Knaresborough
also lays claim to the oldest chemist
shop in England. The shop in the
Market Place is housed in a medieval building and first opened its doors as a
pharmacy in 1720. This old building with tiny rooms and oak beams was a chemist
shop until 1965 owned by the Lawrence family and Mrs Lawrence bottled her own
lavender water. The old drawers and shelves are now stocked with confectionary,
tea, preserves and gifts to attract tourists, but still sell lavender water,
toiletries and herbal remedies and so the owner still lays claim to the title.
Across the
Market Place is a pub which has the curious name Blind Jack’s and nearby is a very fine metal effigy of John
Metcalfe sitting on a bench. Jack, as he was known, was born into a poor Knaresborough
family in 1717 and at the age of six he lost his sight as a result of smallpox.
Never daunted, young Jack lived life to the full, he could climb trees, run,
box, wrestle, ride and swim with the best and he married the prettiest girl in
the town. He became a fish merchant, learned to play the fiddle and he even
fought at the Battle of Culloden. He also ran a horse drawn taxi service and a
pack horse service before his big break came. Following the passing of an Act
of Parliament which authorised the building of turnpike roads, Jack somehow
managed to obtain the contract for such a road between Harrogate and
Boroughbridge, which he completed successfully to be followed by several others
and eventually employed some 400 men. It seemed that he had the nack,
determined by instinct for his task despite the obstacles and the fame of Blind
Jack spread. He died at nearby Spofforth when he was 93 years of age, a rich
man with some 180 miles of northern roads behind him. He was buried in the
churchyard at nearby Spofforth where an extensive epitaph on his gravestone tells his
story.
The
legendary sorceress and soothsayer, Old
Mother Shipton, is said to have been born at Knaresborough in 1488 in a cave in the wooded area on the other side of the river. She died
in 1561 at the age of 73 years.
Born Ursula
Southill, she married York builder Tobias Shipton when she was 24 years old.
Every woman is entitled to be ugly but it seems that Ursula abused the
privilege.
‘She was very morose, big
boned, her head was long with great
goggling sharp and fiery eyes; her nose of an incredible and un- proportionate length,
having in it many crooks and turnings and adorned with many strange purples and
diverse colours, which like vapours of brimstone gas, gave such a lustre in the
dead of night.’ So said a contemporary
writer who went on to say, ‘ She had in
addition a chin of the nutcracker order, yellow skin shrivelled and wrinkled
with one solitary big tooth standing out of her mouth like a tusk. Her neck was
so distorted that her right shoulder supported her head, her legs crooked, with
feet and toes turned towards her left side so that when she walked to the right
it seemed as if she were travelling to the left.’
That may be so but apparently her
understanding was extraordinary and her strange powers of prophesy became known
throughout the land. Over one hundred years after her death, Samuel Pepys had
recorded in his diary that Mother Shipton had foretold the great fire of
London. Her predictions were widespread, she is said to have foretold of the
Dissolution of the Monasteries, the defeat of the Armada, the Civil Warf, the
Great Plague and so on. ‘Carriages
without horses shall go and accidents fill the world with woe. Around the world
thoughts shall fly in the twinkling of and eye. Iron in the water shall float
as easy as a wooden boat. Gold shall be found in a foreign land that’s not now
known.’ Is how some of her predictions have been quoted. In his Collection
of Prophesies of 1645, Astrologer W. Lilley quoted that 16 of her predictions
had been fulfilled. Many people thought that she was a witch, especially
Cardinal Wolsey whom Mother Shipton predicted would never be Archbishop of
York. Apparently he sent her a message that when he did enter York he would
have her burned as a witch. Fortunately for her she was right. Equally
fortunate, one of her predictions did not come true, the end of the world in
1881!
Near to Mother Shipton's Cave there is a dropping or petrifying well. The well is protected by an
overhang in the limestone cliff and water dripping from this overhang pertifies, in other words it turns to stone.
It has been customary over the years to hang absorbent articles under the overhang such as
teddy bears, gloves, shoes and the like where the water will drip onto them and
after a time they are turned to stone. This area is privately owned and the
public are admitted on payment.
On the town side of the gorge there is a house built into the rock face. Known as Fort Montague, this 18th century three storey castellated dwelling was partly excavated into the rock between 1770 and 1791 by linen weaver Thomas Hill and his son. It was once a popular tourist attraction but is now just a private house.
Another
curiosity can be seen a little further along the riverside, The Chapel of Our Lady of the Crag is
hollowed ten feet into solid rock. It was excavated and constructed in 1408, as
a wayside shrine by John the Mason, traditionally to give thanks for his son
being miraculously saved from a falling rock. The roof is ribbed and there is a
simple altar, a stone bench, a small window and an arched door. The stone
figure of a knight drawing his sword is also carved on the rock face at the
side of the door.
Finally in this fascinating gorge there is another cave known as St Robert’s Cave. St Robert of Knaresborough lived in this cave
from c1180 until his death in 1218. He was well known in the area and renowned throughout the land as
a holy man. Robert sought the life of a hermit but was responsible for physical
and spiritual healing and many miracles were attributed to him. He was visited
by no less a personage than King John 1n 1216. After his death he was venerated
as a saint. His stone bed and his altar remain in the cave.
The site gained
notoriety in 1758 when the body of a local man, Daniel Clark, who had
disappeared some thirteen years earlier was found buried there. He had been
murdered and another local man, Eugene Aram was subsequently hanged for the
crime.
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2 comments:
Hi -I'm writing a book about the seventeenth century traveller and diarist Celia Fiennes. One of the places she visited was St Robert's Cave at Knaresborough. I'd like to include in the book a photo of the cave entrance,and wondered if I might use one of yours. If you're happy for me to go ahead, could you let me know please how you would like the atribution expressed "By kind permission of..." etc. The image I'k referring to is the one in dappled sunlight showing the statue and the door.
May I ask you please to reply to me by email: derekjtaylorbooks@gmail.com
My sincere thanks in advance.
-Derek Taylor
Very nice… i really like your blog…
your article is so convincing.
Impressive!Thanks for the post..
Interesting stuff to read. Keep it up.
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