Redcar, Yorkshire Family History Guide

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Redcar is an Ecclesiastical Parish in the county of Yorkshire, created in 1830 from Marske in Cleveland Ancient Parish.

Alternative names: Marske in Cleveland St Peter

Parish church: St. Peter

Parish registers begin:

  • Parish registers: 1832
  • Bishop’s Transcripts: 1832

Nonconformists include: Society of Friends/Quaker and Wesleyan Methodist.

Adjacent Parishes

Parish History

High Street Redcar Yorkshire 1960
High Street Redcar Yorkshire 1960

The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales 1870

REDCAR, a small town and a township-chapelry in Marske and Upleatham parishes, N. R. Yorkshire.

The town stands on the coast and on the Cleveland branch of the Stockton and Darlington railway, 3¼ miles ESE of the mouth of the river Tees, and 7½ ENE of Middlesborough; was, prior to 1833, a mere fishing-village; began then to acquire importance by the projection at it of a harbour of refuge, 500 acres in extent, with a depth of 30 feet of water, and a month 1,000 feet wide; rose further and rapidly into consequence, as a favourite sea-bathing resort; possesses the advantage of very fine and extensive sands, well adapted for bathing.

It consists chiefly of one long street, together with a terrace and outskirts; is practically conjoint with the village of Cotham; and has a head post-office, a railway station with telegraph, several good hotels, numerous respectable lodging-houses, a hydropathic establishment, a sea-bathing hospital, a church, four dissenting chapels, and a mixed public school.

The chapelry comprises 3, 900 acres of land and 423 of water. Real property, £6, 866. Pop. in 1851, 1,032; in 1861, 1, 330. Houses, 283. The manor belongs to the Earl of Zetland. The living is a p.curacy in the diocese of York. Value, £50. Patron, the Earl of Zetland.

Source: The Imperial Gazetteer of England & Wales [Wilson, John M]. A. Fullarton & Co. N. d. c. [1870-72].

A Topographical Dictionary of England 1848

REDCAR, a chapelry, partly in the parish of Upleatham, but chiefly in that of Marsk, union of Guisborough, E. division of the liberty of Langbaurgh, N. riding of York, 7 miles (N.) from Guisborough; containing, in 1841, 794 inhabitants.

This place, which is on the sea-shore, has, from the advantages of its situation, risen from an obscure and humble village consisting of a few fishermen’s huts, into a handsome well built town and fashionable bathing-place. It is seated in one of the most charming districts of which the county can boast, and overlooks the magnificent Tees bay, enlivened by the numerous vessels trading to the neighbouring ports.

The landward prospect reaches to the range of the Cleveland hills, among which RoseburyTopping stands conspicuous; the easternmost of these hills terminate in beetling cliffs of from 500 to 700 feet in height, the most remarkable of which are Huntcliff, Roacliff, and Staiths Nab, the last forming the southeastern boundary of the bay.

The shore of the bay is here composed of broad sands, extending five miles towards the east, and two or three towards the west, and of such firmness that the wheels of a carriage scarcely leave an impression upon them. The drives inward, amidst the lovely scenery of Kirk-Leatham and Wilton, and of the vale of Guisborough to Skelton and Upleatham, are rendered still more agreeable by the excellence of the roads, on which there is no turnpike impost for 18 miles in any direction.

The town contains some good inns and lodging-houses, with several establishments of warm and cold baths; and in consequence of the formation of a line of railway to Redcar in 1846, parties desirous of enjoying the sea-breezes here, may at a moderate expense and in a few hours reach the town from the midland and even southern counties.

A considerable fishery is carried on, the fish taken being chiefly cod, ling, haddock, turbot, lobsters, crabs, and shrimps, of which great quantities are sent to various parts of the county; but the want of a convenient harbour renders the pursuit somewhat hazardous, and notwithstanding the fishermen’s intimate knowledge of the coast, boats and lives are occasionally lost.

Some protection, however, is afforded in landing, by the ridges of aluminous schistus rocks, called the Salt Scar and the East Scar, that extend into the sea opposite Redcar for above a mile, and form between them a capacious basin or natural harbour when the water falls below their level, which it does at half tide. These rocks, instead of being a series of irregular heaps, serve as piers, or breakwaters, and might readily be converted by the hand of man into a means of preventing the shipwrecks which are so frequent on this dangerous coast.

Mr. Brooks, the civil engineer, conceived the idea of taking advantage of these natural features, and an application was made to parliament for a private bill, to form a harbour of 510 acres, having 30 feet at low water; but the proposition was rejected, on the principle that a measure so largely relating to the protection of life and property, should be undertaken by the nation.

The subject is again attracting the attention of the legislature, from the strong recommendation of the committee on shipwrecks: and it is not unlikely that something will eventually be done, as there is no deep-water harbour, or harbour which can be entered at all states of the tide, in the long distance between the Frith of Forth and the Humber. An excellent life-boat establishment is supported by subscription; and here is a coast-guard station.

The chapelry comprises by computation 520 acres, of which about 150, including between 30 and 40 acres of inferior land called the sea banks, are pasture; the surface is level, and the soil various, being on the sea-side a sandy loam, and inland for the most part clay, producing excellent wheat. The Earl of Zetland is lord of the manor, and chief proprietor of the soil. Redcar House, a handsome mansion overlooking the sea, is the residence of James Ewbank, Esq.

The chapel, dedicated to St. Peter, is in the later English style, with a square tower surmounted by four turrets, and contains 700 sittings, of which half are free; it was erected in 1828, at a cost of £2700, raised by subscription, aided by a grant of £500 from the Incorporated Society, and a donation of £600 from the late Earl of Zetland. The living is a perpetual curacy, in the patronage of the present Earl, with a net income of £56, and a neat parsonage-house, situated near the chapel.

There are places of worship for Primitive Methodists and Wesleyans; and a parochial school, with a house for the master, built by the first Lord Dundas, is partly supported by the Earl of Zetland, and partly by subscription. The rocks in the vicinity of Redcar abound with fossil remains; and on the East Scar are found ammonites of 20 inches in diameter.

Source: A Topographical Dictionary of England by Samuel Lewis 1848

Parish Records

FamilySearch

Use for:
England, Cleveland, Redcar

England, Yorkshire, Redcar – Cemeteries ( 8 )
Burial register, St. Peter’s Churchyard, Redcar, 1832-1896

Burial registers, index, and grave registers, 1874-1996
Author: Redcar (Yorkshire : borough). Cemetery Department

Monumental inscriptions from some churches in Edinburgh, Angus Co., Scotland, and Redcar, Yorkshire, England
Author: Cramer, Sydney

Monumental inscriptions, St. Peter’s Churchyard, Redcar, Cleveland
Author: Cramer, Sidney; Cleveland Family History Society

Monumental inscriptions, St. Peter’s Churchyard, Redcar, Cleveland, 1836-1950

Monumental inscriptons of St. Peter’s and Coatham Churchyards, Redcar, Yorkshire
Author: Cramer, Sydney

Parish churchyard records of Redcar, Yorkshire, England, (St. Peter’s), 1801-1952
Author: Maxwell, Archibald Strath

Redcar Cemetery [monumental inscriptions]
Author: Sampson, Alex; Cleveland Family History Society

England, Yorkshire, Redcar – Census ( 1 )
Census returns for Redcar, 1841-1891
Author: Great Britain. Census Office

England, Yorkshire, Redcar – Census – 1851 ( 1 )
Census returns for Kirkleatham, Redcar, Marske and Coatham, 1851

England, Yorkshire, Redcar – Census – 1851 – Indexes ( 1 )
1851 census for Redcar (N. Yks.), Marske (N. Yks.)
Author: Cleveland Family History Society

England, Yorkshire, Redcar – Church records ( 10 )
Bishop’s transcripts for Redcar, 1832-1852
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Redcar (Yorkshire)

Church records for Primitive Methodist churches in the Saltburn by the Sea Circuit, 1895-1966
Author: Saltburn by the Sea Circuit

England, Yorkshire, Redcar, parish registers : St. Peter’s Church, 1832-1922
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Redcar (Yorkshire); North Yorkshire County Record Office (Northallerton, Yorkshire)

Guisborough Wesleyan Methodist Circuit baptisms, 1840-1926
Author: Cleveland, North Yorkshire and South Durham Family History Society

Marriage register transcript, St. Peter Redcar, Cleveland, 1856-1948
Author: Cleveland Family History Society

Parish registers for Redcar, 1832-1901
Author: Church of England. Chapelry of Redcar (Yorkshire)

Register of baptisms for Dormanstown Methodist Church, Redcar, Yorkshire, 1925-1971
Author: Dormanstown Methodist Church (Redcar, Yorkshire)

Register of baptisms for West Dyke Chapel, Redcar, 1913-1966
Author: West Dyke Chapel (Redcar, Yorkshire : Wesleyan)

Register of marriages for Station Road Methodist Chapel, Redcar, 1931-1959
Author: Station Road Chapel (Redcar : Primitive Methodist)

Wesleyan Methodist baptisms for Redcar and Coatham, 1860-1905
Author: Guisbrough Circuit (Yorkshire : Wesleyan Methodist)

England, Yorkshire, Redcar – Church records – Indexes ( 2 )
Computer printout of Redcar, Yorks., Eng

Index to marriages at Trinity Methodist Church, Redcar, 1907-1980
Author: Sampson, Alex; Cleveland Family History Society; Trinity Methodist Church (Redcar, York)

England, Yorkshire, Redcar – Poorhouses, poor law, etc. ( 1 )
Poor law records, 1788-1866
Author: Redcar (Yorkshire)

England, Yorkshire, Redcar – Taxation ( 1 )
Poor law records, 1788-1866
Author: Redcar (Yorkshire)

Administration

  • County: Yorkshire
  • Civil Registration District: Guisborough
  • Probate Court: Exchequer and Prerogative Courts of the Archbishop of York
  • Diocese: York
  • Rural Deanery: Cleveland
  • Poor Law Union: Guisborough
  • Hundred: Langbaurgh
  • Province: York