MSB Souvenirs

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MSB Souvenirs MUKER SILVER BAND Order Form MUKER SILVER BAND SOUVENIRS Please send this page with a cheque ( Sterling only ) made payable to Muker Silver Band to-: Mr & Mrs C. Watts South View Cottage Gunnerside Richmond North Yorkshire DL11 6LE 01748 886202 (Prices include postage and packing in the UK) C.D. RECORDINGS Price Quantity Total Cost MSB6 - Melodies From Muker £10.90 Including-: Don’t Cry For Me Argentina, When I fall In Love, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, I Dreamed A Dream and many more. MSB7 - Best Of Muker £10.90 Including -: Any Dream Will Do, One Moment In Time, Salute To Sullivan, Hootenanny and many more MSB8 - Muker Memories- Hymns & Marches (22 in all) £10.90 Featuring favourite Hymns such as Crimond, The Old Rugged Cross and Marches Slaidburn, Chieftain, The Howitzer and many more MSB9 - “100 Years Of Muker” Re Issue of 1997 Favourite £10.90 Including Danny Boy, I’ll Take You Home Again Kathleen, O’ Sole Mio and many of your golden oldies AUDIO CASSETTES MSB1 - Music From Muker - No Longer Available MSB2 - The Sound Of Muker ( 1990) £2.90 MSB3 - Marching To Muker ( 1992 ) £2.90 MSB4 - More From Muker - No Longer Available MSB5 - 100 Years Of Muker (1997 ) £2.90 MSB6 - Melodies From Muker (2004) £2.90 VIDEOS MSB V1. Dales Medley (1994) VHS £11.75 MSB V2. Muker Centenary (1999) VHS - No Longer Available BOOK MSB M2 Banding In The Dales. Fascinating insight into Muker £4.95 Band and other bands from the Dales – written by Dr D. Bythell Delivery Address: Name………………………………..................... Address……………………………….................………………………………................................ POST CODE …………………………………… TELEPHONE ………………………………….. Email Address………………………………….. Please allow 28 days for delivery N.B. By purchasing items from this list, you are playing your part in helping to keep Muker Band going. Thank you for your support. .
Recommended publications
  • THE FARMERS ARMS Walk No. 3 - Muker to Ivelet Circular
    THE FARMERS ARMS Walk No. 3 - Muker to Ivelet Circular Walk No. 3 – Muker to Ivelet Circular Summary A great circular walk to Ivelet via Oxnop, with spectacular views of Kisdon Hill, Oxnop Side and the villages of Muker and Gunnerside. Start: The Farmers Arms, Muker Facilities: Public Toilets at Muker Distance: 5 miles Refreshments: Muker Duration: 2 hours Difficulty: Medium – An undulating walk to Ivelet, followed by a ½ mile climb* along the road through Ivelet and past Gunnerside Lodge, returning to Muker via a stone track with spectacular views of Upper Swaledale and gradually descending down to Rampsholme footbridge and returning through the level flagged footpath through the meadows. * The climb is worth it but it can be avoided should you wish to choose the well signposted riverside footpath to Muker from Ivelet Bridge. Important Note: The first half of this walk can be very wet underfoot after heavy rainfall. Route 1) With the pub behind you turn left and follow the main road B6270 as it heads out of the village and over the bridge. Look to your right and you will see a footpath sign directing you up a track which initially runs parallel to the road, turn onto this track. 2) As you pass in between two stone barns, the track turns right and slightly downhill. You will see 2 wooden gates on your left. The second one has a footpath arrow on its crooked end (pictured below left). Follow this path. The path is quite well defined but stays reasonably close to the bottom field boundary and keeps the stone wall on your left.
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  • Newsletter No.23 Spring 2017
    Newsletter No.23 Spring 2017 T here is such a lot to look forward to with the Museum opening at the beginning of May. Helen has put together a very interesting and varied programme of talks, exhibitions and One of the miniature other events so please check them out on the works of art which will back page of this Newsletter and keep an eye be auctioned on May 17th - a local on the local press and the posters at the landscape by Carolyn Museum for changes and additions to the Stephenson programme - everything is also listed on the Museum website of course if you have internet access. The season begins with the AGM on Wednesday 17th May and as usual the official part of the evening will be very short, but followed by a new venture, an auction of art, mostly with local connections, which promises Did our albino mole have any offspring? Will we ever find out more to be great fun. The items to be auctioned will about the little boy who died of diphtheria, whose miniature hob- be on display from 12th May and for those nailed boots were left in a bag outside the Museum after his mother unable to attend on the evening, sealed bids died? Our ‘ferret feeding trough’ seems to have been recycled from a may be left in advance at the Museum. fine piece of stone carving, but for what function was it originally Janet Bishop, made? The list is endless. Clearly the Swaledale Museum is spot on- Chair of the Friends of Swaledale Museum trend.
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  • North Yorkshire Muker & Swaledale
    north yorkshire north yorkshire 19 muker & swaledale 20 rosedale abbey NORTH EAST NORTH uDistance: 7½ miles/12km uTime: 4 hours uGrade: Moderate EAST NORTH uDistance: 6½ miles/10.5km uTime: 4 hours uGrade: Moderate e a blossoming Hawthorn plau N Yo R walK plau N Yo R walK see UR in upper swaledale. EAT F age 60 on p Photo: Photo: dennis kelsall tom bailey tom RoutE RoutE s tart/parking Muker long s tart/parking Considerate stay car park (P&D), DL11 bank Top Farm on the roadside parking in village, 6QG, grid ref sD910978 final stretch of this walk. yo18 8rA, grid ref Is it for me? Mostly good, se724959 well-signed paths and Is it for me? Field and chosen by… see the waterfalls of Kisdon tracks, with a few gentle CHOSEN BY... Start moorland paths and tracks philip thomas Force. Swaledale’s industrial ups & downs. two steeper, DENNis KELSALL 1From the village centre, head stiles 12 Distilling the past emerges as you rise rougher detours to kisdon Rosedale’s abbey past the school and bear R. Yorkshire Dales across opposite bank of the Force & swinner Gill can was, in fact, a priory After 75m, leave L over a stile plaNNiNg be skipped. into half a day’s outing, the river, where exposed paths for nuns, but little remains walking beside a cottage to Nearest town Pickering stiles 2 (& several smaller refreshments the Coach walk from Muker to Keld is a turn into Swinner Gill. Beyond beyond a small turret near the a tarmac drive. Follow it R squeeze stiles/gates) house inn (tel: 01751 heady concoction of flower the ruin of Crackpot Hall, church and a few stones built through a caravan site for 417208); Abbey stores meadows, waterfalls and the ravine is scarred by plaNNiNg into the fabric of the present 300m before the marked tearooms (tel: 01751 drystone workmanship.
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  • Muker Township
    Apportionment of the rent and charge in lieu of tithes in the Township of Muker in the Parish of Grinton in the North Riding of the County of York Whereas an award of rent charges in lieu of tithes in the Township of Muker in the Parish of Grinton in the North Riding of the County of York was on the seventeenth day of January in the year one thousand eight hundred and forty four confirmed by the tithe Commissioners for England and Wales of which award and the Schedule therein completed and thereunto annexed the following is a copy Know all men by their presents that I Charles Howard of the City of York Esquire having been duly appointed and sworn an Assistant Tithe Commissioner according to the provisions of the Act for commutation of tithes in England and Wales and having also been duly appointed to ascertain and award the total sum to be paid by way of rent charge instead of the tithes of the Township of Muker in the Parish of Grinton in the North Riding of the County of York do hereby award as follows that is to say Whereas I have held divers meetings near the said Township touching the matter aforesaid of which meetings due notice was given for the information of the Land owners and Tithe owners of the said Township And whereas I have duly considered all the allegations and proofs tendered to me by all the parties interested and have myself made all enquiries touching the presumed subject which appeared to me to be necessary And whereas I find the estimated quantity in statute measure of all the Lands of the said Township amounts to
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  • Swaledale & Arkengarthdale
    Swaledale & Arkengarthdale The two far northern dales, with their The River Swale is one of England’s fastest industry, but in many places you will see iconic farming landscape of field barns and rising spate rivers, rushing its way between the dramatic remains of the former drystone walls, are the perfect place to Thwaite, Muker, Reeth and Richmond. leadmining industry. Find out more about retreat from a busy world and relax. local life at the Swaledale Museum in Reeth. On the moors you’re likely to see the At the head of Swaledale is the tiny village hardy Swaledale sheep, key to the Also in Reeth are great shops showcasing of Keld - you can explore its history at the livelihood of many Dales farmers - and the local photography and arts and crafts: Keld Countryside & Heritage Centre. This logo for the Yorkshire Dales National Park; stunning images at Scenic View Gallery and is the crossing point of the Coast to Coast in the valleys, tranquil hay meadows, at dramatic sculptures at Graculus, as well as Walk and the Pennine Way long distance their best in the early summer months. exciting new artists cooperative, Fleece. footpaths, and one end of the newest It is hard to believe these calm pastures Further up the valley in Muker is cosy cycle route, the Swale Trail (read more and wild moors were ever a site for Swaledale Woollens and the Old School about this on page 10). Gallery. The glorious wildflower meadows of Muker If you want to get active, why not learn navigation with one of the companies in the area that offer training courses or take to the hills on two wheels with Dales Bike Centre.
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  • Thorns Farm Thorns, Muker, Richmond, North Yorkshire
    Thorns Farm Thorns, Muker, Richmond, North Yorkshire Farmhouse, annex and buildings together with meadow and pasture land extending to 3.06 Ha (7.56 Ac) For Sale by Private Treaty Guide Price: £460,000 Thorns Farm, Thorns, Muker, Richmond, North Yorkshire, DL11 6DY Situation Viewing Thorns Farm is ideally situated in the small The property may be inspected by prior settlement of Thorns located between the slightly arrangement with the selling agent. larger settlements of Angram and Keld in Upper Swaledale. This is an area renowned for its Directions unspoiled natural beauty and extensively farmed The farm’s location is identified on the location map landscape within the Yorkshire Dales National and also marked on the ground by our sale boards. Park. Access Description Access is achieved over the existing routes shown A small traditional hill farm which extends to with an orange line on the map leading from the approximately 3.06 hectares or 7.56 acres and B6270 public highway. comprises a farmstead with a two bedroom farmhouse and a two bedroom annex together with Tenure and Possession a range of traditional and modern farm buildings, The freehold interest in the property is offered for meadow and pasture land. sale with vacant possession upon completion. Thorns Farm comes to the market following the Rights and Easements Vendor’s decision to retire and represents a rare The property will be sold subject to and with the opportunity to acquire a small holding in a beautiful benefit of all existing rights of way, water, drainage, and renowned location. There is vast potential for watercourses, and other easements, quasi or reputed the Purchaser to add value with remodelling and easements and rights of adjoining owners if any renovating the farmhouse and annex and the affecting the same and all existing and proposed development of some of the barns and buildings wayleaves and all matters registered by any into alternative uses subject to gaining the competent authority subject to statute.
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  • Greenacres Angram, Muker, Richmond, North Yorkshire, DL11 6DY
    Greenacres Angram, Muker, Richmond, North Yorkshire, DL11 6DY A GRADE II LISTED SEMI- DETACHED BARN CONVERSION IN A RURAL POSITION WITH STUNNING VIEWS • Spacious Stone Built Grade II Listed Barn Conversion • Three Double Bedrooms • Generous Garden with Small Pond • Fantastic Views • Off- Road Parking • Accessible rural Location • Guide Price: OIEO £395,000 SITUATION Hawes 9 miles. Kirkby Stephen 11 miles. Leyburn 21 miles. Richmond 23 Miles. Barnard Castle 23 miles. Angram is a quiet rural hamlet in Upper-Swaledale a short way between the villages of Muker and Keld. The nearby market towns of Hawes, Reeth and Kirkby Stephen have an excellent range of shops and facilities including schools, restaurants, cafes and pubs. DESCRIPTION Greenacres comprises a deceptively spacious Grade II listed stone built, semi-detached barn conversion located on the edge of the rural hamlet of Angram. The property is well-presented and has been redecorated throughout. The ground floor accommodation briefly comprises a large ‘L’ shaped living room with dining area. This room features a multi fuel stove set within a stone fireplace and four windows which enjoy the stunning views. The inner hall is used as a breakfast room with a door leading out onto the patio. The kitchen features a range of reclaimed timber freestanding units, a single electric Aga and space for a fridge freezer. Usefully there is a utility room where there is plumbing for a washing machine and the central heating boiler, and a separate cloakroom. To the first floor there are three double bedrooms each enjoying a lovely outlook. The main bedroom has an ensuite shower room with large fitted wardrobes and the others share a family bathroom.
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  • GUNNERSIDE an Introduction to the Built Heritage of the Village
    GUNNERSIDE An introduction to the built heritage of the village Gunnerside village stands on the north side of Inn. West of the bridge there is a scatter of The usual 20th-century remodellings and the Swaledale, where the deep ravine of Gunnerside Gill development along and to the south of the Ivelet conversion of even the smallest farm buildings into flows into the main Swale valley. This has long been road, whilst the Methodist Chapel sits on the west of holiday cottages are apparent, especially in the a bridging point on the tributary stream while the the main road. A big chapel (in Swaledale only western part of the village which contains the periodic threat of flooding probably explains why the Reeth has one of comparable size), it is built on a modern school. There were two older church-based present structure spanning the Gill is of no great town rather than a village scale and plan, with twin schools on the east side of the Gill: a Methodist one age. The main road up the valley from Reeth drops stairs from the entrance lobby and galleries all lost to a 20th-century fire (although the attractive down to the bridge, and then turns south along the round. It stands in the centre of an extensive school master’s house survives), and a suitably- west bank of the Gill to cross the Swale and follow graveyard with memorials going back into the Gothic Anglican one - now ‘Gunnarsgill Hall’- looking the south side of the valley up to Muker, whilst a 18th century.
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  • Swaledale & Arkengarthdale Barns & Walls Conservation Area Appraisal
    Swaledale & Arkengarthdale Barns & Walls Conservation Area Appraisal Adopted Document Table of Contents Executive Summary 6 1.0 Introduction 8 1.1 Executive Summary 8 1.2 The Appraisal 8 2.0 Planning Policy Framework 10 2.1 What Is a Conservation Area? 10 2.2 Benefits of Designation 11 3.0 The Special Interest 13 3.1 General 13 3.2 Summary of the Special Interest of the Swaledale & Arkengarthdale Barns & Walls Conservation Area 13 3.3 Summary of Issues Threatening the Special Interest of the Conservation Area 14 9 4.0 Assessing Special Interest 15 4.1 Location and Setting 15 a) Location and Context 15 b) General Character 16 c) Landscape Setting 17 4.2 Historic Development and Archaeology 23 a) Historic Development of the Area 23 b) Archaeology 25 4.3 Spatial Analysis 25 a) Character and Interrelationship of Spaces within the Area 25 b) Key Views and Vistas 26 4.4 Character Analysis 29 a) Definition of Character Zones 29 b) Activity and Prevailing or Former Uses and Their Influence on Plan Form and Buildings 33 c) Quality of Buildings and Their Contribution to the Area 40 d) Audit of Listed Buildings 46 e) Settlements 48 f) Traditional Building Materials, Local Details and the Public Realm 54 g) Contribution Made to the Character of the Area by Green Spaces and Its Biodiversity Value 57 h) Values Attributed by the Local Community and Other Stakeholders 61 i) General Condition of the Swaledale & Arkengarthdale Barns & Walls Conservation Area 62 xx 5.0 Community Involvement 69 6.0 Boundary Changes 70 7.0 Useful Information, Appendices and
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  • Swaledale Museum Newsletter 25 Spring 2018 Draft
    Newsletter No.28 Spring 2018 A colourful corner of quilts in T he Museum is open and Spring has sprung. I the re-ordered upstairs gallery wonder if there is any connection? Helen has organised a fascinating summer of talks which will be that part of the proceeds stimulating, informative and as always, thoroughly will go to much needed enjoyable. I am looking forward to being able to go Museum funds. Tracy will through the gate, to admiring Alan’s vegetable let you know when this garden, and then stepping into my favourite Museum. exhibition is launched, via Janet Bishop, Chair her regular email updates and in the local press. A message from the Curator I am delighted to welcome you all to the new season. We have some exciting We have done a bit of re-arranging in the Museum to talks, by distinguished accommodate new acquisitions and enable us to think historians, that are already booking up. On 23rd May in new ways about old favourites. In order not to Duncan Bythell will give a talk on ‘Keld in Swaledale disappoint those who can’t make the stairs we have 1870-1970 - The Decline of an Upland Community’. also brought more of the exhibits down to the ground He tells me that this will be his final public lecture, and floor. We installed Roger Preston’s new work at the while we hope this is actually not true, are honoured to end of April, which this time focuses on local be the venue he has chosen for this seminal event.
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  • Muker Parish Council Minutes – 2016/17
    Muker Parish Council Minutes – 2016/17 22 March 2016 – Annual Meeting 22 March 2106 12 May 2016 16 June 2016 18 August 2016 29 September 2016 3 November 2016 8 December 2016 26 January 2017 MUKER PARISH ANNUAL MEETING The Annual Parish Meeting was held on Tuesday 22 March 2016 at 7.30p.m. in Muker Institute. Councillors Whitehead, Calvert, Porter, Metcalfe, Reynoldson were present. Alison Stringer the Parish Clerk also attended. APOLOGIES FOR ABSENCE: Cllr Blackie, Cllr Blows ELECTION OF CHAIRMAN: Cllr Ernest Whitehead was elected Chairman, nominated by Cllr Porter and seconded by Cllr Reynoldson. MINUTES OF THE PREVIOUS MEETING: The minutes of the previous meeting held on 17th March, 2015 where read out. The minutes were approved as a correct record. All were in favour. MATTERS ARISING: The notice board in Thwaite has still not got a cork backing – this matter was to be discussed in the Monthly Parish Council meeting following the annual meeting. FINANCIAL STATEMENT AT 31.3.15: This showed an opening balance of £2548.62 Incomings of £7064.04 and Outgoings of £6885.11 The balance to carry forward is £2727.55. All were in favour. ANY OTHER BUSINESS: None MUKER PARISH COUNCIL MINUTES OF PARISH COUNCIL MEETING HELD ON 22 March 2016 The Parish Council meeting was held on the 22nd March 2016. Councillors Calvert, Reynoldson, Metcalfe, Porter, Councillor Whitehead presiding. The Clerk was Miss A Stringer. 1. Apologies for Absence: Cllr John Blackie, Cllr Richard Blows 2. Declaration of Interests: None 3. Minutes of previous meeting: The minutes of the Parish Council meeting held on 16 February 2016 had been circulated.
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  • Two Dales Local News
    REETH AND DISTRICT GAZETTE LTD ISSUE NO. 282 DECEMBER 2019 Two Dales Local News REETH AND DISTRICT GAZETTE LTD First Thoughts . Last Christmas What is your all time favourite Christmas song? It’s a very difficult question to answer and can change each year...BUT for me it’s ‘Last Christmas’ by Wham! I remember Christmas 1984 when it lost out to ‘Do they know it’s Christmas’ by Band Aid, for the no.1 spot. It’s arguably the best song never to get to No.1. ‘Last Christmas’ was written by George Michael, then aged 21, in the summer of 1984. It was composed in so wise about life, love etc. He left a his childhood bedroom whilst Andrew wonderful legacy of songs. Happy Ridgeley (his Wham! partner) was Christmas George. downstairs watching television and Despite all of that the editor’s: probably blow-drying his hair. The song was then recorded August ‘last Christmas was a bit 1984, in a studio full with Christmas rubbish !’ decorations. Incredibly George wrote, produced, performed and played every Happy Christmas to all readers instrument, even though he had no Mike B musical training. No Apologies for all the Christmas George died Christmas Day 2016 imagery in this edition. (what a sad coincidence) and before that he had already given permission Gazette Archives for this years Christmas film, ‘Last All Gazette editions are available Christmas’ to be made. The film is online at www.2dales.org.uk written by Emma Thompson who in a recent TV appearance, said of meeting Cover Picture.
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