Osbaldwick ( ) is a village and civil parish in the unitary authority of the City of York in North Yorkshire, England. Situated east of York,
Osbaldwick is nowadays generally considered one of York's suburbs, though parts of it retain its historic character.
History
In prehistory, the area around Osbaldwick comprised sandy heaths, forests and peaty carrs. It is hypothesised that Hull Road, south of the village, may already have been a routeway at this point, in which case settlement of the environs may go back millenia. A 3rd century Roman coin has been found a few hundred metres east of the village.
Osbaldwick (and its name) were certainly in existence by 11th century: it is mentioned three times in the Domesday Book as Osboldewic. The name derives from Osbald (an Old English forename) and wic (an Old English word meaning "dwelling-place").
When the Domesday Book was written, the manor of Osbaldwick was assessed with the city of York, and its lands were held by the Church of St Peter, York.
The office Prebend of Osbaldwick was created, likely by Thomas of Bayeux, the first Norman archbishop of York.
Osbaldwick was probably within the royal Forest of Galtres at this time.
The western half of this rectangle was a moated site known
as Hall Garth up to the 19th century, and Moat Field thereafter. It is theorised that there once stood a moated demesne manor house there, (perhaps even a pre-Norman one).
Further enclosures happened in 1769.
The fields north of the village still maintain their long, thin medieval shapes. They are primarily pastoral, and probably have been for hundreds of years.
The centre of the village was declared a conservation area in 1978.
Governance
The village was historically within the Bulmer wapentake of the North Riding of Yorkshire. When the latter county was distestablished in 1974, it was then a part of the district of Ryedale in North Yorkshire. Since 1996 it has been part of the City of York unitary authority.
Since 2010, the village has been within the York Outer UK Parliament constituency.
Prior to that it had lain within Yorkshire (−1832), North Riding of Yorkshire (1832–1885)
Thirsk and Malton (1885–1983), Selby (1983–1997) and Ryedale (1997–2010).
It is also part of the Osbaldwick and Derwent Ward within York Unitary Authority.
Geography
thumb|left|Osbaldwick Beck
The village proper lies around the rectangle of streets formed by Osbaldwick Village and Osbaldwick Lane. At its heart is a village green with a road running through. There is also a high-voltage substation.
A 2006 housing development named Beckett Drive was built by Wimpey Homes by Osbaldwick Link Road on the site of a farm building and surrounding fields. A larger development, originally named New Osbaldwick and later named Derwenthorpe, was granted planning permission on 10 May 2007 for green-belt land north of the village. Some farmland also exists between Osbaldwick and Murton.
Osbaldwick Beck runs through the village green, and is part of the tributary system of the River Foss.
Demography
The 1881 UK census recorded the population as 340.
This number barely varied over the 19th century.
However, as a result of new estates being built and York's slum clearances of the 1920s and 30s, the population rose to almost 2,000 by 1931. The population of the civil parish as taken at the 2011 census was 2,902.
Latterly, because of Osbaldwick's proximity to the University of York, it has started to take on the character of a student quarter.
Transport
thumb|right|A heritage-style bus stop
Osbaldwick is served by two bus routes.
First York's service 6 operates between Clifton Moor retail park and the University of York's east campus. Transdev York's less-frequent service 20 runs to Rawcliffe. Further buses (including EastRider ones) operate along the A1079. The bus stops in the village centre are built to a heritage style.
Between 1913 and 1915 Osbaldwick was served by a station on the Derwent Valley Light Railway. This line remained open to freight until 1981. In 1992, Sustrans converted a section of the trackbed between the village and York into part of the National Cycle Route 66.
This section is included in the Way of the Roses cycle route, and was previously included in the White Rose cycle route.
Facilities and landmarks
thumb|right|[[B&Q Superstore]]
Education in the village is provided by Osbaldwick Primary Academy, and most pupils transfer after Year 6 to Archbishop Holgate's School. There is also a scout hut.
There are shops at either end of the north portion of Thirkleby Way: convenience stores, hairdressers, eateries, et cetera.
On Hull Road, there is a petrol station. It was later renamed The Derwent Arms after the Derwent Valley Light Railway which used to run through the village. It currently consists of a rendered brick building with the public rooms on the ground floor and accommodation for the owners above. The pub has a large field which is used to host community events such as the village fair and a bonfire night.
A brewery-cum-taproom named The Handley Tap was opened in 2022 by Brew York.
Historically, another pub existed in a very central location: adjacent to St Thomas' Church. Established in 1831 by Thomas Cundall, it was named The Blacksmith's Arms in the mid-19th century and The Horse Shoe Inn in the early 20th.
The Magnet was built in 1934 by John Smith's Brewery near recently-constructed houses on Osbaldwick Lane. It closed in 2018 and was demolished in 2023.
Listed buildings and former asylums
The village is home to four listed buildings, all of which are Grade II-listed. One is St Thomas' Church.
The other three are 18th century private houses (the oldest in the village): Osbaldwick Hall, Hollytree House, and Stanley House. All three were private lunatic asylums in the 19th century.
Hollytree House was previously a private asylum for men.
Between 1821 and 1877, Stanley House was Terrace House, a private asylum for women.
The abutting (non-listed) Derwent House housed the asylum's staff.
Osbaldwick Hall was only briefly an asylum: from 1882 to 1887.
Religion
The Church of England parish church dedicated to St Thomas originally dates from the 12th century. Windows in the north wall date from the 12th, 13th and 14th centuries. The church has been reordered and extended on a number of occasions, notably in 1877 by John Oldrid Scott and by later architects in both 1967 and 2005.
A window in the church is a memorial to former Sheriff and Lord Mayor of York, James Barber.
thumb|left|Former methodist chapel and village hall. The building's left half is an extension built in 2023.
In 1813, a Methodist society was founded.
It eventually grew large enough to warrant its own building.
This became possible after an 1871 donation of Thomas Allis; a Wesleyan chapel was erected next to Moat Field.
Following a 1905 fundraiser, the original "parish hall" was a converted North Eastern Railway carriage situated in the vicarage's garden (now the street Vicarage Gardens). Despite a village concert, a sale, sewing meetings, and "Japanese entertainment", insufficent funds were raised for a permenant building. The way the money had been spent caused much disquiet; the villagers had been expecting a non-denominational actual building. A row broke out at a parish meeting, which the police attended.
Regarding other religions, Quakers and Catholics were present in 1743.
As of the 2020s, Christians make up only half the villagers, with irreligiosity and non-Christian religions contributing the remaining 46 and 4 percent, respectively.
Sport
Osbaldwick Sports Club on The Leyes plays host to football and cricket.
thumb|A cricket match at Osbaldwick
The football club plays in the York Football League, and was founded in the mid-1970s.
They have won the premier division eleven times. Ten of these were consecutive, a feat aided by manager John Bell and professional players including Jimmy Crangle and John Harrison. There are also junior and reserve teams, the former having been previously coached by Crangle.
Stag hunts and fox hunts took place in the area in 19th and 20th centuries, respectively.
Frequent whippet racing is recorded in the 1930s, and dog racing in the 1940s.
A proposal to build a stadium in the village centre was submitted in 1945.
It would have held athletics and greyhound and pony racing, and had a capacity of 15,000.
The residents had been protesting against the disturbance caused by the racing since 1931.
Determined opposition thus saw that the stadium never materialised.
Appearance in media
A semi-fictionalised Osbaldwick features in the Peter Turnbull crime novel Chelsea Smile, and is mentioned in other books in the Hennessey and Yellich series by the same author.
The village is also referred to in the novels Walking With Ghosts (John Baker), Jorvik (Sheelagh Kelly), The Abyss (Cynthia Harrod-Eagles) and Marrying the Mistress (Juliet Landon).
Notable people
St Thomas's churchyard is the burial place of the Roman Catholic nun Mary Ward, who founded the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary (also known as the Sisters of Loreto).
Her followers chose the location as they feared persecution were she to be buried somewhere more conspicuous. (Even burial at Osbaldwick was illegal).
There is an tradition in the Institute that Ward's grave was once found to be empty.
Some sources postulate that her body was moved to Europe by her followers, or by a foe in the Cromwellian period.
However, skeletal remains thought to be hers were uncovered in a 1965 excavation.
Dorothy Paston Bedingfield, a superior of the Institute, is buried in the same yard.
Eliza Raine (born 1791), Lister's first love, spent seven years in the same facility. On 10 November 1853, she was moved there from an asylum in Clifton. Having died alone on new year's eve, 1860 whilst still at the asylum, she was buried in St Thomas' churchyard.
The churchyard has a second LGBT-related grave: that of William Hutchinson and his partner.
Hutchinson was an 18th-century benefactor of Osbaldwick.
Robert Hallam (1399–1400),
John Catterick (1407),
Robert Gilbert (1426),
Edward Foxe (1527),
Nicholas Wotton (1545–6),
William Blethyn (July 1567),
Matthew Hutton (August 1567),
John Favour (1614-1616/7),
William Crashaw (1617–1618),
Darley Waddilove (1782–1783),
John Jenkins (1828),
Alfred Pearson (1903–1905)
and Paul Burbridge (1966).
Among the former parish vicars are the scholar Charles John Fynes Clinton (1824–1827) and the geneaologist William Ball Wright (1903–1912). Ball Wright was one of the first SPG Anglican missionaries to Japan.
Other notable residents include the lepidopterist Thomas Henry Allis, the suffrage campaigner Marion Coates Hansen the author Noel Botham, the academic Susan Mendus, and The Seahorses frontman Chris Helme. The 1994-5 lord mayor of York David Wilde is the only author of a publication dedicated to the village.
