This new extended manor of Skurveton
remained in the hands of the Lascelles family until the end of the
13th Century. It subsequently passed to the Markenfields of Markenfield
Hall in 1314 and to the Danbys of Thorp Perrow at the end of the
16th Century.
The oldest surviving building in Scruton is the Church,
which was built as a lofty barn-like structure in the 12th Century.
The aisles and chancel were added in the 13th Century and the tower
in the 15th, but much of the old building disappeared in an over-enthusiastic
Victorian restoration by the Squire, Henry Coore, in 1865. Those
with a taste for Church architecture may like to amuse themselves
in finding the remains of the original 12th Century building, and
dating the other parts. The church still bears its original dedication
to St. Radegund, the Queen of the Merovingian King Chlotar I; she
died on August 13th, 587 A.D. and was buried at Poitiers in France
. It is one of only five churches in England , all mediaeval, with
this dedication.
Scruton saw fighting during the raids by the Scots
in the first half of the 14th Century, when much of Yorkshire was
devastated. It is said that at this time a battle with the Scots
took place on Scruton Moor, the area to the west of the village
(where Moor House Farm is today).
Richmondshire was also a centre of activity during
the “Rising of the North” of 1569, in support of the
old Catholic religion. The “Provost Marshall in the Northe
partes”, charged with opposing the rebellion, was Sir George
Bowes. The constables reported to him that 12 men had joined the
rebellion from Scruton, and two of these were appointed to be executed,
but it appears that only one was caught and put to death. Thomas
Markenfield of Markenfield Hall, who then owned the manor of Scruton,
was involved in the Rising and he also was executed; his lands were
confiscated and in 1571 the Crown granted Scruton to Sir George
Bowes no doubt as a reward for his services.
For the whole of the mediaeval period the manor of
Scruton was an agricultural community under the control of a manorial
court, meeting at the Manor House. You can still see in some of
the Scruton pastures the ridge and furrow which remains from the
mediaeval strip fields.
The manorial water mill was at Grimescar; Mill Lane
is still there but little else. The mill and the nearby Grimescar
farmhouse stood on the edge of Leeming Aerodrome, and shortly before
midnight on 13th March, 1942 , a Whitley of 77 Squadron coming in
to land after an operational flight hit and damaged the farmhouse,
crashed and caught fire, killing the members of the crew. All the
buildings at Grimescar were later demolished.
The mediaeval common fields were enclosed by the
middle of the 17th Century, and the Manor House was rebuilt about
the same time in the form in which it still stands today. One of
the landowners in Scruton was Dr. Thomas Gale, a member of an old
Scruton family who later, in 1688, purchased the manor of Scruton
and became the Squire. Dr. Gale was a clergyman and one of the most
learned men of his time. He married a second cousin of Samuel Pepys
the diarist; for much of his life he was headmaster of St. Paul’s
School in London, and subsequently was a successful Dean of York.
He was buried in York Minster where you may see his memorial stone.
His eldest son Roger was also a nationally-known antiquarian; he
was M.P. for Northallerton from 1706 to 1713, and Scruton’s
first historian. He was buried in Scruton Churchyard, but he left
instructions that there was to be no stone to mark the place.
It was Roger Gale who about 1705 built Scruton House,
later known as Scruton Hall, which used to stand behind the high
wall to the west of the Church. It started life as a simple but
attractive Queen Anne house, but wings were added later, which made
it a much grander building. All the Scrutonians who knew the Hall
greatly regret its needless destruction in 1956. Between 1718 and
1720 Roger Gale planted the old Lebanon cedars which still survive
in Scruton Park.
There was a threat of further strife in Scruton in
1745, when Bonny Prince Charlie marched south from Scotland. Local
defence associations were formed all over Yorkshire, and our Squire,
Roger Henry Gale, a ne’er-do-well son of the famous Roger,
fled rather precipitately with his family to Stamford. In fact he
was probably in more danger at Stamford than he would have been
at Scruton, for the Pretender came down the west coast route and
never touched Yorkshire. He found that his expected Catholic support
never materialised and he retreated in disarray. Poor Roger Henry
ran into trouble of another sort on his way back to Scruton. Due
to floods and bad roads, the 125 mile journey lasted 5 days!
Alfred Coore's Gravesite
In 1795 the direct male line of the Gales died out,
and eventually the manor of Scruton passed through marriage to the
Coore family. One of the more remarkable members of that family
was the Rev. Alfred Coore, who in his later years was Rector of
Scruton from 1936 to 1943. In 1898 when a young man, he had gone
out to India as a missionary. Although self-taught and not qualified
as an architect, he started to design and build churches with great
success in a blend of hindu and Mogul styles. he designed about
50 churches, schools and other buildings. he died in 1947, and the
Scruton estate was finally sold off in 1953 after his brother Alban
died, but the name still survives in Scruton in the Coore Arms,
the Coore Memorial Hall and Alban Coore Place.
The Coore Memorial Hall was in fact the old National
School, opened in 1860, where several generations of Scrutonians
received their education. Despite opposition in the village, it
was closed in 1967 and Scruton children are now bused to Morton
and Northallerton.
Alban Coore's Gravesite
The old Rectory facing the village green was built
in 1742 and it replaced at least one, and possibly more, earlier
parsonages, for the names of Scruton Rectors can be traced back
to the 13th Century. With the grouping of parishes which is now
a feature of the Anglican Church, the Rector of Scruton is also
Vicar of Ainderby Steeple with Yafforth. He lives at Ainderby Vicarage,
so we no longer have a resident parson.
The Methodist Chapel in Station Road was converted
from a house in 1879 at a total cost of £300.00 but there
is a record of a house in the village being used as a chapel in
1840.
The old Scruton Lane Railway Station still survives
– but only just! The Wensleydale line from Northallerton reached
Scruton in 1848 and freed the township from its dependence upon
horse-drawn vehicles. Although schedule passenger services ceased
in 1954, the line is still used for quarry freight traffic and the
odd holiday excursion; and on at least two occasions the Royal Train
carrying our present Queen has passed up the line en route to a
quiet siding for an overnight stop. These are the only royal visits
to Scruton that I know of, if we can discount the tradition that
Mary Queen of Scots once slept at the Manor House!
Before the days of the railway, Scruton was of course
a much more self-contained community than it is today. The Census
tells us that in 1841 there were about a dozen people of independent
means, 15 farmers with farms ranging from 20 to 300 acres, about
a dozen adult children of farmers working on the farm and 40 agricultural
labourers of both sexes and all ages. There were 43 general servants
in the village, fairly evenly divided between men and women, a very
varied assortment of tradesmen and craftsmen also lived and worked
in Scruton: carpenters, joiners, bricklayers, shoemakers, blacksmiths,
cartwrights, upholsterers, nurserymen, gardeners, weavers, tailors,
butchers, a draper and a miller. There were deficiencies: no doctors
or dentists, even though the parson was usually prepared to pull
a tooth if you were desperate! And mains water did not reach Scruton
until 1939. The more recent arrivals in the village can now enjoy
its pleasures without having to endure the former inconveniences!
April 1985© C. S. Preston
Scruton
12.7.42
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