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Greenhow Hill

North Yorkshire, England

Life on the Hill

Life on the Hill

Life on the HillLife on the Hill, first published in December 2005, and reprinted in 2010: Hardbacked, 252 x 194mm, 144 pages, over 150 photographs and illustrations. This book tells the story of Greenhow village from the earliest times up to the present day. It covers subjects like local life, farming and mining, to name but a few.

  • Did you know that the Romans mined lead at Greenhow?
  • Did you know that in 1365 the King ordered lead from Greenhow for Windsor?
  • Did you know that St Mary’s Church at Greenhow was the highest Parish Church in England?
  • Did you know that the villages foundation was due to mining? Indeed it could have been one of the earliest planned villages, developed by Stephen Proctor in the early 17th Century…

Now available to order online

Price: £16.00 with free postage to UK destinations
Please contact us for details of the postage costs and payment options for overseas destinations

How to order – Please either send a cheque/postal order for £16.00 made payable to “Greenhow Local History Club” or buy a copy online with your credit/debit card.

Greenhow Local History Club
Ravenstone Cottage
Greenhow Hill
Harrogate
HG3 5JQ
Email: Please contact us via the contact page.

If you live outside the UK, please contact us for payment details and shipping costs.

The book is also available to personal callers at Stump Cross Caverns, Greenhow.

Below is a sample of one of the pages from the book.

A list of names found in the book

Life on the Hill - A sample page from the book

6 thoughts on “Life on the Hill”

  1. William Johnson says:
    May 20, 2016 at 2:37 pm

    Very interesting book, well worth reading and loads of photos

    Reply
  2. Beverly Eastham says:
    April 4, 2017 at 10:26 pm

    I have ordered this book from you as my Great Great Granddad was the Newbould who found Stump Cross Caverns, and they are in this book. It is a very interesting read and you realize just how hard it was for the families on the Hill

    Reply
  3. Mrs Jacqueline Watts says:
    November 24, 2018 at 11:12 am

    I purchased this book several years ago from The Tourist Information at Grassington. I had recently begun to research my family history to find that many of them came from Greenhow Hill being miners/farmers. To my astonishment on page 111 there is a photo of the Harris Mine workers, one of which is my 2x Grandfather Mattias Pratt number 21 in the photo. There is also a complete paragraph about the Pratt family on page 112. This just made my day, thank you.

    Reply
    1. Bev Cochrane says:
      April 21, 2025 at 8:45 am

      We must be related! Your x2 grandfather, Mathias, was the brother of my x3 grandfather, Michael.
      I’m hoping to be able to find this book to buy when I visit the UK in October.

      Reply
  4. Sheila Learoyd Baker says:
    April 29, 2019 at 5:31 pm

    I have discovered that my middle name, Learoyd, was named after Amos Learoyd who was a charismatic Methodist preacher at Greenhow chapel. My uncle, grandmother, great great uncle and other relatives also bear the middle name of Learoyd down the ages.I have also discovered that Rudyard Kipling visited Greenhow. His grandfather was preacher at the chapel there. Kipling’s short story ‘On Greenhow Hill’ features John Learoyd telling a Yorkshire tale of a charismatic preacher call Amos (Baraclough) so witha switch of names here. https://greenhow-hill.org.uk/history-2/rudyard-kipling/

    There is also in the story a character called Jesse, another family member, who named their daughter Learoyd too.
    Does anyone have any information about The Reverend Amos Learoyd and what it was about him that could have inspired several generations of my family to bear his name (including me) as well as inspire a story by the great Rudyard Kipling? Are any characters in this story known to locals?

    Reply
  5. GORDON GILES says:
    July 25, 2022 at 12:44 pm

    Hi Beverley we must be related as I see your granddad found stump cross, which one of the Newboulds was it.
    keep well from Gordon Giles

    Reply

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Books for sale

Our book, “Life on the Hill” which we published in 2005 is still available here at £16 including postage.

Our latest book, due later this year, is a reprint of the two books written by Harald Bruff in the 1920s – T’ ill an’ t’oade uns upuv Greenho’ & T’ Miners – character sketches of Yorkshire Lead Miners, together with photos, authors notes, further information on the characters in the books and family history information. Watch this space.

Other books for sale published by the Northern Mine Research Society:

The Greenhow Mines

The Grassington Mines

The Wharfedale Mines

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Recent Comments

  • Bev Cochrane on Life on the Hill
  • Andy Naylor on Boundary Dispute 1809
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