Before the Harrying of the North Bedale was held by Torpin (Thorfinn),[2] a patronym retained by the infamous Dick Turpin. The parish church also dates from this time (as evidenced by its crypt), before significant remodelling. The original 9th-century church escaped destruction in the Harrying of the North and was recorded in Domesday Book.[3] The recent discovery of the Bedale Hoard provides further evidence of high-status Anglo-Saxon and Viking Age activity in the area.[4] The town was recorded as Bedell[3] or Bedhal and derives from 'Beda's Halh' which means the corner or piece of land of Beda.[5]
Sir Alan FitzBrian, Knt, Lord of the Manor of Bedale &c., (died shortly before 17 May 1267, killed in self-defence by Payn le Keu of Brandesburton) was a descendant of Conan I of Rennes, Duke of Brittany.[20][21] He had two known sons, the younger being Theobald FitzAlan of Stow and Quy (d. 21 February 1308), and was succeeded at Bedale by the elder:
Sir Brian FitzAlan Knt., (d. 1 June 1306), J.P., High Sheriff of Yorkshire, &c.[22] He was summoned to parliament from 24 June 1295 to 22 January 1305 by Writs directed to Briano filio Alani whereby he is held to have become Lord FitzAlan. Upon his death any hereditary peerage created by the Writ of 1295 is held to be in abeyance.[23]
His daughters, Agnes (born 1298) and Katherine (born 1300), were his co-heirs in his landed estates and manors. They were also co-heirs to his brother, Theobald.[24] Katherine (d. before 7 August 1328) married Sir John de Grey, 1st Baron Grey de Rotherfield, KG (9 October 1300 – 1 September 1359).
The estate of Bedale and the Lordship of the Manor passed via the elder daughter, Agnes FitzAlan, whose marriage was granted on 10 May 1306 (when she was aged just 8) to Sir Miles de Stapleton of Carlton, Yorkshire, for his son:
Sir Gilbert de Stapleton, Knt., (d. before 23 June 1324) a younger son, whom she married before 15 December 1317,[25] in whose family Bedale remained for more than a century and was still in the possession of their great-great-grandson,
Sir Miles Stapleton, who died 30 September 1466.[26] His younger brother Brian Stapleton of Crispings (in Happisburgh) and Hasilden, Norfolk, died at about the same time and they both left only co-heiresses.[27]
The Lordship of Bedale Manor is currently held jointly by Lord Beaumont, heir of both FitzAlan moiety lines, but the Beresford-Peirse baronets retain distinction as having de facto possession of the manor, which was originally forfeited by Lovell's attainder and passed on to numerous instalments of government figures and subsequent real-estate purchasers, whether Digby of Warwickshire, Dudley of Nottinghamshire, native Theakston and Jackson, then Peirse, after which it passed by inheritance to Beresford of Derbyshire.[28][29][30]
Later history
In the 18th century Bedale was a centre of horseracing. It was the place where races for three-year-olds were introduced in England (having previously being limited to older horses).[31]
St Gregory's had a daughter church known as St Augustine's Church and Village Hall at Leeming Bar, no longer used for worship, and a Mission Chapel at Burrill.[42] There are other local Anglican chapels, such as St Gregory's at Crakehall and St Patrick's at Patrick Brompton. Two other parishes with churches joined in the benefice with St Gregory's are St John the Baptist (Leeming village) and St Mary the Virgin (Thornton Watlass).[40]
Others
The Catholic church of St Mary and St Joseph's Church, Bedale lies in Aiskew.[43] There are Methodist chapels in Bedale, Leeming, Crakehall and Aiskew. Some buildings in the area also have their own private chapels, such as at Christ's Hospital in Firby.[2]
Transport
Bedale lies on the B6285 road, which runs south and south east from Bedale and connects with the A6055 road at Burneston.[44] The A684 road used to go through the town but a bypass was opened in August 2016, which means through traffic now avoids Leeming Bar, Aiskew and Bedale.[45] The town is only two miles (three kilometres) west of the A1(M) at Leeming Bar via the A684 or via the adjoining village of Aiskew.[46]
Bedale has a railway station on the preserved Wensleydale Railway. The station opened in 1855 and lasted almost a century before British Rail closed it in April 1954.[47] The line remained open for local goods until the 1980s and for the limestone quarry at Redmire until 1992.[48] The Ministry of Defence paid £750,000 to have the line upgraded and improved so that it could transfer heavy vehicles (mostly tanks) between Catterick Garrison and other MoD sites across the United Kingdom. These trains continue to run sporadically.[49]
The line was eventually reopened in 2003 as a heritage railway between Leeming Bar and Redmire.[50] The station is actually in Aiskew, since it lies east of Bedale Beck, which forms the boundary between the two.[51] The line was later extended to Scruton as well as to the west of Northallerton.
Work on making Bedale Beck navigable to barges down to the River Swale at Gatenby began in 1768 and resulted in an area at the south end of the town known as The Harbour. The plan was abandoned in 1855 when the railway was opened but the weir and some iron moorings still exist on the beck just south of the Bedale to Aiskew road bridge.[52] A public footpath runs along the Bedale side of the beck from the bridge for more than one mile (1.5 kilometres), passing the leech house and the harbour.
Education
Bedale has three schools: Bedale Primary School[53] (which won the Drax Cup in 2012), Bedale High School[54] and Mowbray School.[55]
The town has many local shops, a Co-op Food supermarket,[58] pubs and eating places along its market place.[59] It holds a market every Tuesday on the cobbles that line the market place,[60] and there is a car-boot sale in the park every Saturday morning from April to October approximately.[61] It also has a leisure centre with full gym, swimming pool and astroturf sports pitches. Bedale Athletic Sports Association provides football, cricket, hockey, squash and tennis. Big Sheep Little Cow Farm is a petting zoo next to the railway line and Bedale Beck.[62]
Bedale Golf Club is on the northern edge of the town where the B6285 meets the A684 to Leyburn.[57] The golf club was founded in 1892. The course is a challenging 18 holes in wooded parkland.
Bedale also has a brass band with a 25-year history of providing musical education and entertainment for the local community.[63]
The 1945 film The Way to the Stars was filmed with Bedale as the local town for the fictional RAF Halfpenny Field and some of the locations remain little changed.[67] The film stars Sir John Mills and Sir Michael Redgrave as RAF pilots and Bedale was one of a number of locations used during filming.[68]
^"Election Maps". ordnancesurvey.co.uk. Retrieved 30 June 2024. On the left of the screen is the "Boundary" tab; click this and activate either civil parishes or Westminster Constituencies (or both), however, only two functions can be active at any one time.
^Richardson, Andy (17 February 2017). "New bypass leads to end of market". Darlington & Stockton Times. p. 13. ISSN2040-3933.
^Bagshaw, Mike (2010). Go slow Yorkshire dales & moors : local, characterful guides to Britain's special places (1 ed.). Chalfont St Peter: Bradt Travel Guides. pp. 96–97. ISBN978-1-84162-323-8.
Cokayne, George; Gibbs, Vicary; Doubleday, Arthur; Warrand, Duncan; Scott-Ellis, Thomas; de Walden, Howard (1926). The complete peerage : or a history of the House of Lords and all its members from the earliest times. Vol. 5. London: St Catherine Press. OCLC851393633.