Puneet Varma (Editor)

Brandesburton

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Population
  
1,522 (2011 census)

Civil parish
  
Brandesburton

Local time
  
Thursday 4:26 PM

UK parliament constituency
  
East Yorkshire

OS grid reference
  
TA117474

Country
  
England

Dialling code
  
01964

Unitary authority
  
East Riding of Yorkshire

Brandesburton httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Ceremonial county
  
East Riding of Yorkshire

Region
  
Yorkshire and the Humber

Weather
  
8°C, Wind W at 26 km/h, 67% Humidity

Brandesburton is a village and civil parish in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. It is situated approximately 7 miles (11 km) west of Hornsea and 9 miles (14 km) north-east of the market town of Beverley.

Contents

Map of Brandesburton, Driffield, UK

The civil parish is formed by the village of Brandesburton and the hamlets of Burshill and Hempholme. According to the 2011 UK census, Brandesburton parish had a population of 1,522, an increase on the 2001 UK census figure of 1,348.

St Mary's Church, which is surrounded by its churchyard in the north-east corner of the village, is a large, medieval building, with tower, nave, aisles and chancel. It was largely built out of cobbles, but has an early brick clerestory and later south porch. Exhibiting some fragments of Norman work (including a priest's door), it principally dates from the 13th to the 15th centuries, and was restored in 1892. Inside are two noteworthy brasses: on the south side of the chancel the fragments of a (rare) bracket-brass, and on the north side more substantial, full-size brasses to John St Quintin, a former Lord of the Manor, and his wife. The church has been designated a Grade I listed building.

On the village green is a Grade II listed market cross.

Brandesburton amenities include the Billabong Jet Ski centre which operates throughout the year, the Hainsworth Park Golf Club, The Burton Lodge Hotel, the Black Swan and Dacre Arms pubs, and The Dacre Lakeside camping and Caravan Park.

The village is situated off the A165 which used to pass through the village until the opening of a bypass of it, and neighbouring village Leven, in 1994. A railway station was proposed in 1901 as part of the North Holderness Light Railway between Beverley and North Frodingham, but the line was never built.

Remains of mammoths and prehistoric elephant tusks have been discovered near the village.

From the 1930s and into the Second World War RAF Catfoss was located just to the north-east of the village.

Governance

The civil parish was in the Beverley and Holderness parliamentary constituency until the 2010 general election when it was transferred to the constituency of East Yorkshire.

References

Brandesburton Wikipedia