Giggleswick Yorkshire Family History Guide
Giggleswick is an Ancient Parish in the county of Yorkshire.
Other places in the parish include: Stack Houses, Rome, Long Cliffe, and Close House.
Riding: West Riding
Parish registers begin:
- Parish registers: 1558
- Bishop’s Transcripts: 1600
Nonconformists include: Independent/Congregational, Methodist, Presbyterian, and Primitive Methodist.
Table of Contents
Adjacent Parishes
Giggleswick Parish Registers
Giggleswick Parish Registers Vol 1, 1558-1669
Parish History
The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales 1870
GIGGLESWICK, a village, a township, and a parish in Settle district, W. R. Yorkshire. The village stands on the river Ribble, near the North Midland railway, 1 mile WNW of Settle; was known at Domesday as Ghigleswick; is neatly built; and has a post office under Settle. The township includes the village, contains Settle work-house, and comprises 4,306 acres. Real property, £7,203; of which £60 are in quarries. Pop., 727. Houses, 145.
The parish contains also the townships of Settle, Lang-cliffe, Stainforth, and Rathmell. Acres, 18,419. Real property, £26,100. Pop. in 1851, 3,965; in 1861, 3,187. Houses, 656. The decrease of pop. was caused by the stoppage of cotton mills and the dispersion of mill hands. The property, in most parts, is subdivided.
The manor belongs to the Duke of Devonshire. Near the village is a lake, called Giggleswick Tarn, partly natural, partly artificial; and about a mile distant, under a limestone rock, called Giggleswick Scar, is a well of limpid water, which fitfully rises and falls as much as 18 inches, sometimes as often as every six minutes, but commonly not oftener than four or five times a day. The rocks include slate and good building-stone; and rise, in some parts, into picturesque cliffs. Roman coins have been found.
The living is a vicarage in the diocese of Ripon. Value, £550. Patrons, J. Coulthurst and W. Hartley, Esqs. The church was built in the time of Henry VIII.; consists of nave, chancel, transept, and porch, with embattled tower: contains several brasses; and is in tolerable condition. The chapelries of Settle, Longcliffe, Stainforth, and Rathmell are separate benefices.
A grammar school, at the village, was founded by Edward VI.; has an endowed income of £1, 140, with six exhibitions at Christ’s College, Cambridge; was conducted, for nearly half a century, by Archdeacon Paley’s father; and had the Archdeacon himself for a pupil. There are Methodist chapels, national schools, and a number of small charities.
Source: The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales [Wilson, John M]. A. Fullarton & Co. N. d. c. [1870-72].
Administration
- County: Yorkshire
- Civil Registration District: Settle
- Probate Court: Exchequer and Prerogative Courts of the Archbishop of York
- Diocese: Post-1835 – Ripon, Pre-1836 – York
- Rural Deanery: Craven
- Poor Law Union: Settle
- Hundred: Staincliff and Ewcross
- Province: York





























































