Margrove Park is a village in the borough of Redcar and Cleveland and the ceremonial county of North Yorkshire, England. It is at the eastern end of a broad valley extending eastwards from Nunthorpe and is about 2 miles (3.2 km) east of Guisborough. The terraces of houses were built for the miners who worked the adjacent ironstone mine, which was called Stanghow Mine and closed in 1925. Prior to the arrival of ironstone mining, the area was a deer park probably belonging to the owners of Skelton Castle. During the nineteenth century, a brickworks was located in the settlement known as Squire Wharton's Brickworks. Margrove Park first appears in historical documents c. 1349 as Maugrey park with deer, and was part of the Langbaurgh Wapentake. The settlement used to be in the civil parish of Skelton-in-Cleveland and part of the Skelton & Brotton Urban District. In 1974, Margrove Park as part of the Skelton civil parish was moved into the County of Cleveland. It is now in the civil parish of Lockwood, and is represented at Westminster as part of the Middlesbrough and South East Cleveland Constituency. Margrove Ponds nature reserve is to the north of the settlement. The nature reserve is maintained by the Tees Valley Wildlife Trust, and the ponds are thought to have been created by the weight of shale heaps from the adjacent ironstone mine pressing down on the land.

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Charltons

Charltons is a village in the unitary authority of Redcar and Cleveland and the ceremonial county of North Yorkshire, England. It is 5 miles (8 km) south of Saltburn-by-the-Sea on the A171. The village was named after Thomas Charlton who built the cottages for the miners at his Slapewath ironstone mine around 1870. The housing in the village is of two rows of terraces. A third row of houses was demolished in the 1960s due to subsidence.
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Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland

Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland is a constituency created in 1997 represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 2024 by Luke Myer of the Labour Party.
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1.3 km

Boosbeck

Boosbeck is a village in the borough of Redcar and Cleveland and the ceremonial county of North Yorkshire, England. The name is Viking in origin and means "the stream near a cow shed". Between 1878 and 1960, the village had a station on the North Eastern Railway line between Brotton and Guisborough. It was very efficient but closed in 1960. Lockwood Primary School is located on the southern edge of the village. It was opened in 1984.
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1.4 km

Slapewath

Slapewath is a hamlet in the borough of Redcar and Cleveland and the ceremonial county of North Yorkshire, England. Whilst the name of the hamlet is recorded as far back as the 13th century, it was developed due to the alum and ironstone industries of the North-Eastern part of Yorkshire in the 16th and 19th centuries respectively. The hamlet lies on the A171 road.