Muston, North Yorkshire
Muston is a village and civil parish, in North Yorkshire, England. It was historically in the East Riding of Yorkshire. The village is situated 1.5 miles (2.4 km) south-west from the centre of the coastal town of Filey, and on the A1039 road.
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252 m
All Saints' Church, Muston
All Saints' Church is the parish church of Muston, North Yorkshire, a village in England.
In the early Mediaeval period, Muston was in the parish of All Saints' Church, Hunmanby, although it had a chapel of ease by 1115, and had its own vicar from 1269. In 1856, it was described as a "a small and mean, ancient, edifice", with a nave, chancel and south porch and a turret; the floor was paved with pebbles. In 1863, the church was demolished and a replacement constructed on the same site, to a design by William Baldwin Stewart. The building was grade II listed in 1966.
The church is built of limestone on a moulded chamfered plinth and has a slate roof. It consists of a nave, north and south aisles, a south porch, a chancel and a vestry. On the west gable is a gabled bellcote with two pointed arches on colonnettes, and a clock face on the east side. Inside the porch are two re-set medieval carved heads. Inside, the altar table has an early stone base, there is a possible holy water stoup, a Norman font, and a piscina in the form of a pillar.
1.3 km
Filey School
Filey School (named Ebor Academy Filey for a time) is a secondary school located in Filey, North Yorkshire, England. It is the only secondary school in Filey, and it also covers surrounding villages, with a significant intake from Hunmanby. The school is under the Enhanced Mainstream School (EMS) umbrella created by North Yorkshire County Council, which means the school is specialised in Special Educational Needs students.
1.4 km
Passage Beds
The Passage Beds is a member of the Corallian Oolite Formation, a geologic formation in England. The subtidal to marine sandstone preserves fossils of bivalves, gastropods, crinoids, echinoids and ammonites dating back to the Late Jurassic period (Oxfordian stage).
1.9 km
Royal Oak, North Yorkshire
Royal Oak is an area in North Yorkshire, England, between Scarborough and Bridlington, next to Filey and Hunmanby. The place itself is marked by a public house, also named The Royal Oak and a railway crossing on the Yorkshire Coast Line listed as being 43 miles 4 chains (69.3 km) north of Hull Paragon station. Two railway junctions that formed a spur to the railway station at Filey Holiday Camp were also located just to the south of the A165 crossing. These were known as the Royal Oak Junctions.
It is home to a string of bungalows, and across the A165 is a blue house which was formerly the Gate keepers Cottage. In front of the inn is the location of a deserted medieval village known as Fowthorpe. It was historically part of the East Riding of Yorkshire until 1974. From 1974 to 2023 it was part of the Borough of Scarborough, it is now administered by the unitary North Yorkshire Council.
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