Melbecks est une paroisse civile du Yorkshire du Nord, en Angleterre.

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4.0 km

Ivelet

Ivelet is a hamlet in the Yorkshire Dales, North Yorkshire, England about a mile west of Gunnerside in Swaledale.
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4.3 km

Ivelet Bridge

Ivelet Bridge is a historic structure in Ivelet, a hamlet in North Yorkshire, in England. The packhorse bridge over the River Swale was constructed in the late 16th century. Nikolaus Pevsner describes it as "the most romantic of the Swaledale bridges. One arch, rising very high and never widened". It was grade II* listed in 1966. The bridge was damaged by a vehicle in 2012, but was repaired ahead of the 2014 Tour de France passing nearby. The bridge is built of rubble, and consists of a single semicircular arch of voussoirs, surmounted by smaller stones forming a hood mould. The parapets have segmental coping, and they curve round at the northeast corner. Immediately to its northeast is a separately listed Mediaeval stone slab, said to have been used to rest coffins being transported to the Church of St Andrew, Grinton.
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4.6 km

Oxnop Hall

Oxnop Hall is a historic building near Muker in North Yorkshire, in England. The date the farmhouse was built is uncertain, but it has a datestone reading 1685, so was either built or altered at that time. It was the home of George Kearton, a boxer and huntsman, who died in 1764, when he claimed to be 125 years old. The building was grade II* listed in 1966; Historic England describes it as "the best house of its type in Swaledale". In 2018, it remained in use as a farmhouse, and has more recently also served as a bed and breakfast. The house is built of stone on a boulder plinth, with sandstone dressings, quoins and a stone slate roof with stone copings and shaped kneelers. It has two storeys, five bays, and a rear stair turret. On the front is a two-storey gabled porch containing a basket-arched doorway with a moulded chamfered surround, a dated and initialled lintel, and a hood mould, above which is an inscribed and dated panel. On the front are fire windows and a single-light window, and the other windows are mullioned or mullioned and transomed with hood moulds.
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6.6 km

Muker

Muker is a village and civil parish at the western end of Swaledale in North Yorkshire, England, within the Yorkshire Dales. The parish includes the hamlets and villages of Angram, Keld, Thwaite, West Stonesdale and Birkdale, as well as the Tan Hill Inn, the highest in England. At the 2001 census the civil parish had a population of 309, reducing to 249 at the 2011 census. In 2015, North Yorkshire County Council estimated the population to be 260. From 1974 to 2023 it was part of the district of Richmondshire, it is now administered by the unitary North Yorkshire Council.
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6.8 km

Arn Gill (North Yorkshire)

Arn Gill is a ravine or gully containing a beck of the same name, near the village of Muker in Swaledale, North Yorkshire, England. The ravine and beck run steeply downhill from the stream's source in Arn Gill Head, and the beck disgorges into the River Swale below. The ravine contains remnants of the former Adelaide Level lead mine, which is named after Lady Adelaide Lamont, a descendant of Judge Jeffreys. In 1865 a strike was made there, which yielded about £12,000 (equivalent to £1,449,217 in 2023) worth of galena or lead ore. The mine closed in 1920. Miners worked in bad conditions in North Yorkshire lead mines during the Adelaide Level's era, with over 62% of local mines having extremely impure air. The most common occupational disease for miners was silicosis.