Yorkshire Post

Step through time in county town

Digital trail aims to encourage a new audience to explore historic landmarks via app on mobile phones

- PAUL JEEVES HEAD OF NEWS ■ Email: paul.jeeves@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @jeeves_paul

TUCKED AWAY in the northern fringes of the Vale of York, the market town of Northaller­ton can trace its origins back to the Roman era.

Originally thought to be a military station for the Roman army, the county town of North Yorkshire has had a long and distinguis­hed history.

And now that heritage is due to be showcased to a new audience with the launch yesterday of a trail through Northaller­ton, charting its hidden history dating back to the 12th century.

The new digital initiative, which features a total of 13 stops along a mile-long trail, has been created using historic photograph­s held at North Yorkshire County Council’s County Record Office.

Anyone embarking on the trail can download a virtual map on to their mobile phone, which features historic photograph­s of specific locations along the route, along with details of each site’s past. The venture has been developed over the past four months by Elena Leyshon, inset, a graduate trainee archivist who has been working at the County Record Office for the past two years.

Miss Leyshon said: “The aim of the trail is to open up some of the hidden history of Northaller­ton to not only the town’s residents, but also to visitors as well.

“The County Record Office is a really important resource, but people may have the perception that it is full of dusty old documents. This is about opening up the heritage of Northaller­ton to a whole new audience who we may not have engaged with before.”

The trail starts at Northaller­ton’s railway station before finishing at All Saint’s parish church, parts of which date back to 1120.

Other historic locations include the Victorian vista of South Parade, County Hall and Zetland Street, where the Joe Cornish art gallery is located on the site of the former North Riding register office.

The market place is also included, and the trail gives details of the fact that a market has been held in the town on a Wednesday since 1127. Among the locations which have changed dramatical­ly is the site of the town’s former prison, which was acquired by Hambleton District Council in 2015 and transforme­d into the Treadmills developmen­t, featuring retail and leisure facilities and a business tech hub. The name of the developmen­t was taken from the world’s largest treadmill once used by inmates in the prison.

The trail has been developed in partnershi­p with East Riding of Yorkshire Council’s archives department and is available through its What Was Here app, which was launched in 2019.

Other trails on the mobile app include Skipton, Harrogate and Beverley, although the Northaller­ton route is the first to be developed by the North Yorkshire County Record Office.

The app can be downloaded at www.whatwasher­e.org and if the new Northaller­ton trail proves a success, more routes in North Yorkshire could be introduced.

The aim is to open up some of the hidden history of Northaller­ton. Elena Leyshon, graduate trainee archivist.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? TRAIL: The history of Northaller­ton can now be explored via a mobile phone app, developed by the North Yorkshire County Record Office which gives an insight into locations such as the town’s market place, South Parade and County Hall.
TRAIL: The history of Northaller­ton can now be explored via a mobile phone app, developed by the North Yorkshire County Record Office which gives an insight into locations such as the town’s market place, South Parade and County Hall.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom