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Kelfield, North Yorkshire

Kelfield
Kelfield chapel - geograph.org.uk - 100463.jpg
Kelfield chapel, a Wesleyan Chapel, built in 1815, and now in need of care
Kelfield is located in North Yorkshire
Kelfield
Kelfield
Kelfield shown within North Yorkshire
Population 497 (2011)
OS grid reference SE592383
• London 165 mi (266 km) S
District
Shire county
Region
Country England
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town York
Postcode district YO19
Dialling code 01757
Police North Yorkshire
Fire North Yorkshire
Ambulance Yorkshire
EU Parliament Yorkshire and the Humber
UK Parliament
List of places
UK
England
Yorkshire
53°50′18″N 1°06′02″W / 53.838468°N 1.100492°W / 53.838468; -1.100492Coordinates: 53°50′18″N 1°06′02″W / 53.838468°N 1.100492°W / 53.838468; -1.100492

Kelfield is a small village and civil parish in the Selby district of North Yorkshire, England.

The village is situated on the northern bank of the River Ouse, equidistant between the villages of Riccall, Cawood and Stillingfleet, approximately 5 miles (8 km) north-west of Selby.

Kelfield is recorded in the Domesday Book (1086) as Chelchefelt,‘an estate of one carucate and seven bovates… The estate of Hugh son of Baldric had land for one plough, and four villeins had a plough there.’

In 1823 Kelfield was a township in the civil parish of Stillingfleet, in the East Riding of Yorkshire and the Wapentake of Ouse and Derwent. A public school existed for the benefit of poor children. Population at the time was 286, with occupations including a schoolteacher, nine farmers, a tailor, a butcher, two carpenters – one of whom was a gunsmith, the other a shopkeeper – and the landlord of the Boot and Shoe public house, who was also a shoemaker. There was an Esquire at the Hall, and three yeomen.

A prophetess arrived in Kelfield in the summer of 1833. The Yorkshire and national newspapers were gripped by the story of a young girl called Hannah Beedham who became known as the 'Kelfield Prophetess'. Whilst staying at James Sturdy's home in Kelfield, Hannah described having a vision where she was told the date of her death. Thousands of people flocked to Kelfield to be 'in at the death'. The newspapers reported Hannah Beedham's exploits with growing cynicism and glee when she failed to die as promised on 1 August 1833 at 9.00 pm. She had laid herself out in state in James Sturdy's Kelfield parlour, and thousands of curious people from all over Yorkshire filed past, in the hope of seeing a miracle. When she did not pass away, Sturdy must have wondered how to extricate himself from the embarrassing situation. Hannah died a few years later aged only 27 years. There is a record of Hannah's burial in an unmarked grave on Christmas Eve 1839, at Holy Trinity Church, Goodramgate, York.


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