English Heritage sites near Carlton Parish

Mount Grace Priory, House and Gardens

MOUNT GRACE PRIORY, HOUSE AND GARDENS

5 miles from Carlton Parish

Set amid woodland in North Yorkshire, this unusual monastery is the best preserved Carthusian priory in Britain. Mount Grace Priory is the perfect tourist attraction for a relaxing and peaceful day out. Discover how the monks lived 600 years in the reconstructed monk’s cell and herb plot.

Gisborough Priory

GISBOROUGH PRIORY

10 miles from Carlton Parish

The ruins of an Augustinian priory founded by the Bruce family, afterwards Kings of Scotland. They are dominated by the dramatic skeleton of the 14th-century church's east end.

Rievaulx Abbey

RIEVAULX ABBEY

13 miles from Carlton Parish

Rievaulx Abbey is the perfect choice for a peaceful day out, with its extensive ruins and fascinating museum in a secluded North York Moors valley.

Helmsley Castle

HELMSLEY CASTLE

15 miles from Carlton Parish

Unlock 900 years of life at Helmsley Castle, an essential site for any visitor to the market town of Helmsley in the North York Moors National Park.

Helmsley Archaeology Store

HELMSLEY ARCHAEOLOGY STORE

15 miles from Carlton Parish

Helmsley Archaeology Store holds the extensive archaeological collections and paper based archives from English Heritage guardianship sites from the North of England including the counties of Northumberland, County Durham, Cumbria, Lancashire, Yorkshire, North Lincolnshire, Cheshire.

Byland Abbey

BYLAND ABBEY

16 miles from Carlton Parish

Once one of the greatest monasteries in England, Byland Abbey inspired the design of church buildings throughout North.


Churches in Carlton Parish

St Botolph, Carlton

Carlton-in-Cleveland Stokesley

This St. Botolph's Church, completed in 1897, is believed to be the most northerly of all his churches and was designed by the nationally famous architect, Temple Moore. It is built in Gothic style with local sandstone and cost £2,336.

The large stained glass east window is by Henry Payne, of Birmingham as are two memorial windows added after the 1st World War.

In the Churchyard is the stump of a stone cross commemorating a visit of St Botolph in 675.

By the 1870’s the old church at Carlton was in a terrible state and was often flooded when the pond at the rear overflowed. A mid-century chronicler, Ord, described the church as a beautiful, quaint building and a delight to worship in. The Rev. George Sanger came to Carlton and came to a church in desperate need of repair, and was faced with the challenge of building a new church, a task he took to heart, and a new church was built.

In 1882, the night before the dedication, the church burnt down and subsequently Sanger left. His successor Canon Kyle arrived to find a ruined church. He raised the necessary funding and built the present Church and in 1908, having raised a further £800, a peal of 8 bells was installed. He later became a Canon of York Minster, died in 1943 and is interred in the churchyard.

The church is still at the heart of the village and with the building of a new village hall, to replace the old Church Hall, remains committed to village life.

We look forward to welcoming visitors and parish residents, whatever their age, to our services in St. Botolph and the other churches of the Benefice.
 


Pubs in Carlton Parish

Blackwell Ox Inn

Carlton-in-Cleveland, TS9 7DJ
(01642) 712287
blackwellox.co.uk/

Blackwell Inn and Holiday Lodge Park is a privately owned multi-roomed and many times Good Beer Guide listed pub with open log fires, outside seating and an extensive play area on the edge of the National Park in a very popular village pub....