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Thirsk
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visit Thirsk website |
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| Welcome to Thirsk - A
Town in the heart of North Yorkshire |
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| Welcome to Thirsk |
Thirsk Clock Tower |
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Thirsk is a small market town in the
Hambleton district of North Yorkshire, England. The
local travel links are located a mile from the town
centre to Thirsk railway station and 20 miles to
Teesside International Airport. Also, the main road
running through the town is the A61, connecting Thirsk
to Ripon. The town has a population of 4,703 according
to the 2001 Census.
Thirsk is a popular tourist destination attracting
visitors, especially with Thirsk Racecourse and the
North York Moors.
The town lies in the Vale of Mowbray, twenty miles north
of York. Cod Beck runs through the centre of Thirsk -
the area to the east of the river is called Old Thirsk.
The A19 road now, after a bypass was built in the 1960s,
passes Thirsk to the east; the former route of the A19
through the town is the A61 to the north to South
Kilvington and the A170 to the south at the junction
where the A19 joins the original route to the south.
The town is mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1089 as
Tresche, derived from the Viking (Old Norse) word ūresk
= "marsh". It is surrounded by a number of villages also
having names of Danish origin, such as Thirlby, Boltby,
Borrowby and Sowerby (the -by suffix meaning village or
farmstead).
Thirsk is built around a large medieval market square,
which still hosts an open-air market each Monday and
Saturday. Thirsk possesses a museum and the 15th century
church of St Marys.
Thirsk's chief modern claim to fame is as the home of
the veterinary surgeon and author James Herriot,
although it was renamed "Darrowby" in the books. The
veterinary practice at 23 Kirkgate, in which he was a
partner along with Donald Sinclair (Siegfried Farnon in
the books) now houses a museum dedicated to his life and
works, The World of James Herriot.
Thomas Lord, another Thirsk notable, was born in a house
which now houses the Thirsk Museum, also on Kirkgate.
Another local attraction is the Kilburn White Horse, a
chalk horse carved into the hillside about four miles
east of the town.
The Ritz Cinema on Westgate is a small 200 seat (100
stalls, 100 balcony) cinema run by volunteers. It shows
in a period setting most of the current films and is run
for residents and visitors to Thirsk and the local
villages by a dedicated team of volunteers.
The race course at Thirsk is a leading venue for horse
racing on the flat in the Spring and Summer months. |
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| James Herriot Museum |
St Mary's Church |
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| Thirsk Market Square |
Thirsk Hall |
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| Thirsk shops |
Thirsk Museum |
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Thirsk Hall Home of the
Lords of the Manor since 1723 Extended by John Carr York
Architect in 1774 |
James Herriot Museum
The character of James Herriot was based
on Alf Wright, who lived in Thirsk and visited farms and
homes around the Husthwaite area.
Looking at the pictures taken in the
James Herriot museum will give you a good idea of what
it was like in and around Husthwaite in the 1950's and
1960's.
visit museum website |
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| Dining Room of the 1950's |
1950's
sitting room |
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| Kitchen of the 1950's |
Medicines
for animals |
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| bread and bread board |
old
fashioned pram |
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| Persil washes whiter |
All Purpose
Polish |
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| Johnson's Wax |
Kleen-e-ze
wax polish |
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| 1950's washing machine |
possers for
doing the washing |
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| ironing board |
beef suet |
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| Austin Seven car |
stained
glass window showing the Hambleton area and the White
Horse of Kilburn |
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[ Home ] [ Up one level ] [ Easingwold ] [ Yorkshire Moors ] [ Yorkshire Dales ] [ Richmond ] [ Ripon ] [ James Herriot ] [ Husthwaite ] [ Thirsk ] [ York ] |
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