Friday 6 July 2012

The Cinder Track - Part 2 - Robin Hood's Bay to Scarborough

The next stage in my quest to complete the Cinder Track route was to walk the 17 miles from Robin Hood's Bay to Scarborough.


This is the site of the old Robin Hood's Bay station - now private accommodation and workshops - see  Robin Hood's Bay Station



The route took me by Fyling Hall - see Fylinghall Station


Heading towards Ravenscar ...



... but first to the Alum Quarry, just outside Ravenscar.


From 1640 to 1862 Ravenscar had an industry of world class importance. A chemical called Alum was produced from the local shale. Alum was used to cure leather and fix dyes in cloth as well as for medicinal uses. 



This chemical was of huge economic importance and the Peak Alum Works even attracted raids by foreign pirates and was guarded by cannon set into the cliff top. The extraction process to produce alum was peculiar, involving burning the rock for months over huge bonfires then pouring human urine over the heaps of rock.

Ravenscar has always had a sparse population and so the urine had to be collected from cities all over England and imported by the boatload. It is said that the first public toilet in the world was built in Hull to provide solvent for the Alum Trade. Quite how this method of production was discovered is not recorded.






At the beginning of the 20th century a Victorian entrepreneur decided that a town should be developed around the village then known as Peak . A railway line was being built to link the towns of Scarborough and Whitby, and Peak was the central point. Roads were built, sewers were laid and plots of land sold to city dwellers who liked the idea of living by the beach.

The plan was badly researched as the route to the shore was precarious and the area, though beautiful, was very exposed. The building company folded in 1913 having built less than a dozen houses but it had altered the area forever and is often referred to as "the town that never was" .






Peak was re-named Ravenscar, the wide roads remained and the houses built for a new town look strangely out of place in the middle of open countryside. Foxcliffe Tearooms is part of this history, being situated in part of the old Ravenscar House Hotel, built to house the city dwellers visiting to choose their plots. 





Peak House, the building which is now the Raven Hall Hotel was, from 1788, owned by the Rev. Dr. Francis Willis who owned an asylum to the south in Lincolnshire where he treated King George III for his bouts of insanity. As portrayed in the film "The Madness of King George" the treatment consisted of bleeding with leeches and deluging in baths of water. It is rumoured the King was treated at Ravenscar to be away from all publicity.



For details of Ravenscar Station see - Ravenscar Station




Heading south towards Scarborough ...


This reminded me of that famous Leonard Cohen song - "Bird on a wire"!



Next stop, Staintondale Station - see Staintondale Station






... then on to Hayburn Wyke - see Hayburn Wyke Station


... then - see Cloughton Station




... I had hoped for a cuppa and a slice of cake here ...




... but it was shut!



So I pressed on and headed on to Burniston and Scalby - see Scalby Station



Scarborough Castle in the distance ...


... and Scarborough Rugby Union Football Club, close at hand



The end of the Track - in Sainsbury's car park in Scarborough



Scarborough Central Station - see Scarborough Station


Footsore and weary, I caught the bus back to Robin Hood's Bay and my "home" for the week



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