Puneet Varma (Editor)

Flasby

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OS grid reference
  
SD946566

Country
  
England

Local time
  
Monday 1:56 AM

District
  
Craven

UK parliament constituency
  
Skipton and Ripon

Civil parish
  
Flasby with Winterburn

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Shire county
  
North Yorkshire

Dialling code
  
01756

Flasby

Population
  
207 (Including Calton and Eshton. 2011)

Region
  
Yorkshire and the Humber

Weather
  
3°C, Wind W at 13 km/h, 90% Humidity

Flasby is a hamlet in the Yorkshire Dales in North Yorkshire, England. It is one of the two settlements, with Winterburn, in the civil parish of Flasby with Winterburn, part of the Craven district. The population of the civil parish was estimated at 80 in 2012, measured at 212 in the 2011 Census.

Map of Flasby, Skipton, UK

Flasby was first mentioned, as Flatebi, in the Domesday Book of 1086. The toponym is of Old Norse origin, meaning "the farmstead of a man called Flat" (the same origin as Flaxby).

Flasby with Winterburn was a township in the ancient parish of Gargrave in Staincliffe Wapentake in the West Riding of Yorkshire. It became a separate civil parish in 1866., and was transferred to the new county of North Yorkshire in 1974.

Flasby Hall is a large house built in 1843–44 and a Grade II listed building. In 1848 the Flasby Sword, an Iron Age sword and scabbard, was discovered in the grounds. It is now in the Craven Museum & Gallery in Skipton.

Freddie Trueman, the Yorkshire cricketer, lived in the village for many years.

References

Flasby Wikipedia