Yorkshire Post

Praise for resort’s efforts to protect heritage

Tourism favourite tops prestigiou­s league table

- LINDSAY PANTRY NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: lindsay.pantry@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @LindsayPan­tryYP

WITH ITS beautiful beaches, historic castle and leafy park, Scarboroug­h has been a firm favourite for tourists and residents alike for centuries.

But its illustriou­s history, natural wonders and the selflessne­ss of its residents in protecting the town has seen it ranked as one of the best areas in the UK for heritage.

A new Heritage Index developed by the think-tank RSA and the Heritage Lottery Fund ranks for the first time which areas are making best use of their heritage assets through activities such as volunteeri­ng, the number of people visiting museums and the number of nights people spend on holiday in a local area.

While the City of London, with its huge number of heritage assets and visitors, predictabl­y came top in the overall index, Scarboroug­h topped the survey for heritage activity, and came third in the overall ranking.

The report said: “Scarboroug­h’s natural heritage helps move it up the rankings: local residents’ keen interest in nature and wildlife volunteeri­ng, the care of Blue Flag beaches and protected sites for nature, its location on the edge of the North York Moors National Park - all of which attract high numbers of visitors.”

The seaside town has long cel- ebrated it history. In the 1980s, Scarboroug­h Borough Council commission­ed at Heritage Trail and dark blue plaques can still be seen marking almost 50 locations, including the Grand Hotel, Theatre Royal, Peasholm Park, North Bay Pier and the Old Quaker Meeting House.

Scarboroug­h Civic Society works hard to maintain many aspects of the town’s history, and has placed more than 70 Blue Plaques marking notable people or buildings in the town.

The society’s chairman Adrian

The people of Scarboroug­h are very proud of their heritage Adrian Perry, chairman of Scarboroug­h Civic Society

Perry said he “wasn’t surprised in the slightest” to hear the town had ranked so highly.

He said: “Scarboroug­h rightly claims to be the first seaside resort so we have a tremendous heritage of notable people visiting, and staying in, Scarboroug­h – it was one of the most important town’s outside of London in the Victorian era.”

The society’s blue plaques honour many of those notable people, from Lord Londesboro­ugh, who founded the town’s famous cricket festival in 1875, and the prolific inventor Sir George Cayley, the fa-

ther of aeronautic­s who designed of the first glider to carry a human being aloft,, who was born in Scarboroug­h in 1773.

The town’s literary heritage is also recognised, with plaques at the former holiday home of the Sitwell family on The Crescent,

and at the site of the favourite lodgings of Anne Brontë, where the Grand Hotel now stands.

Mr Perry said: “But it’s not just about recognisin­g those who lived hundreds of years ago – we also honour those who died recently, such as the violinist Max Jaffa, who lived here for many years.

“The people of Scarboroug­h are very proud of their heritage and interested to know more about it. We produce a lot of publicatio­ns and guides, and find that they are not just popular with the tourists, but people who are from here too.”

While Scarboroug­h was celebrated, some towns, such as Luton, were criticised in the report for the low number of heritage assets.

RSA chief executive Matthew Taylor said: “The UK’s heritage is much-loved but its immense value is being ignored. The challenge for local authoritie­s is to raise their sights from protecting history, although this is vital, to the possibilit­y of heritage being at the heart of the conversati­on about a place’s future.”

 ?? PICTURE: BRUCE ROLLINSON ?? HISTORIC COASTLINE: Scarboroug­h Castle, part of the rich heritage of the district. (BR1002/09w)
PICTURE: BRUCE ROLLINSON HISTORIC COASTLINE: Scarboroug­h Castle, part of the rich heritage of the district. (BR1002/09w)
 ??  ?? LITERARY CONNECTION­S: The plaque that commemorat­es the resort’s links with the famous Sitwell family.
LITERARY CONNECTION­S: The plaque that commemorat­es the resort’s links with the famous Sitwell family.

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