Economic History


The parish comprises the townships of Aughton, East Cottingwith, and Latham.

 

The village of Aughton, long and straggling, is situated on the East bank of the Derwent, and presents a generally level surface. The township of East Cottingwith is pleasantly seated on the East bank of the navigable river Derwent, across which there was once  a ferry. Latham is a small but neat village.

 

Land and Crops

The soil in Aughton is a mixture of loam and clay, resting on clay, and the chief crops are wheat, oats, barley, potatoes, and turnips. 

 

In East Cottingwith the soil is sand and clay; subsoil, clay. The chief crops are wheat, barley, oats and beans.

 

In Latham, the soil is clayey and loamy, and the subsoil is clay. The chief crops are wheat, oats and barley. In Bulmer’s Directory for 1892 it states that a large portion of the land is laid down in grass.

 

The evidence from wills also show that livestock, including pigs, sheep, horses and cattle were farmed throughout the medieval and late modern period. There are also ample references referring to grazing on the Ings. The Ings hay meadows were cut in early July, then grazed with sheep or cattle until the late autumn. Many other fields were referred to in estate documents as being used as pasture for animals.

 

Workers for the fields and houseservants were generally recruited from the Selby Hiring Fair, held on Martinmas Monday. The farmers and agricultural labourers stood near to the Abbey, whilst the lads and lasses stood at the other end of the market near the banks. After the hiring was concluded the workers would celebrate in a fair held in Wide Street.

 

 

Transportation

 

River

The chief communications artery to and from Aughton and East Cottingwith for many centuries has been the river Derwent. The 38 miles of river between Malton and its confluence with the river Ouse have almost certainly been used by small craft since the time of the Romans, and improvements in the 18th century permitted navigation by the barges then trading on other Yorkshire rivers. The unusual upstream facing outfall of the Derwent is manmade. It is believed to have been cut during the Roman occupation of Britain to reduce the distance between the Derwent mouth and the Roman legionary headquarters at York by 9 miles. The first navigation weir, also believed to be of Roman origin, was a flash weir built near Wheldrake to raise the level of the river upstream and regulate its flow downstream.

 

During the reign of King John (1199-1216) a water mill on the Derwent at Wheldrake was given to the monks of Fountains Abbey and later in the thirteenth century a weir is known to have existed at the same place. By 1462 when the Lord Mayor of York was authorised to "correct and amend defects" of the Derwent "from the Ouse as far as the town and bridge of Sutton upon Derwent" the river must have been navigable at least to Sutton. A corn mill existed at Sutton upon Derwent by 1597. It was rebuilt in 1836 and continued in use until 1960.There are other water mill sites at Stamford Bridge, Buttercrambe, Howsham, Kirkham and Malton. (Navigation on the Yorkshire Derwent, Pat Jones, 2000).

 

There were several attempts to improve the navigation of the Derwent by Act of Parliament. George Sorocold produced plans for making the river navigable on which two unsuccessful Bills were promoted in 1695 and 1698. He surveyed the river again for a Bill introduced in 1700, which failed, but an Act was finally passed in 1701.

 

On the 6th May 1702 the Derwent Navigation Act received the Royal Assent. The driving force behind this Act had been the traders of Malton, and the Act empowered the five undertakers to not only dig cuts, trim the banks, remove obstructions and weeds, but to also prepare towpaths. The promoters were allowed to charge tolls on the cargo carried on any part of the river. By 1724 Malton was at the head of a fully navigable river taking boats of up to 50 tons.

 

In 1720 the navigation was acquired by Thomas Wentworth, together with his descendant Earl Fitzwilliam. They employed Joshua Mitchel to work on a survey for making the river navigable to Yedingham Bridge on the York to Scarborough turnpike road. This was done by an additional cut of the river but with a shallower depth, making it navigable only with 15 ton boats rather than 50 ton boats to Malton. Between 1723 and 1724 Mitchel leased the tolls jointly with Mark Andrew. On the 20th October 1755 the tolls were leased to William Fenton, for a term of twenty-one years and subsequently to Thomas and James Fenton, who leased the tolls until March, 1805.  By 1805 the extent of the navigation had been increased by a further eleven and a half miles as far as Yeddingham Bridge.

 

The Major traffic during this period was coal  coming to Malton having been mined in the pits of Fitzwilliam in the Barnsley area via the Aire and Calder canal along the Ouse navigation. In 1840 the coal tonnage was 37898 tons. Lime was also carried in large quantities, as it was used to improve soil fertility. The boats were normally loaded with corn for the return journey.

 

The boats on the river were mainly sailing keels and sloops, but due to the meandering nature of the river the boats must have made extensive use of the towing horses. However, the towpaths were not uniform on both sides of the river, so on several occasions the horses had to be ferried to the opposite bank to continue the tow. The boats were largely of Malton, but a survey of 1807, in connection with the raising of tolls, listed boats using the Derwent other than those of Malton, and included 4 from Cottingwith, 1 from Bubwith, and 1 from Hemingbrough.

 

Until the arrival of the railway the Derwent navigation had proved quite profitable, but it was the third Earl FitzWilliam who eventually saw the writing on the wall. In the late 1830s he embarked on an extensive programme of dredging and improvements, and introduced the first steam-driven dredger to the river, in order to be better placed to compete with the inevitable arrival of the railway. Paradoxically, much of the sand and gravel and other materials used in the construction of the railway on the Hull-Selby, Selby-Market Weighton, and the York-Malton-Scarborough lines were carried by boat on the Derwent.

 

The navigation was purchased beneficially by North Eastern Railway Company on the 1st May 1855 for £40,000. However, the decline in the navigation traffic and profitability was slow and steady. In the month of May 1805 the number of boats passing Barmby chain was 146, whereas in May 1847 it had reduced by one third to 93, and in May 1862 it was down to 38. Navigation as far as Cottingwith, from which point the Pocklington canal was served, survived up to the 1930s, and that to Sutton for just a little longer.

 

By the beginning of the 20th century the river had started to be used by pleasure craft and by 1920 there were craft based regularly at Stamford Bridge and Kirkham Abbey. In 1935, the statutory Right of Navigation was revoked above Sutton Lock. There followed a long series of fights for public access against riparian interests which continue to the present day and the navigation currently ends at Stamford Bridge.

 

 

The records of the Derwent Navigation, 1702-1918, are held at the North Riding Record Office in Northallerton, under reference ZPB.

 

East Cottingwith Ferry

There is mention of a ferry over the Derwent at East Cottingwith from at least 1659 (Hull University Archives, Ref: DDJ/4/30), and in 1693 the ferryman, Richard Clarke, was fined £2 for extorting 1½d. from John Brownbridge, when the usual toll was 1d. (Records of the Admiralty Court of York, Issue 22).

 

The ferry was included in the marriage settlement of George Blanshard, lawyer of York, prior to his marriage to Margaret (daughter of Timothy) Wilkinson of York, in 1706. The ferry was still in the hands of the Blanshard family of York in 1768.

 

Throughout the 18thc. Quarter Sessions records contains indictments of the inhabitants of East Cottingwith for failing to repair the road from East Cottingwith to the ferry over the Derwent (see below).

 

The ferryman in 1738 was George Burton of Cottingworth (more likely to have been West Cottingwith) yeoman, when he indicted for non-repair of gatestead, part of the way from West Cottingworth to the Ferry.

 

he was indicted again in 1745, when he was charged with refusing to take people over the ferry at East Cottingwith.

 

In 1768 the Blanshards sold the ferry to Stephanus Caister of Howden, and in turn the devisees of Stephen’s heir, William Caister, sold the ferry to Sarah North of West Cottingwith, widow, for £1,050.

 

The ferry house was on the West Cottingwith side of the Derwent, and by 1827 it had been turned into a Public House, named, appropriately, ‘Ferry House’. The Ferry Boat Inn is still serving customers today.

 

The ferry continued in use up to the 1950s (Victoria County History, Thorganby Parish).



The River Derwent seen at the end of Ferry Lane. Behind is the Ferry Boat public house. © Copyright DS Pugh and licensed for reuse

Road

Road construction and usage in the Aughton area had always been limited by the river Derwent. The two ferry crossings at Bubwith and East Cottingwith were at the two local East-West road thoroughfares. However, the major East-West thoroughfare over the Derwent was of course at the main bridge crossing, which prior to the construction of the bridge in Bubwith was on the Pocklington-York road, at Kexby, on the present-day A1079, built in the late 1420s, rebuilt in 1650, and turnpiked in 1764.

 

Our knowledge of roads in the Aughton area stem from the well-known Act for the amending of Highways, of 1555. This Act placed the onus for road repair on the parish, and stipulated that each parish should elect two honest men of the parish to be Surveyors and Orderers for one year. The Surveyors were to name four days each year when the parishioners had to provide free services for the repairing of any highway that lead to a market town. Labourers had to provide their labouring services free for the four days, while all those farmers who occupied a Plow-Land or who owned a draught or plough, had to provide a wagon or cart with oxen or horses, and two labourers. All the parishioners had to provide their own suitable tools. The penalties for non-compliance were fairly stiff, being ten shillings for the farmer, and one shilling per day for the labourer. Offences could be brought before the Quarter Sessions by the personal knowledge of any Justice of the Peace, and it is through the presentments here that our knowledge of the road systems, and their state of repair, or lack of it, can be found. The following cases, from 1726-1819, have been found in the Quarter Sessions records:


Party Offence Reference Year
Inhabitants of East Cottingwith non-repair of road from East Cottingwith to ferry over R. Derwent QSF/73/B/4 1726
George Burton of Cottingworth Ferry, yeoman non-repair of gatestead, part of the way from West Cottingworth to the Ferry QSF/120/B/7 1738
George Burton of Cottingwith, ferryman refusing to take people over the ferry at East Cottingwith QSF/149/B/4 1745
Inhabitants of East Cottingwith non-repair of highway from Ross Moor to East Cottingwith Ferry QSF/192/B/28 1756
Inhabitants of Aughton non-repair of highway from Aughton over the Moor to Bubwith Field QSF/192/B/25 1756
Inhabitants of Laytham for non-repair of highway QSF/191/C/16 1756
Inhabitants of Laytham non-repair of highway from Seaton through the lane to Laytham QSF/192/B/16 1756
Inhabitants of Laytham non-repair of highway from the gate belonging Mary Gell of Foggathorpe through Laytham to Ross Moor QSF/196/B/14 1757
Inhabitants of Aughton non-repair of highway from Laytham Long Close Gate over Aughton Common and through Aughton Bicks. QSF/200/B/20 1758
George Young of Aughton yeoman ploughing up highway QSF/213/B/5 1761
Inhabitants of Laytham non-repair of highway from the E. end of Laytham and through Laytham Lane QSF/212/B/17 1761
John Nottingham of Laytham gentleman, surveyor of highways for Laytham non-repair of highway QSF/212/C/3 1761
Richard Daniel, Surveyor of highways for Aughton non-repair of highway QSF/227/C/8 1765
Inhabitants of Aughton non-repair of highway from Laytham QSF/228/B/33 1765
Inhabitants of Laytham non-repair of highway from John Brabb's Barn in Laytham to Ross-Moor QSF/268/B/10 1775
Inhabitants of Aughton non-repair of highway. QSF/315/C/16 1787
Inhabitants of East Cottingwith non-repair of highway through East Cottingwith to the Ferry QSF/320/B/2 1788
Simeon Webster and Robert Wilkinson surveyors of highways for Aughton non-repair of highways QSF/342/C/9 1793
Inhabitants of Aughton non-repair of 690 yds. of the Seaton Ross - Selby road, from Layburn Lane to a bridge at west end of Long Closes in Aughton QSF/344/B/4 1794
Inhabitants of Aughton non repair of highway from Laytham to Bubwith beginning at John Gell's closes to Aughton Common QSF/379/B/10 1802
Inhabitants of Laytham non repair of highway from Howden to Pocklington at Laytham towards a farm house occupied by Thomas Harper in Foggathorpe QSF/431/B/24 1816
Inhabitants of Laytham non repair of highway from Seaton Ross to Foggathorpe at Laytham QSF/444/B/13 1819

Railway

Aughton was not served by the railway in the East Riding. The nearest stations were at Bubwith and Highfield serving Aughton, while at East Cottingwith recourse could be had, after 1912, to The Derwent Valley Light Railway, which had a station at West Cottingwith. The line was closed for passenger traffic in 1926 and for goods in 1965.

Bubwith lay along the Selby to Market Weighton line built by George Hudson's company, the York and North Midland Company, and opened on the 1st August, 1848, crossing the Derwent a little lower down from the road bridge, using a bridge of wood, but which was destroyed by fire in 1858. An iron girder bridge was then built to replace it.

 

The line was taken over by the North Eastern Railway Company on 31 July 1854, and converted to double track in 1890 when the Market Weighton to Driffield section opened.

 

Stations were opened in Bubwith, Highfield and Foggerthorpe along the line, which was unusual to have three stations serving just one parish.

 

Due to low passenger receipts these stations were closed to passenger traffic on the 5th December, 1953. Today the route forms part of the Howdenshire rail Trail for walkers, cyclists and horse riders.

 

 

Trades

Aughton was primarily an agricultural parish, and there was very little else in the way of trades carried out there. There were local services of course, to serve local needs, and so we find in the trades directories mention of local shopkeepers and tradesmen, such as tailors, butchers, grocers, shoemakers, flax-dresser, wheelwrights, innkeepers, bricklayers, millers, carriers, schoolmasters, and the village blacksmith. East Cottingwith had more shops and tradesmen than Aughton during the 19th century, and Laytham only had farmers.

 

No Post Office appeared in the directories of Aughton throughout the 19th century, and the first to appear occurs in the 1925 Directory, in East Cottingwith.

 

Likewise, no doctor or surgeon appears in any directory during the 19th century, and presumably the sick went to either Bubwith or Pocklington.

 

Public Houses

Alehouses were ordinary dwellings where the householder served home-brewed ale and beer. By the mid-18th century larger alehouses were becoming common, while inns (purpose-built to accommodate travellers, usually beside the major highways) grew in grandeur and new ones sprang up during the coaching era. The term alehouse was gradually replaced by public house during the 18th century.

 

The East Riding Justices of the Peace issued licences to public houses. Their records, called Alehouse Recognizances, have survived for 1754-1785; 1787-1788; 1793 and 1822-1826. The licenses issued to Aughton residents are presented below:


Reference Name/Public House/Place Year
QDT/2/12/1 Aughton: George Young, Robert Smooton, Elizabeth Holborn; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, Richard Cooke, John Ward; Laytham: George Clark, Peter Coverdale 1754
QDT/2/12/2 Aughton: George Young, Elizabeth Holborn; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, Richard Cooke, John Ward; Laytham: George Clark, Peter Coverdale 1755
QDT/2/12/3 Aughton: George Young, Thomas Sanderson; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, Richard Cooke, John Ward; Laytham: George Clark, Peter Coverdale 1756
QDT/2/12/4 Aughton: George Young, Thomas Sanderson; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, Richard Cooke, John Ward; Laytham: George Clark 1757
QDT/2/12/5 Aughton: George Young, Thomas Sanderson; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, Richard Cooke, John Ward; Laytham: George Clark 1758
QDT/2/12/6 Aughton: George Young, Thomas Sanderson; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Ward; Laytham: George Clark 1759
QDT/2/12/7 Aughton: George Young, Thomas Sanderson; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Ward, Richard Cook; Laytham: George Clark 1760
QDT/2/12/8 Aughton: George Young, Thomas Sanderson; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Ward, Richard Cook; Laytham: George Clark 1761
QDT/2/12/9 Aughton: George Young, Thomas Sanderson; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Waltham, Richard Cook; Laytham: George Clarke 1762
QDT/2/12/10 Aughton: George Young, Thomas Sanderson; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, William Waltham, Richard Cook; Laytham: Nil 1763
QDT/2/12/11 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, William Waltham, Richard Cook; Laytham: Nil 1764
QDT/2/12/12 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, George Wilson; Laytham: Nil 1765
QDT/2/12/13 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Swann; Laytham: John Sowle 1766
QDT/2/12/14 Aughton: George Young, John Roome; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Swann; Laytham: John Sowle 1767
QDT/2/12/15 Aughton: George Young, John Roome; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Swann; Laytham: Nil 1768
QDT/2/12/16 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Swann, John Roome; Laytham: Nil 1769
QDT/2/12/17 Aughton: George Young, William Empson; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: Nil 1770
QDT/2/12/18 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Soul 1771
QDT/2/12/19 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Sowl 1772
QDT/2/12/20 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Sowl 1773
QDT/2/12/21 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Sowl 1774
QDT/2/12/22 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Sowl 1775
QDT/2/12/23 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Rhodes 1776
QDT/2/12/24 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: Michael Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Rhodes 1777
QDT/2/12/25 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: Michael Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Rhodes 1778
QDT/2/12/26 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: Michael Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Rhodes 1779
QDT/2/12/27 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Rhodes 1780
QDT/2/12/28 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Rhodes 1781
QDT/2/12/29 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Rhodes 1782
QDT/2/12/30 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Thorpe 1783
QDT/2/12/31 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Roome; Laytham: John Thorpe 1784
QDT/2/12/32 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Room; Laytham: John Thorpe 1785
QDT/2/12/33 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: John Calbert, John Room; Laytham: John Thorpe 1787
QDT/2/12/34 Aughton: George Young; East Cottingwith: Michael Calbert, John Room; Laytham: John Thorpe 1788
QDT/2/12/35 Aughton: Thomas Young; East Cottingwith: Michael Colbert, John Room; Laytham: Nil 1793
QDT/2/10/1 Alehouse recognizance for Thomas Young of the 'Windmill' at Aughton: Surety William Maltby of Aughton, farmer 1822
QDT/2/10/9 Alehouse recognizance for Thomas Colbert of the 'Ship' at Cottingwith East: Surety William Maltby of Aughton, farmer 1822
QDT/2/10/10 Alehouse recognizance for John Gell of the 'Blue Bell' at Cottingwith East: Surety Edmund Clark of Bubwith, butcher 1822
QDT/2/10/43 Alehouse recognizance for Thomas Young of the 'The Plough' at Aughton: Surety William Maltby of Aughton, farmer 1823
QDT/2/10/51 Alehouse recognizance for Thomas Colbert of the 'Sloop' at East Cottingwith: Surety William Bell of Melbourne, farmer 1823
QDT/2/10/52 Alehouse recognizance for John Gell of the 'Blue Bell' at East Cottingwith: Surety John Camplejohn of Melbourne, butcher 1823
QDT/2/10/86 Alehouse recognizance for Thomas Young of the 'The Plough' at Aughton: Surety Emanuel Lawson of Aughton, farmer 1825
QDT/2/10/94 Alehouse recognizance for Thomas Colbirt of the 'Ship' at East Cottingwith: Surety James Roome of East Cottingwith 1825
QDT/2/10/131 Alehouse recognizance for Thomas Young of the 'The Plough' at Aughton: Surety Richard Coney of Aughton, farmer 1826
QDT/2/10/139 Alehouse recognizance for Thomas Colbirt of the 'Ship' at East Cottingwith: Surety James Room of East Cottingwith 1826
QDT/2/10/140 Alehouse recognizance for John Gell of the 'Blue Bell' at East Cottingwith: Surety George Johnson of East Cottingwith 1826


Publicans in the Trades Directories

1823: East Cottingwith, Colbert Michael vict. Ship

1823: East Cottingwith, Gell John, butcher and vict. Blue Bell

 

1840: Aughton, Bernard Wm. vict. & grocer, Cross Keys

1840: Aughton, Maltby Richard, vict. Plough

1840: East Cottingwith, Davy John, vict. & brewer, Blue Bell

1840: East Cottingwith, Pearse James, vict. Ship

 

1857: Aughton, Newham William, Cross Keys

1857: East Cottingwith, Pears James, farmer, & Ship Inn

1857: East Cottingwith, Sumpton John, Blue Bell inn

 

1872: Aughton, Sanderson William, Plough inn

1872: East Cottingwith, Pears Ann (Mrs.), farmer, & Ship inn

1872: East Cottingwith, Sumpton John, Blue Bell inn

 

1879: Aughton, Sanderson William, Plough inn

1879: East Cottingwith, Houseman John, farmer and Ship inn

1879: East Cottingwith, Sumpton Hannah (Mrs.), Blue Bell inn

 

1889: East Cottingwith, Fratson Charles, Blue Bell P.H.

1889: East Cottingwith, Reader Robert, Ship inn

 

1892: East Cottingwith, Fratson Charles, joiner and wheelwright, &c., and vict., Blue Bell

1892: East Cottingwith, Sutcliffe Abraham, pig jobber and vict., Ship

 

1913: East Cottingwith, Dunn Thomas, Ship inn

1913: East Cottingwith, Fratson Arth. Blue Bell P.H. & joiner

 

1925: East Cottingwith, Fratson Arthur, Blue Bell P.H

1925: East Cottingwith, Hawe William, Ship inn