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Yarm
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Yarm
Town and civil parish
The railway viaduct and the high street, centred upon the town hall
Yarm is located in North Yorkshire
Yarm
Yarm
Location within North Yorkshire
Population9,600 (small town, 2021 census)[1]
OS grid referenceNZ416124
Civil parish
  • Yarm
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townYARM
Postcode districtTS15
Dialling code01642
PoliceCleveland
FireCleveland
AmbulanceNorth East
UK Parliament
Websitewww.YarmTC.org
List of places
UK
England
Yorkshire
54°30′N 1°21′W / 54.5°N 1.35°W / 54.5; -1.35

Yarm, also referred to as Yarm-on-Tees, is a market town and civil parish in the Borough of Stockton-on-Tees, North Yorkshire, England. It is in Teesdale with a town centre on a small meander of the River Tees. To the south-east, it extends to the River Leven, to the south it extends into the Kirklevington.

Yarm bridge marked the river's furthest tidal-flow reaching until a barrage opened to regulate the tide in 1995. It was previously the last bridge before the sea, having been superseded multiple times since. It was first superseded by a toll bridge in 1771, crossing into Stockton-on-Tees.

The town's historic county is Yorkshire, the North Riding sub-division. The three sub-divisions had gained separate county status in 1889 before these were abolished in 1974. It is in the borough of Stockton-on-Tees; first when the borough was a county of Cleveland district (1974–1996) and second (from 1996) in its present unitary authority structure. The borough is a constituent member of the Tees Valley combined authority.

History

The name Yarm is thought to be derived from the Old English gearum, dative plural of gear, 'pool for catching fish' (source of the modern dialect word yair with the same meaning), hence 'at the place of the fish pools'.[2] Yarm was first mentioned in the Domesday Book of 1086, and was originally a chapelry in the Kirklevington parish in the North Riding of Yorkshire; it later became a parish in its own right.[3]

The Yarm helmet is a c. 10th-century Viking Age helmet that was found in Yarm. It is the first relatively complete Anglo-Scandinavian helmet found in Britain and only the second Viking helmet discovered in north-west Europe. It is displayed nearby in Preston Park Museum, Preston-on-Tees.[4]

Dominican Friars settled in Yarm about 1286, and maintained a friary and a hospital in the town, until 1583. Their memory is preserved in the names of Friarage and Spital Bank.[5] The Friarage was built on top of the cellars of a Dominican friary in 1770, for the Meynell family.[6] It is now at the centre of Yarm School.

Bishop Skirlaw of Durham built a stone bridge, which still stands, across the Tees in 1400. An iron replacement was built in 1805, but it fell down in 1806. For many years, Yarm was at the tidal limit and head of navigation on the River Tees.[7]

On 1 February 1643, during the First English Civil War, a small Roundhead force attempted to halt the progress of a large waggon-train of arms, landed at Tynemouth and destined to bolster the Royalist war effort in Yorkshire and beyond. Heavily outnumbered and outflanked by Royalist ford crossings, the Parliamentarians were quickly routed and the Royalists gained the bridge, crossing into Yorkshire.[8]

On 12 February 1821, at the George & Dragon Inn, the meeting was held that pressed for the third and successful attempt for a Bill to give permission to build the Stockton & Darlington Railway, the world's first public railway.[9]

In 1890, Bulmer & Co listed twelve inns in Yarm: Black Bull, Cross Keys, Crown Inn, Fleece, George and Dragon, Green Tree, Ketton Ox, Lord Nelson, Red Lion, Three Tuns, Tom Brown, and Union. Also listed was Cross Keys beside the Leven Bridge.[10]

In the 13th century, Yarm was classed as a borough, but this status did not persist. It formed part of the Stokesley Rural District under the Local Government Act 1894, and remained so until 1 April 1974 when, under the Local Government Act 1972, it became part of the district of Stockton-on-Tees in the new non-metropolitan county of Cleveland. Cleveland was abolished in 1996 under the Banham Review, with Stockton-on-Tees becoming a unitary authority.[11]

Geography

A map of Yarm showing main roads and estates

Yarm is bordered by two rivers, the River Tees to the north, and the River Leven to the east. The Leven is a tributary of the Tees.[12] Yarm was once the highest port on the Tees.[13]

Two road bridges cross the river, Yarm Bridge crossing from the High Street to Eaglescliffe, which is Grade II* listed,[14] and Leven Bridge crossing the Leven between Yarm and Low Leven, which is Grade II listed.[15] On 26 February 2010, Leven Bridge was closed after cracks appeared in it.[16] Repairs took less time than expected, and the bridge re-opened on 18 June 2010.[17]

Yarm Town Hall

Yarm Town Hall in the High Street was built in 1710 by Thomas Belasyse, 3rd Viscount Fauconberg who was Lord of the Manor. In a poll taken for the BBC's Breakfast programme on 19 January 2007, Yarm's High Street was voted the 'Best High Street':[18] the street and its cobbled parking areas is fronted by many Georgian-style old buildings, with their red pantile roofs.

The A67, which runs through High Street was previously classified as the A19 until a dual carriageway was built in the 1970s, about three miles (five kilometres) south of the town near the village of Crathorne.[19] When the A19 ran through High Street, it was heavily congested. The road was used by heavy goods traffic as a shortcut to Teesside International Airport.[20] The classification of the road as an 'A'-road meant that it was difficult to place a ban on heavy goods vehicles; however the town council made efforts to come up with voluntary agreements with many haulage firms[20] until 2012, when all HGV traffic was banned from the route through Yarm and Egglescliffe.[21]

The Rookery

The Rookery is a public area by the River Tees situated at the bottom of Goose Pasture. The ash, sycamore and lime woodland is about 200 years old and owned by Yarm Town Council.[22] In 2002, a walkway was constructed around the wood to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II. Within the woodland, close to the river, BMX riders have created numerous dirt ramps which are regularly used during summer months.

Areas of Yarm include the housing estates Levendale in the southeast and Leven Park in the south.

Governance

House of Commons

Yarm is part of the Stockton South Parliamentary Constituency which is represented in the House of Commons of the UK Parliament since 14 December 2019 by Matt Vickers, a Conservative MP.[n 1]

It was represented from 8 May 2017 by Dr Paul Williams (Labour), "a local GP" who lost his seat at the 2019 General Election.

From 2010 to 2017 the constituency was represented by James Wharton (Conservative); He was elected on 6 May 2010[23] for Stockton South. James Wharton was re-elected with an increased majority on 7 May 2015. In August 2016 he was appointed Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State at the Department for International Development.

From 1997 to 2010, the constituency was represented by Dari Taylor (Labour).[24]

House of Lords

On the morning of 2 September 2020, the former MP, James Wharton, was created James Wharton, Baron Wharton of Yarm, after being nominated in Prime Minister Boris Johnson's 2020 Dissolution Honours List.[25] He was introduced on 10 September, becoming the youngest member of the House of Lords at 36, and the first member of the House of Lords to retrieve their title from the area.

Borough Council

The Yarm ward of Stockton, which includes Kirklevington, has three local councillors sitting on Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council.

2007 Stockton on Tees Local Elections – Yarm Ward[citation needed]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Democrats Philip Addison 452 5.19%
Yarm Independents Association John Anderson 817 9.39%
Conservative Jennie Beaumont 1358 15.60%
Conservative Jackie Earl 1223 14.05%
Liberal Democrats Alan Kirby Judge 493 5.66%
Yarm Independents Association Christopher Neil 740 8.50%
Labour Victoria Eileen Parker 297 3.41%
Conservative Andrew Sherris 1268 14.57%
Yarm Independents Association Marjorie Simpson 1005 11.55%
Labour Simon Rogers Tranter 301 3.46%
Labour Eric Turton 294 3.38%
Liberal Democrats Mike Wade 455 5.23%

From 5 May 2011, Conservatives Mark Chatburn, Ben Houchen, and Andrew Sherris became the councillors on the Stockton on Tees Borough Council for the Yarm Ward.[citation needed] Mark Chatburn subsequently defected to UKIP on 22 March 2013.[citation needed]

2011 Stockton on Tees Local Elections – Yarm Ward[citation needed]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Conservative Mark Chatburn 1721 15.52%
Liberal Democrats Natasha Craggs 186 1.68%
Conservative Ben Houchen 1556 14.03%
Yarm Independent Association Christopher Neil 1218 10.99%
Labour Vicky Parker 610 5.50%
Conservative Andrew Sherris 1829 16.50%
Yarm Independent Association Marjorie Simpson 1287 11.61%
Labour Simon Tranter 666 6.01%
Labour Eric Turton 620 5.59%
Yarm Independent Association Robert Wegg 1101 9.93%
Liberal Democrats Jonathan Wylie 152 1.37%
Liberal Democrats Lindsay Wylie 141 1.27%

Town council

Yarm has a town council which is responsible for certain aspects of the town's administration, including allotments and the cemetery. It meets once a month in the town hall.[26]

The council has eleven seats with a chairman who, for ceremonial purposes, is 'Mayor'. The Standing Orders of the Council restrict the chairman's period of office to two years in any four-year period. The 2015 chairman was Clr Jason Hadlow.[27] Elections for the council are held every four years.

December 2008 by-election

A by-election was held for two vacant seats on the council after the resignation of one, and disqualification of another Conservative councillor.[citation needed] The Conservative Party fielded two candidates against two Independent candidates who stood under the banner 'Former Councillor'.[citation needed] The Labour Party and Liberal Democrats chose not to field any candidates, the former instead backing the Independents.[citation needed] Turnout for the election was low, with the Conservative candidates elected by a small margin.[citation needed]

December 2008 Yarm Town Council by-election[citation needed]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Philip Addison 498 24% n/a
Conservative Mike Hornby 538 26% n/a
Independent Peter Monck 491 24% n/a
Conservative Sarah Sherwood 546 26% n/a

October 2009 by-election

After the departure of a Conservative councillor, a by-election was held on 15 October 2009 for one seat on the town council. Peter Monck, a former town councillor and Liberal Democrat candidate for Stockton South in the 1997 general election stood as an independent candidate against Paul Smith, a Conservative party candidate.[citation needed]

October 2009 Yarm Town Council by-election[citation needed]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Peter Monck 579 46% n/a
Conservative Paul Smith 683 54% Zdroj:https://en.wikipedia.org?pojem=Yarm
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