PocklingtonHistory.com
News
> Historical Horrors
> Allerthorpe Walk
> D-Day talk
> The 2024 AGM & Talk
> 18th Century Pocklington
> Two Short Talks
> Pocklington Heritage Festival (2023)
> Old Shops part 2
Events
> Pocklington Local History Group
  19th Sep - Pocklington's connection
  with the sea

> Pocklington Local History Group
  22nd Sep - 'Footsteps of
  the Parisi' and Exhibition

> Pocklington District Heritage Trust
  14-16th Nov - **HERITAGE FESTIVAL**
  The Anglo-Saxons and Vikings'

> Pocklington District Heritage Trust
  14th Nov - 'Archaeology conference
  The Anglo-Saxons and Vikings'

> Pocklington District Heritage Trust
  15th Nov - 'Heritage Beanfeast
  A Viking evening with SHIFTIPIG'

Gallery
Market Place Market Place
Note the new building in the photo on the corner.
Regent Street Regent Street
Note the 'Old Red Lion Hotel'
Chapmangate Chapmangate
Note the independent chapel built in 1807 to the left.
Publications
Woldgate History Woldgate History

"A History of Woldgate School"

* 60 pages
* Fully illustrated
* Only £5.00
epp Exploring Pocklington's Past

* Peter Halkon
* Summary of
Pocklington Archaeology
* Only £5.00
Heritage Trail Heritage Trail

"A Pock History & Heritage Trail"

* 2nd edition
* 27 pages
* Old photos
* Only £4.99

People and Places Thumb Old Pock

"People and Places of Old Pocklington"

* 40 pages
* Old photos
* Only £5.99
Adieu WW1 Book

"Adieu to dear old Pock"

  * ww1 diary
  * 53 profiles
  * Local News
  * 299 soldiers
  * 246 pages
Newsletter

PDLHG Newsletters
#1 Oct 2020
#2 Dec 2020
#3 May 2021

Kilnwick Percy
Kilnwick Percy in around 1840. David Neave confirmed the portico being built in 1844, the marble columns in the entrance hall in 1845 and the ceiling frescos 1848. It shows the church with no porch and the door at the west end before it was rebuilt in 1865; and the hall as Robert Denison built it in the 1790s without Duncombe's later portico and balustrade additions. The artist is Thomas Edward Newnum, an artist and portrait painter in St Martins Lane, York in the 1840s who was 'drawing master' at St Peters School by the 1860s. The printer/lithographer was York's William Monkhouse (1812-96), who also printed William Watson's Market Weighton map.
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