Tag Archives: Oddfellows Arms

Leech House, Bedale Beck, on BBC’s Escape to the Country.

IMG_5048 Escape to the Country, North Yorkshire, first aired 17.12.18, S19, E11. - Copy

My mother’s family (Mace) house garden, in the 1920’s to 1950’s, contained the Leech House, Bedale Beck, North Yorkshre.   Now a Grade 2 listed building, seen on Escape to the Country, “North Yorkshire”, first aired on BBC, 17.12.2018.

Joan was watching a repeat of  “Escape to the Country” on BBC TV and shouted for me to come and look at the Leech House, by Bedale Beck, in Bedale, North Yorkshire.  I used to play in the the garden containing this turreted brick building when visiting my Aunt Alice and Uncle Teddy in the 1950’s.  It was like a miniature castle to me and I was later told about the leeches.  It is the only surviving Leech House in the UK.

Here is Alistair Appleton, a presenter on Escape to the Country, explaining how 200 years ago the small building was full of leeches.  These were kept alive with fresh water from the Beck and put into jars by the apothocary, who delivered them to doctors when the leeches were needed for “blood letting” on a patient.

IMG_5051 Alistair Appleton explaining that leeches but in jars. - Copy

Alistair Appleton, presenter on Escape to the Country, explaining how leeches were put into jars by the apothocary in Bedale.  BBC programme “Escape to the Country” first aired 17.12.18.

Park House, Bedale (in the background of the above picture) is next to the railway level crossing of the road connecting Bedale and Aiskew and is now offices.  The garden stretching down to the Beck is now publicly owned and a tourist attraction because of the Leech House.  The railway line and the nearby station are now part of the Wensleydale Railway, which re-opened the Bedale Station in 2004.

In the 1950’s, a raised siding came from the railway station almost to the house and lorries could back in underneath the railway trucks to be loaded with coal being dropped through the bottoms of  the trucks, etc.

My mother, Brenda Mace, was born in the family pub, the Oddfellows Arms (now The Three Coopers), on Emgate, in 1909.   Park House was the local Police Station of the North Riding Police and when it was no longer required, in the 1920’s, my grandfather Thomas Mace bought it.   My grandparents moved out of the pub with their younger children, leaving one of his elder sons, John and his family, at the pub.

I have seen the Leech House on the television before, when Janet Street Porter did a programme 20 years ago about the book Yorkshire: The North Riding by Pevsner, the famous writer on architecture.  She showed Castle Howard, Whitby Abbey and then, suddenly, it was my mother’s garden and the Leech House.

This building with turrets reminds me of the Mace family’s relationship with castles and fortifications and in particular artisan and artistic ancestors.

Conway Mace, born in Lisburn, near Belfast in Ireland, in 1669  was the son of the Rector of Lisburn Cathedral, who was born in Cambridge, and a local Irish mother.  He was initially a goldsmith in Dublin before starting, in 1694, a long career as an army officer.  He served under Marlborough and then in Menorca before being in the 1727 siege of Gibraltar.  He ended his service at Plymouth Citadel, where he died in 1733.

Here is an engraving produced by Sandford Mace in 1737 of the Citadel of Plymouth, which he presented to Charles Churchill the Governor of Plymouth.  Sandford, along with his brother James, took leave from the Royal Artillery to produce the map.  The names listed on the map include General Borgard, commander of the Royal Artillery, and Colonel Adam Williamson, Deputy Governor of the Tower of London, who served with Conway Mace in 1707-8.

91516 from Paulus Swaen (full density)

Engraving of The Citadel of Plymouth presented by Sandford Mace in 1737 to Charles Churchill, Governor of Plymouth.  From the Brenda Mace Collection.

Sandford Mace then joined General Ogglethorpe’s new Regiment as a junior officer, when it was formed in 1738, and was in charge of cannon in Florida when a Spanish Fortress was taken in 1740.  Sandford drew the Fort and also a plan of the positions of different combatants, including local Indians.  He died in Georgia in 1745.

James Mace returned to the Royal Artillery and rose to the rank of Captain.  When serving at Gibraltar in 1751 he produced an engraving of Gibraltar.

North View of Gib by James Mace & Tomms. 03648-2

North View of Gibraltar by James Mace and Thomms. 1751.  This print presently hangs in the Governor’s House in Gibraltar.

James, as a boy aged 11, used to visit the Tower of London and Deputy Governor Adam Williamson recorded that James drew the portrait of John Plunket, who was imprisoned in the tower for Treason.

In 1756 James was promoted to Major whilst in Gibraltar to be head of the fleet charged with defending Menorca against the French.  Unfortunately (or fortunately for him) before he got there the French had captured the island.  General Clive, in Calcutta, then requested expert assistance to build fortifications for if the French attached Calcutta and James was dispatched.  He was delayed in Bombay, involved in the building of a new harbour, where he died in 1765.

A similar view was painted in the 1780’s by John Mace, who may have been the son of James.

Mace, John, active 1780-1790; North View of Gibraltar from Spanish Lines

North View of Gibraltar from Spanish Lines, by John Mace, active 1780-90. Art UK image, Government Art Collection.

 

 

Tour of Britain, Continuous Line, new version by Mick Burton. Inspired by Tour de Yorkshire 2019.

Tour of Britain, new continuous line drawing by Mick Burton. Inspired by Tour de Yorkshire 2019.

The Tour de Yorkshire annual cycle race has become a fixture in the Yorkshire calendar, but can be disruptive to other events or day trips we may plan.

Harrogate and Nidderdale Art Club’s exhibition, intended to take place on Early May Bank holiday, was moved this year to Spring Bank Holiday weekend 25-27 May 2019 due to the Tour de Yorkshire coming through Ripley, where we hold the exhibition, on Friday 3 May.

Harrogate and Nidderdale Art Club Spring Art Show and Sale of Work, Ripley Town Hall, 25-27 May 2019.

My Tour of Britain drawing has a continuous line starting and ending in Yorkshire as well, but would take slightly longer than the 4 days of the Tour de Yorkshire and require some trips over water.

The Tour de Yorkshire passed Ripley Town Hall, where the Exhibition will be held this weekend, and the Television coverage did a feature on Ripley including aerial views of Ripley Castle and the family of Sir Thomas Ingilby our art club’s patron.

Ripley Town Hall.   Photo from Harrogate and Nidderdale Art Club website   www.handnart.co.uk

That day’s stage, from Doncaster to Bedale, passed some other places which have a close connection to myself.  As well as passing Scholes Village Hall, near Leeds (where Joan and myself play table tennis on a Sunday morning), Harrogate (where I went to school and served as a Police Cadet) and Ripley (as above), into Ripon passing two road ends where I grew up in the 1950’s and it ended in Bedale where my mother’s family (Mace) were based from the early 1800’s.

Last year’s Tour de Yorkshire went through Bedale and the reception was so impressive that the organisers decided to finish a stage in the town this year.  Here is a photo from the 2018 race where the riders went over the railway level crossing from Bedale into Aiskew and on the left is Park House, the Mace family house from the 1920’s.

Tour de Yorkshire 2018 at level crossing from Bedale into Aiskew passing the Mace family Park House on the left.  Photo Northern Echo 2018.

Joan and myself had intended to visit my Aunty Vi Doyle, 98 years old and who’s first husband was my mother Brenda’s youngest brother Harry Mace, on Friday 3 May.  When I realised that the Tour was finishing in Bedale that day I knew that we would not be able to get any where near her house and so we went a few days earlier.  Vi’s health had been deteriorating for some months and she was distinctly weaker this time and did not eat much of her fish from Fishy Hall’s for the first time ever.

We found out about the exact route of the race which included going past Vi’s bungalow in South End at the start of the finishing straight and we told her she would hear the cheering.

Joan and myself watched the end of that stage on the television and after passing Vi’s the riders went up the main street passing the top of Emgate, in sight of the Oddfellows Arms (now The Three Coopers) where my mother was born, and finished next to the house in North End where my parents had their first home.

The cheers of the crowd would be one of the last memories of Aunty Vi who sadly died peacefully this morning in her own home.