BBC Countryfile Magazine

Tale of the turkey

Wintringha­m and Boynton, East Riding of Yorkshire

- Chris Gee is the author of Walking the Yorkshire Coast: A Companion Guide.

As we tuck into our turkey Christmas dinner, how many of us give a thought to the origin of this traditiona­l fayre? Turkeys are not native – they originate from Mexico – and it wasn’t until the 1950s that turkeys were affordable for the general population.

Before then, goose, rabbit and roast beef would have been at the heart of our

Christmas feast.

Henry VIII is reputed to have been the first to enjoy turkey for Christmas, but almost certainly in a game meat pie rather than the whole-bird roast that is familiar to us today. It took a considerab­le time for turkey to become a Christmas staple, gaining momentum in the 19th and early 20th century when popularise­d by Dickens in his 1843 novel A Christmas Carol and, later, by King Edward VII.

ARRIVAL OF THE BIRD

William Strickland is credited with introducin­g the turkey to Britain in 1526 after he was given six live birds by native American traders. The son of a Yorkshire gentleman, Strickland was an early explorer, sailing to the New World with the famous adventurer Sebastian Cabot.

On returning to Yorkshire in 1542, Strickland invested in estates at Wintringha­m and Boynton in East Yorkshire. He spent most of the later part of his life at Place Newton in Wintringha­m.

His coat of arms, granted in 1550, includes the oldest surviving European drawing of a turkey, and St Andrew’s Church in Boynton includes a turkey carved into a wooden lectern.

WANDERING THE WOLDS

Today, Wintringha­m and Boynton are classic Yorkshire Wolds hamlets in a quiet corner of East Riding, both surrounded by footpaths and bridleways. Wintringha­m is on the 79-mile Yorkshire Wolds Way. A short introducti­on to this National Trail climbs steeply through the Deep Dale plantation to Knapton Brow, where there are panoramic views across the Vale of Pickering from the stunning sculpture of Enclosure Rites by Jony Easterby.

A fine network of paths strides out from Boynton, past Strickland’s hall and up on to Woldgate – an old Roman Road that would have been familiar to Strickland – which leads on via the Gypsey Race chalk stream to the prehistori­c Rudston Monolith. A wider circuit includes Argam Dikes, one of a number of ancient earthworks, burial howes, tumuli and henges, so characteri­stic of the Yorkshire Wolds.

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 ??  ?? Just down the road from Boynton is Rudston Monolith, the tallest standing stone in the UK at 7.6 metres BELOW, INSET A wooden turkey supports the lectern at St Andrew’s Church in Boynton
Just down the road from Boynton is Rudston Monolith, the tallest standing stone in the UK at 7.6 metres BELOW, INSET A wooden turkey supports the lectern at St Andrew’s Church in Boynton
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