.[6]
The church appears to have Norman origins, although what can be seen now largely dates from the later Middle Ages, the 17th, and 19th centuries. Its beginnings were a two-cell structure of nave and chancel, with a later north aisle; but in 1896 that was completely rebuilt as part of restoration works in memory of J. R. W. Hildyard.[6]
From 1974 to 2023 it was part of the Hambleton District, it is now administered by the unitary North Yorkshire Council.
When Nikolaus Pevsner visited the hamlet in the early 1960s, to write the entry for his Yorkshire: The North Riding volume of the Buildings of England, he described the estate church of St Lawrence as "away from anywhere except the decaying Hall".[7] The Hall was demolished in the 1960s, although the gate piers at the start of the drive remain and are a Grade II listed structure.[8] St Lawrence's was declared redundant in 2007. It is now in the care of the Friends of Friendless Churches.[9]
See also
References
- ^ Ordnance Survey: Landranger map sheet 93 Middlesbrough (Darlington & Hartlepool) (Map). Ordnance Survey. 2010. ISBN 9780319228777.
- ^ "Hutton [Bonville] | Domesday Book". opendomesday.org. Retrieved 26 February 2026.
- ^ Ekwall, Eilert (1960). The concise Oxford dictionary of English place-names (4 ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 259. OCLC 1228215388.
- ^ Smith, A. H. (1979) [1928]. The Place Names of the North Riding of Yorkshire. English Place Name Society. p. 211. OCLC 19714705.
- ^ "A Vision of Britain Through Time: Hutton-Bonville". www.visionofbritain.co.uk. GB Historical GIS/University of Portsmouth. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
- ^ a b A look at the history of Church of St Lawrence, Hutton Bonville, with Dr Emma Wells, Yorkshire.com, accessed 19 February 2026
- ^ Pevsner 1966, p. 198.
- ^ Historic England. "Gate Piers Approximately 100m to the south of Hall Farm (Grade II) (1315156)". National Heritage List for England. Retrieved 9 December 2020.
- ^ "Hutton Bonville". Friends of Friendless Churches. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
Sources
- Pevsner, Nikolaus (1966). Yorkshire: The North Riding. The Buildings of England. London: Penguin Books. OCLC 1156437241.
External links
Media related to Hutton Bonville at Wikimedia Commons